The intensifying and expansive heat wave affecting around 150 million people in...

CNN Climate 3 months ago

The intensifying and expansive heat wave affecting around 150 million people in the United States from Wisconsin to Washington, DC, bears the hallmarks of human-caused global warming. Hundreds of daily temperature records are threatened during the next few days, particularly along the East Coast, and some all-time June high temperature records could be tied or broken as well. Milestones for record warm overnight low temperatures are also being set — another sign of climate change. Nighttime temperatures have been warming faster than daytime, which exacerbates the health consequences from heat waves. This is especially the case in cities, where the urban heat island effect keeps temperatures high overnight. The US heat wave comes nearly in tandem with searing high temperatures in Western Europe, which global warming made far more likely and intense. Read more at the link in our bio. 📸: Andrew Caballero-Reynolds/AFP/Getty Images; Mark Makela/Getty Images; Jon Cherry/AP

layersDaily Sustainability Digest

Published about 6 hours ago



The University of Derby has launched the UK’s first Institute of Carbonomics to pioneer research around carbon quantification and reduction, with strong industry backing. This initiative aims to improve accuracy in Whole Life Carbon Assessment, offering construction firms a more precise route to tackling Whole Life Carbon in materials and processes. By integrating carbon metrics into decision-making, the institute could transform how sustainable building design is delivered and support the shift towards net zero Whole Life Carbon strategies.

Clean energy investment is gaining momentum as Gresham House expands its portfolio through the acquisition of SUSI Partners, lifting assets under management to over £10 billion. This injection of capital into renewable infrastructure and green construction signals a positive outlook for sustainable building practices. As investors look to align with environmental Climate Change sustainability in construction, the financial market is playing a key role in scaling up energy-efficient buildings and low carbon construction materials.

The London Stock Exchange has highlighted a reduction in the carbon intensity of portfolios; yet overall emissions across real estate and infrastructure remain high. This underlines the gap between ambition and measurable impact within the built environment. Greater adoption of lifecycle assessment and Whole Life Carbon methodologies is required to close this gap, ensuring that Life Cycle Cost and carbon footprint reduction are integrated into mainstream investment and design strategies.

The shift to hydrogen at the UK’s Bacton gas terminal illustrates how existing infrastructure and skills can be repurposed for the clean transition. For construction, this demonstrates the importance of resource efficiency in construction, the potential of Circular Economy in construction approaches, and the upskilling of the workforce to deliver net zero carbon buildings. Embedding eco-design for buildings alongside low carbon design practices will be central to this transformation.

Broader developments such as the ratification of the global oceans treaty reinforce the urgency of protecting biodiversity and ecosystems. Though not directly tied to sustainable construction, these frameworks influence shoreline planning and climate resilience strategies. Sustainable urban development and green infrastructure increasingly require life cycle thinking in construction to balance resilience, functionality, and environmental impact of construction activities.

Climate pressures continue to escalate, with extreme weather and rising temperatures reinforcing the urgency for carbon neutral construction pathways. From decarbonising the built environment to advancing circular construction strategies and sustainable material specification, the sector must keep accelerating change. Net zero carbon now depends not only on technical innovation but also on embedding sustainable design principles and green building materials into every aspect of building lifecycle performance.

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Whole Life Carbon is a platform for the entire construction industry—both in the UK and internationally. We track the latest publications, debates, and events related to whole life guidance and sustainability. If you have any enquiries or opinions to share, please do get in touch.