The recent bankruptcy of the Netherlands-based supermarket PieterPot, which delivered products in reusable packaging, serves as a stark reminder that the success of circular businesses in a linear, take-make-waste economy is far from guaranteed.
To effectively compete with their linear counterparts, circular businesses will need targeted financial support as well as other forms of assistance at the local level.
What can cities do to ensure the circular economy transition takes place at the speed and scale needed to fulfil the #EUGreenDeal? Find out in our latest blog article! (link in bio)
Photo by Nichika Yoshida on Unsplash
Scotland’s roadmap for decarbonising heat in buildings underscores that environmental sustainability in construction now drives public policy. The plan promotes low carbon design, large-scale retrofitting, and replacement of fossil fuel systems, advancing the transition towards energy-efficient buildings and net zero carbon buildings. The strategy reflects growing recognition that sustainable building design is inseparable from financial resilience and that the life cycle cost of a building must integrate carbon considerations.
Private sector leaders recognise that circular economy in construction principles and resource efficiency in construction are central to sustainable building practices. The retrofit market, once stagnant, is emerging as a key platform for embedding low embodied carbon materials, renewable building materials, and eco-design for buildings. Companies applying circular construction strategies and end-of-life reuse in construction are achieving competitive advantages, using environmental product declarations (EPDs) to improve transparency and demonstrate lifecycle performance.
The OECD’s latest Climate Action Monitor highlights how the carbon footprint of construction remains a major barrier to achieving global net zero carbon goals. Persistent underperformance across developed economies increases pressure for standardised frameworks such as BREEAM and the upcoming BREEAM v7, which link building lifecycle performance with carbon footprint reduction. The report highlights that decarbonising the built environment now depends on systemic adoption of low carbon construction materials and carbon neutral construction processes guided by whole life carbon thinking.
Momentum across both public and private sectors signals a decisive shift from rhetoric to measurable transformation. Actors embracing sustainable design, sustainable material specification, and green construction practices are setting a new economic and regulatory baseline. The narrowing window to deliver net zero whole life carbon outcomes demonstrates that sustainable architecture must operate within a fully integrated model of circular economy and building lifecycle performance, moving from incremental change toward total carbon accountability.
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