Scientists have been keeping a close eye on the tropical Pacific Ocean for...

CNN Climate 1 hour ago

Scientists have been keeping a close eye on the tropical Pacific Ocean for months now, anticipating the emergence of an intense, "Super" El Niño that would be among the stronger events on record. Now it looks like this El Niño could set the benchmark for peak intensity, with potentially dire implications for the extreme weather events it influences worldwide. El Niño is poised to rapidly strengthen in the tropical Pacific Ocean during the next few months and is forecast to reach the upper echelon of intensity by the time it peaks in late fall to early winter, forecasters warn. It's already being referred to colloquially as a Super El Niño. Only a handful of events have reached that level of intensity in the last few decades, with the most recent one occurring in 2015 to 2016. But now some computer models are predicting this El Niño could be stronger than any other event, back to at least 1950. "I think it's fair to say that, depending on [the] model, the forecasts are close to unprecedented," said Michael Tippett, an atmospheric scientist at Columbia University, in an email. Tap the link in bio for more. 📸 : Mario Tama/Getty Images

layersDaily Sustainability Digest

Published about 8 hours ago



Sustainable construction is moving from concept to measurable impact as policies, materials science and investment converge around whole life carbon assessment. Developers are turning brownfield sites and disused mills into low carbon housing that redefines embodied carbon in materials as a recoverable asset. Projects such as the Royd Edge Mills redevelopment showcase sustainable building design that integrates circular economy principles and adaptive reuse to reduce the carbon footprint of construction.

Governments are recognising that environmental sustainability in construction is fiscal strategy as much as climate policy. Whole life carbon calculations and lifecycle assessments are increasingly informing urban resilience, housing and net zero carbon policy frameworks. Yet inconsistent incentives limit the adoption of circular construction strategies and the scaling of net zero carbon buildings. A coherent regulatory model linking life cycle cost, resource efficiency in construction and green infrastructure could accelerate genuine decarbonising of the built environment.

Advances in low embodied carbon materials and renewable building materials indicate that low carbon design has matured beyond prototype stage. Green construction now relies on verified performance data through environmental product declarations (EPDs) and building lifecycle performance metrics aligned with BREEAM and BREEAM V7 standards. Manufacturers and contractors adopting sustainable material specification and eco-design for buildings are closing the gap between innovation and implementation.

For the industry, the shift towards net zero whole life carbon and carbon neutral construction is reshaping competitiveness. Sustainable building practices, end-of-life reuse in construction and whole life thinking have become essential in achieving energy-efficient buildings and reducing the environmental impact of construction. What once represented idealism is now a commercial imperative: integrating sustainable design and circular economy in construction is no longer optional but defines licence to operate.

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