The math does not make any sense. First, the budget deficit is not new....

Future Earth 1 year ago

The math does not make any sense. First, the budget deficit is not new. President Trump and Republicans actually made it worse with their tax-cuts for billionaires a couple of years ago. Second, please ignore anyone who tells you it’s a matter of paying vs. not paying. The climate crisis will not magically disappear because we stop including certain words in policies. It has always been a matter of who is going to pay and how much. Do you know about the multiplier effect of disasters? For every dollar you spend on prevention and mitigation you avoid paying $4-7 in recovery and damages. The levees that weren’t reinforced before Hurricane Katrina cost billions more in recovery than prevention would have.

layersDaily Sustainability Digest

Published couple of minutes ago

Water scarcity, risk and resource viability are now defining sustainable building design as much as appearance. A growing sense of environmental sustainability in construction is visible in projects from the US Mountain West to the Indian Himalayas, where planners integrate hydrology and slope stability into site plans to reduce disaster exposure and asset loss. The shift signifies a broader acceptance that low carbon design and whole life carbon assessment are as fundamental to feasibility as cost and aesthetics.

Corporations are scaling sustainability at pace. The Redmond tech campus redevelopment demonstrates how net zero carbon buildings and eco-design for buildings can underpin business resilience through intelligent water reuse, energy-efficient buildings and circular construction strategies. In housing, mixed-income models in cities such as San Diego and New York are proving that sustainable construction can deliver both affordability and compliance with stricter embodied carbon and lifecycle assessment standards when capital and permitting align.

Policy inconsistency threatens this momentum. Fragmented energy-transition frameworks and material certification regimes make it difficult to benchmark building lifecycle performance or achieve consistent carbon footprint reduction across markets. Unified regulation and robust environmental product declarations (EPDs) would enable supply chains to invest confidently in low embodied carbon materials and renewable building materials, reinforcing the circular economy in construction.

The industry’s leading edge is now characterised by whole life carbon accountability, life cycle cost optimisation and sustainable material specification. Designing for risk, climate and local ecology while embedding BREEAM and BREEAM v7 principles ensures that green construction moves beyond aspiration into measurable performance. The emerging model of low carbon building and carbon neutral construction signals genuine progress toward decarbonising the built environment and achieving net zero whole life carbon across sectors.

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