The area of Greenland’s ice loss in the past three decades is roughly 36...

CNN Climate 2 years ago

The area of Greenland’s ice loss in the past three decades is roughly 36 times the size of New York City — land that is rapidly giving way to wetlands and shrubs, a new study shows. The loss of ice is creating what’s known as a feedback loop. Snow and ice typically reflect the sun’s energy back into space, preventing excessive heating in parts of the Earth. But as ice disappears, those areas absorb more solar energy, raising land surface temperatures, which can cause further melt and other negative impacts. Ice melt also increases the amount of water in lakes, where water absorbs more heat than snow, which increases land surface temperatures. Tap the link in bio for more. 📸 : Zwick/REDA&CO/Universal Images Group/Getty Images

layersDaily Sustainability Digest

Published about 3 hours ago



Bio‑based construction is entering a decisive implementation phase as new engineering standards drive measurable performance and credibility. The release of a structural manual for bamboo transforms renewable building materials from conceptual to certifiable, giving engineers a shared framework for specification, durability testing and fire safety that aligns with standards for steel and concrete. This move advances sustainable construction by supporting low carbon design and enabling embodied carbon measurement across permanent structures. Integrating bamboo into structural use contributes to whole life carbon assessment and lifecycle assessment processes that underpin sustainable building design and environmental sustainability in construction.

The White Rose Forest’s 25‑year strategy to plant 134 million trees across northern England represents a significant link between green infrastructure and construction supply chains. Managed afforestation aligned with local processing, design standards and resource efficiency in construction has potential to deliver low embodied carbon materials, support net zero carbon buildings and embed circular economy principles. Tree planting tied to sawmilling and design verification increases the availability of green building materials while strengthening the regional circular economy in construction.

These developments tighten the bio‑based supply chain from nature to building performance. Developers are urged to adopt sustainable material specification within procurement to reduce the carbon footprint of construction and achieve whole life carbon targets. Early collaboration with insurers and BREEAM assessors can accelerate certification and enable coherent life cycle cost evaluation. Aligning afforestation programmes with industrial capability, testing and environmental product declarations (EPDs) will solidify the foundation for carbon neutral construction and measurable decarbonising of the built environment.

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