The Philippines, a cluster of more than 7,600 islands, which lie between the Pacific Ocean and the South China Sea, are home to around 115 million people.
Here, the ocean is everything.
There are more than 1,800 marine protected areas in the Philippines — slices of ocean supposed to be safeguarded from human destruction — but corruption, lack of resources, and pressures from the powerful commercial fishing industry have made enforcement a challenge.
It’s a tough job and an uphill battle in the face of the escalating impacts of a global climate crisis for which richer countries bear overwhelming responsibility. But it’s yielding results.
Read more at the link in our bio.
📸: Giacomo d’Orlando
Clean‑energy economics are reshaping sustainable construction as declining costs in solar generation and electrification reinforce the financial logic of sustainable building design. The latest UK grid data show wind, solar and biomass supplying over half of national electricity, proving that low carbon design now cuts both operating cost and emissions. Developers adopting sustainable building practices built around whole life carbon assessment and embodied carbon targets gain a cost advantage, with electrified assets and renewable building materials outpacing fossil benchmarks.
Within sustainable urban development, the focus is moving from policy aspiration to practical delivery through eco‑design for buildings that align with net zero whole life carbon standards and BREEAM benchmarks. Across markets, policy remains uneven. The United States risks reversing momentum by diverting funds from offshore renewables toward fossil infrastructure, threatening the circular economy in construction and investment in low carbon construction materials.
European efforts to reform carbon pricing could soften incentives for low embodied carbon materials including low‑carbon cement and steel, delaying carbon footprint reduction in key supply chains. Leadership from clients applying lifecycle assessment and life cycle cost analysis is essential to maintain progress toward carbon neutral construction and decarbonising the built environment.
The retrofit agenda in England underscores the social dimension of environmental sustainability in construction, with millions of homes requiring energy‑efficient upgrades to meet the standards of net zero carbon buildings. Contractors capable of large‑scale retrofits integrating heat pumps, insulation, and resource efficiency in construction methods stand to capture the rising demand for eco‑friendly construction. The industry’s advantage now lies in embedding whole life carbon thinking, optimising building lifecycle performance, and applying circular construction strategies that reduce the environmental impact of construction while securing resilience through a measurable circular economy.
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