The human fingerprint on global warming was likely evident in Earth's...

CNN Climate 10 months ago

The human fingerprint on global warming was likely evident in Earth's atmosphere far earlier than previously thought — even before the invention of modern cars, a new study says. Using a combination of scientific theory, modern observations and multiple, sophisticated computer models, researchers found a clear signal of human-caused climate change was likely discernible with high confidence as early as 1885, just before the advent of gas-powered cars but after the dawn of the industrial revolution. The findings, detailed in a paper published Monday in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, raise the likelihood that humanity has been remaking the planet's climate in a detectable way for longer than previously believed — and highlight the importance of tracking changes in the upper atmosphere. Read more at the link in our bio. 📸: Print Collector/Hulton Archive/Getty Images

layersDaily Sustainability Digest

Published about 8 hours ago



The global shift towards sustainable construction is advancing from research to measurable implementation through innovations that reshape the built environment. Johnson Matthey’s collaboration in China on biomethanol technology represents a breakthrough for the circular economy in construction, aligning industrial chemistry with the drive to decarbonise the sector and reduce the carbon footprint of construction.

Projects such as the refurbishment of Bell’s Yard in London demonstrate how sustainable building design merges adaptive reuse and low embodied carbon materials to extend building lifecycle performance. The project exemplifies whole life carbon assessment and lifecycle assessment principles, showing that environmental sustainability in construction now informs both design and policy.

Compact housing developments like Ash Mews in Stratford reveal how low carbon design and sustainable building practices can turn limited space into energy-efficient buildings shaped by principles of net zero carbon buildings and circular construction strategies. Each project tests life cycle thinking in construction, highlighting how a detailed understanding of embodied carbon in materials and resource efficiency in construction directly reduces life cycle cost.

Artificial intelligence is increasingly integrated into sustainable design workflows, streamlining lifecycle modelling and improving the accuracy of whole life carbon calculations. Combined with new transparency requirements and environmental product declarations (EPDs), these digital tools promote accountability in sustainable material specification and environmental impact of construction.

The sector’s evolution embodies a commitment to net zero whole life carbon performance. As BREEAM and the forthcoming BREEAM v7 framework drive measurable benchmarks for eco-design for buildings, sustainable architecture is moving toward low carbon building certification rooted in verifiable environmental metrics. The integration of green building products, renewable building materials and end-of-life reuse in construction strengthens circular economy principles, turning sustainable construction into a credible engine of sustainable urban development.

Green construction has progressed from aspirational rhetoric to evidence-based transformation. Through carbon neutral construction strategies focused on low-impact construction, decarbonising the built environment is no longer theoretical; it defines the new baseline for a resilient, responsible and regenerative construction industry.

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