The Copernicus Climate Change Service (C3S) has published its latest monthly...

EU Environment and Planet 1 year ago

The Copernicus Climate Change Service (C3S) has published its latest monthly Climate Bulletin, focused on key climate trends in November 2024. The bulletin indicates that November 2024 was the second-warmest November globally, following November 2023, with an average surface air temperature of 14.10°C, which is 0.73°C above the 1991-2020 average for the month. From January to November 2024, the global-average temperature anomaly stood at 0.72°C above the 1991-2020 average, marking the highest recorded for this period and measuring 0.14°C warmer than the same period in 2023. In light of this trend, it is virtually certain that 2024 will be the warmest year on record, exceeding 1.5°C above pre-industrial levels, according to C3S data. This data visualisation, based on C3S data, shows the surface air temperature anomaly for November 2024 across the European continent and parts of Africa, the Americas, and Asia. C3S data is essential for tracking global climate trends, providing valuable insights to help decision-makers develop and implement effective climate strategies for the future. #CopernicusEU #ImageOfTheDay

layersDaily Sustainability Digest

Published about 5 hours ago



Aldi’s plan to install solar panels on half of its UK stores by 2026 marks a material shift in sustainable construction. Rooftop generation is moving into mainstream asset management for energy-efficient buildings, strengthening the business case for low carbon design across retail, logistics and residential portfolios. For developers targeting net zero carbon buildings, the message is clear: sustainable building design now depends on practical measures that improve life cycle cost, cut operational emissions and support net zero whole life carbon outcomes. This is where whole life carbon, whole life carbon assessment and lifecycle assessment are becoming central to eco-design for buildings, sustainable design and environmental sustainability in construction.

Recycleye’s upgraded AI sorting system gives the circular economy a stronger technical footing, improving the recovery of materials that are often lost in mixed waste streams. That matters for circular economy in construction, resource efficiency in construction and end-of-life reuse in construction, especially as the sector faces growing scrutiny over embodied carbon, embodied carbon in materials and the wider carbon footprint of construction. Better sorting can support sustainable material specification, low embodied carbon materials and greener procurement backed by environmental product declarations (EPDs).

SDCL Efficiency’s planned wind-down shows the harder problem is finance, not technology. Decarbonising the built environment now requires bankable models that link building lifecycle performance with repeatable investment. For teams working to BREEAM and BREEAM v7 standards, the direction of travel is unmistakable: low carbon building strategies, sustainable building practices and life cycle thinking in construction will define the next phase of green construction.

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