The world agreed to a new climate deal in Baku, Azerbaijan, Saturday, with...

CNN Climate 1 year ago

The world agreed to a new climate deal in Baku, Azerbaijan, Saturday, with wealthy countries pledging to provide $300 billion annually by 2035 to poorer countries to help them cope with the increasingly catastrophic impacts of the climate crisis — a figure many developing countries criticized as vastly insufficient. The agreement came after more than two weeks of bitter divisions and fractious negotiations, thrown into chaos by walkouts, boycotts, political spats and open celebrations of fossil fuels. The amount pledged, however, falls far short of the $1.3 trillion developing countries have consistently said is needed to help them cope with a climate crisis they have done the least to cause. Read more at the link in @cnn's bio. 📷: Murad Sezer/Reuters

layersDaily Sustainability Digest

Published about 9 hours ago



Homes England’s backing of a multi-million-pound Richborough debt facility shows that sustainable construction is entering a more exacting phase in which finance, planning and build-out matter as much as innovation. Public support is becoming central to decarbonising the built environment because sustainable building design, sustainable design and eco-design for buildings cannot scale without patient capital and a dependable pipeline. Schemes that advance will need credible whole life carbon assessment, lifecycle assessment and life cycle cost evidence, with far closer scrutiny of whole life carbon, embodied carbon, embodied carbon in materials and the carbon footprint of construction to support net zero carbon buildings and net zero whole life carbon targets.

SDCL Efficiency’s planned wind-down is a sharp warning that low carbon building and energy-efficient buildings are not automatically a bankable proposition, even where environmental sustainability in construction is compelling. The Considerate Constructors’ Scheme’s revised checklist and scoring model in the UK and Ireland raises the bar for measurable responsible construction, strengthening demand for BREEAM, BREEAM v7 and stronger building lifecycle performance. Developers and contractors that can prove circular economy and circular economy in construction principles, life cycle thinking in construction, resource efficiency in construction, sustainable material specification, environmental product declarations (EPDs), low embodied carbon materials and end-of-life reuse in construction will be better placed to deliver green construction, eco-friendly construction and sustainable building practices with commercial durability.

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