The ozone layer in the stratosphere protects the surface from dangerous...

EU Environment and Planet 1 year ago

The ozone layer in the stratosphere protects the surface from dangerous ultraviolet radiation. At ground level ozone is an air pollutant with impacts on human health and crop yields. High surface temperatures in themselves do not lead to ozone pollution - high temperatures usually come with high pressure and anticyclonic meteorological patterns which allow the precursor emissions to accumulate, and with clearer skies more sunlight and faster chemistry which results in increased ozone pollution. Since the start of the summer, CAMS has monitored several periods conducive to an increase in surface ozone concentrations. With the recent increase in temperatures and heatwaves a new episode of high surface ozone concentrations, and exceedances of limit values set by the European air quality legislation in several areas in Western and Southern Europe, has been forecast between 29 July and 4 August. Read more about the forecast, link in bio.

layersDaily Sustainability Digest

Published about 8 hours ago



The momentum across the sustainable construction sector continues to accelerate as firms integrate whole life carbon assessment and embodied carbon strategies into mainstream practice. Tailored Lifestyle Group, a UK-based design enterprise, is emerging as a leader in sustainable building design, embedding low carbon construction materials and eco-design for buildings at the centre of its projects. The company’s portfolio reflects a growing alignment between aesthetic ambition and measurable environmental outcomes, proving that net zero carbon buildings can combine design quality with resource efficiency. Their model underscores how whole life carbon accounting now sits alongside design intent as a standard measure of project value.

Artificial intelligence is reshaping environmental sustainability in construction through tools like Greyparrot’s Analyser. By improving the traceability and reuse of materials, the technology enables construction companies to address circular economy in construction challenges from the design stage through demolition. The AI-driven analysis helps reduce the carbon footprint of construction, enabling progress on decarbonising the built environment while supporting more accurate lifecycle assessment data. This data-centric approach reflects the rise of circular construction strategies, prioritising reuse, recycling, and end-of-life reuse in construction to achieve low-impact construction targets.

Investment in the workforce remains an equally decisive factor. As the demand for net zero whole life carbon delivery rises, firms face increasing pressure to cultivate a skilled labour base proficient in sustainable building practices, life cycle thinking in construction, and carbon neutral construction. Industry training that aligns with BREEAM v7 and BREEAM standards will be instrumental in maintaining compliance and driving the next generation of sustainable architecture. Without an adequately prepared workforce, the shift to eco-friendly construction and the improvement of building lifecycle performance risk stalling before meaningful decarbonisation can be achieved.

Policy and finance are converging to reinforce these technical shifts. The Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors has introduced global guidance that ensures sustainability criteria inform bank lending valuations. Factoring life cycle cost, environmental product declarations (EPDs), and the environmental impact of construction into valuation processes strengthens the financial viability of green building materials and sustainable material specification. These measures also improve visibility of green building products within mainstream investment, translating ecological design into tangible economic performance.

Fire safety advances illustrate that sustainable design must consider resilience as central to green construction. Recent recognition from the Association for Specialist Fire Protection highlights innovation in passive fire systems that enhance both safety and low carbon design integration. As energy-efficient buildings become more airtight and adopt renewable building materials, rigorous design evaluation is vital to managing risk without undermining performance. The collective direction of these innovations confirms that the future of sustainable construction and sustainable urban development depends on joined-up thinking—where circular economy principles, resource efficiency in construction, and carbon footprint reduction become inseparable from quality, safety, and value.

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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.