The U.S. Department of Energy’s multimillion-dollar announcement includes...

Inside Climate News 2 hours ago

The U.S. Department of Energy’s multimillion-dollar announcement includes $350 million to invest in new coal power plants in Anchorage, Alaska, and Mount Storm, West Virginia, and upgrading a Puerto Rico coal-fired plant while restarting a Maryland facility that shut down in 2024. But coal has been on the decline nationwide as an energy resource for decades. Experts consider it to be the most polluting fossil fuel for power generation. “If you’re going to pick between living next to any sort of power plant, coal should be at the bottom of your list,” said Mary Willis, a professor in the Department of Epidemiology at the Boston University School of Public Health. 🔗 Read more on our website, linked in our bio ✍️ @stevenrodasca 📸 Getty Images and Lee Hedgepeth

layersDaily Sustainability Digest

Published about 3 hours ago



The construction sector is entering a decisive phase in its transition toward environmental sustainability in construction, defined by practical integration rather than experimentation. In Germany, a solar development on rewetted peatland is generating renewable power while restoring ecosystems. The project demonstrates how eco-friendly construction can combine energy generation with ecological recovery, achieving both carbon footprint reduction and measurable biodiversity gains. It reflects a circular economy in construction approach, where land use and infrastructure planning advance resource efficiency in construction and champion low-impact construction principles.

In the UK, government planning reforms for nuclear fusion infrastructure signal a strategic move toward decarbonising the built environment. The alignment between regulation and technology introduces a new layer of sustainable building design, where zero-emission energy facilities will require robust whole life carbon assessment and life cycle cost evaluation. This regulatory evolution builds momentum for net zero whole life carbon strategies, guiding planners toward long-term resilience and low carbon design.

Global discussion within UN climate forums is intensifying pressure to reduce embodied carbon in materials and address the carbon footprint of construction. The industry’s pivot from incremental efficiency to large-scale decarbonisation necessitates lifecycle assessment and eco-design for buildings to ensure every phase, from specification to end-of-life reuse in construction, supports a sustainable urban development model. Adopting BREEAM and the upcoming BREEAM v7 standards is reinforcing accountability for embodied carbon and promoting low carbon construction materials.

Digital innovation is shaping this transformation as sustainable architecture adopts artificial intelligence to improve building lifecycle performance and enhance life cycle thinking in construction. Experts emphasise that precision and data transparency through environmental product declarations (EPDs) will underpin credible sustainable building practices.

Energy generation, regulation and materials science are converging around the same objective: a construction model built on circular construction strategies, whole life carbon management and measurable environmental outcomes. The foundations for truly sustainable construction are becoming tangible—combining green infrastructure, renewable building materials and carbon neutral construction to redefine what sustainability in the built environment means.

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