The Permian Basin’s oil and gas wells generate prodigious quantities of...

Inside Climate News 2 hours ago

The Permian Basin’s oil and gas wells generate prodigious quantities of wastewater, known as produced water. This salty, toxic liquid is pumped underground into injection wells, increasing underground pressure. And this pressure finds its way to the surface through old wells that burst and spew wastewater aboveground. The Railroad Commission, Texas’ oil and gas regulator, requested injection wells within a five-mile radius of Grandfalls to stop pumping waste underground while the leak was being plugged. The old well under the church parking lot is still under investigation, according to Railroad Commission spokesperson Bryce Dubee. “This was kind of a good thing because it brought attention to what’s happening,” said David Tucker, interim pastor at First Baptist, referring to the spate of oilfield leaks and geysers in the Permian Basin. 🔗 Read more on our website, linked in our bio ✍️ @psskow 📸 Martha Pskowski

layersDaily Sustainability Digest

Published about 2 hours ago



Regulatory momentum across the built environment is tightening as governments and industry bodies align around robust frameworks for decarbonising construction. The EU’s reform of carbon market controls aims to maintain strong carbon price signals to advance whole life carbon reduction, while ISO’s new standard on net‑zero transition plans gives investors and contractors a consistent structure for measuring life cycle cost and performance. The Science Based Targets initiative is establishing clearer boundaries between verifiable net zero carbon buildings and unsubstantiated claims, driving greater transparency in embodied carbon reporting and lifecycle assessment within construction supply chains.

Engineering progress is translating policy ambition into practice. Plans for a large‑scale direct air capture plant on Teesside highlight a new model of carbon neutral construction industry in the UK, pairing heavy engineering expertise with circular economy principles. Expansion of natural fibre insulation and low embodied carbon materials into mainstream housing retrofits demonstrates eco‑design for buildings moving beyond pilot projects. Sustainable construction now depends on accurate whole life carbon assessment and the specification of renewable building materials validated through environmental product declarations (EPDs).

Climate resilience is reshaping valuation and insurance models as climate‑driven subsidence data sharpen awareness of the environmental impact of construction. Developers are applying sustainable building design and low carbon design strategies to manage soil instability and resource efficiency in construction projects. The focus on whole life carbon and embodied carbon in materials signals a maturing market where green construction and sustainable building practices are metrics of competitiveness, not aspiration. Standards such as BREEAM v7 reinforce this shift toward lifecycle performance, end‑of‑life reuse in construction and circular construction strategies that define the next phase of environmental sustainability in construction.

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