The decade between 2011 and 2020 was the hottest on record for the planet’s...

CNN Climate 2 years ago

The decade between 2011 and 2020 was the hottest on record for the planet’s land and oceans as the rate of climate change “surged alarmingly,” according to a new report from the World Meteorological Organization. The report, released Tuesday at the COP28 conference in Dubai, found rising concentrations of planet-heating pollution in the atmosphere fueled record land and ocean temperatures and “turbo charged” dramatic glacier loss and sea-level rise during this period. Read more at the link in bio. 📸: Josh Edelson/AFP/Getty Images

layersDaily Sustainability Digest

Published about 4 hours ago



{

"meta_title": "Sustainable construction pivots to resilience",

"meta_description": "Flood defences, resilience economics and biodiversity carve-outs are reshaping sustainable construction around utility, risk and returns.",

"digest_text": "Climate resilience is becoming the most bankable expression of sustainable construction. The Environment Agency's delivery of flood protection for 62,000 properties, beating its target by 10,000, shows where public spending is moving: towards asset protection that can be counted, priced and defended. LSE's triple dividend case for adaptation reinforces that shift, giving clients a language of life cycle cost, building lifecycle performance and wider economic return rather than moral obligation alone.\n\nThat matters for sustainable building design. A market focused on risk will still talk about whole life carbon, embodied carbon and a whole life carbon assessment, yet the immediate winners are likely to be projects that combine resilience with low carbon design, energy-efficient buildings and credible lifecycle assessment. In practice, environmental sustainability in construction is being judged less by abstract ambition than by whether a scheme can protect value, cut exposure and support delivery.\n\nThe political signal is sharper in the Biodiversity Net Gain exemption for schemes below 0.2 hectares. Ministers are not abandoning sustainable design, eco-design for buildings or the circular economy, nor are they stepping away from net zero carbon buildings, net zero whole life carbon or BREEAM and BREEAM v7 benchmarks. They are revealing a hierarchy. Measures with a clear commercial or safety case are advancing faster than rules seen as friction.\n\nFor developers, contractors and specifiers, the lesson is clear. The next wave of work will favour low carbon building strategies that pair flood resilience with low carbon construction materials, embodied carbon in materials scrutiny and circular economy in construction. Sustainable construction is not narrowing; it is hardening around evidence, utility and returns."

}

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