The world's largest iceberg is on the move again, drifting through the Southern Ocean after months stuck spinning on the same spot, scientists from the British Antarctic Survey said.
Spanning an area of 1,418-square-miles when measured in August – slightly bigger than Rhode Island – the A23a iceberg has been carefully tracked by scientists ever since it calved from the Filchner-Ronne ice shelf in 1986.
Scientists have said that, while this particular iceberg probably broke away as part of the natural growth cycle of the ice shelf and won't contribute to rising sea levels, climate change is driving worrying changes in this vast, isolated continent, with potentially devastating consequences for global sea level rise.
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📸 : Richard Sidey/Eyos Expeditions
Nature and water are now shaping core commercial and policy decisions in sustainable construction. In the UK, the proposed relaxation of Biodiversity Net Gain rules has triggered warnings from the UK Green Building Council and hundreds of construction firms that such a move would undermine investor confidence and the national transition toward environmental sustainability in construction. Developers have already embedded whole life carbon assessment, life cycle cost analysis and circular economy principles into planning, design, and procurement. Disrupting these frameworks could increase the carbon footprint of construction, delay projects, and erode progress toward net zero carbon buildings.
Water stewardship is becoming integral to sustainable building design across global markets. Urban developers are incorporating resilience to drought and flooding into low carbon building strategies, supported by green infrastructure and eco-design for buildings that reduce embodied carbon in materials. The growing threat to glaciers and polar ice is now influencing insurance and asset valuation, making life cycle thinking in construction an essential discipline for managing climate-related risk.
Layoffs across carbon capture enterprises reinforce the need for immediate decarbonisation within the built environment through material efficiency, adaptive reuse, and low embodied carbon materials. The construction sector is prioritising renewable building materials, resource efficiency in construction and sustainable building practices that deliver measurable reductions in embodied carbon. These measures align with BREEAM and BREEAM v7 standards and strengthen pathways to net zero whole life carbon performance.
Firms that adopt sustainable material specification, implement end-of-life reuse in construction and apply circular construction strategies demonstrate long-term value creation within a low carbon design framework. Such practices support carbon footprint reduction, enhance building lifecycle performance, and accelerate the shift toward carbon neutral construction. By treating ecology and hydrology as structural parameters, not optional aesthetics, the industry is defining a future in which sustainable design, circular economy in construction and whole life carbon management drive resilience, profitability, and genuine sustainability.
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