Special moments filming for Episode 6 of #BBCEarthAsia, “The Arid Heart”...

BBC Earth 1 year ago

Special moments filming for Episode 6 of #BBCEarthAsia, “The Arid Heart” ❤️ 1. A female Pallas cat, Eurasian Steppe, Mongolia. 2. A gobi bear, Gobi Desert, Mongolia. 3. A male Asiatic lion, desert forests of India's Gir National Park. 4. A Demoiselle crane, Khichan, India. 5. A long-eared jerboa, Gobi Desert, Mongolia. 6. 30,000 Demoiselle cranes migrate thousands of miles to the village of Khichan, India. 7. The Rub al Khali or Empty Quarter, United Arab Emirates. These desolate sand dunes are sculpted by wind. 8. Grooming helps Takhi families reinforce their bonds; they rely on the strength of their family unit for survival on the steppe. Hustai National Park, Mongolia. 9. Asiatic lion, sub-adult, Gir Forest National Park, Gujarat, India. 10. An adult Socotra cormorant, Hawar Islands, Bahrain. If you think you’ve seen the best the natural world has to offer, think again 👀 #BBCEarthAsia – a spectacle like no other. Click the link in our bio to find out more 🌏 📸 BBC Studios Natural History Unit. . . . . #BBCEarthAsia #Wildlife #Documentary #Nature

layersDaily Sustainability Digest

Published about 8 hours ago



Brussels’ first-quarter 2026 price for CBAM certificates makes embodied carbon a direct cost for imported steel, aluminium and cement, pushing whole life carbon into core procurement decisions across sustainable construction.

Developers and contractors will need stronger whole life carbon assessment, lifecycle assessment, life cycle thinking in construction and life cycle cost discipline, backed by sustainable material specification, environmental product declarations (EPDs) and verified low embodied carbon materials.

The shift strengthens sustainable building design, low carbon design and eco-design for buildings, rewards low carbon construction materials and supports a circular economy in construction. It also raises the value of BREEAM and BREEAM v7 pathways for net zero whole life carbon, net zero carbon buildings and better control of the carbon footprint of construction.

UK backing for Agratas’s Somerset battery gigafactory and ITM Power’s Sheffield electrolyser expansion supports the industrial base behind green infrastructure, electrification and hydrogen systems, all of which matter for environmental sustainability in construction, energy-efficient buildings and low carbon building supply chains.

Record solar output is cleaning the grid faster, improving the case for all-electric sustainable design and carbon footprint reduction in operations. The harder challenge remains embodied carbon in materials, building lifecycle performance and the wider environmental impact of construction. A weaker UK market leaves sustainable building practices, circular construction strategies, end-of-life reuse in construction and the broader task of decarbonising the built environment dependent on execution, resource efficiency in construction and resilient supply chains.

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