There used to be places to go to escape the heat on our summer vacations. You...

CNN Climate 10 months ago

There used to be places to go to escape the heat on our summer vacations. You could venture to Norway to see its world-famous fjords. A trip to Scotland for a temperate round of golf. Visiting Sweden's Lapland could bring you face to face with reindeer. But the Arctic's icy grip is loosening as the planet warms, and these cool, far-flung destinations are becoming increasingly vulnerable to heat waves. Legitimate heat waves have struck countries more synonymous with snowy, frigid weather in the winter and cool summers: Sweden, Finland and Norway. The message the planet is sending is simple: You cannot outrun global warming or avoid its effects, particularly when the areas closest to the Arctic are warming the fastest. Of course, "extreme heat" is relative, and one region's heat wave may be another's mild weather. But the impacts of unusual warmth can be deadly, nonetheless. Tap the link in bio for more. 📸 : Sven-Erik Arndt/Arterra/Universal Images Group/Getty Images

layersDaily Sustainability Digest

Published about 5 minutes ago



Extreme heat across Europe is exposing the vulnerabilities of conventional building methods. The construction sector faces a defining moment as both regulatory action and climate impacts accelerate demand for sustainable construction and low carbon design. Research shows that high temperatures threaten efficiency and worker safety on sites built around energy‑intensive operations and fossil‑based materials, raising concern over the carbon footprint of construction and the urgent need for eco-friendly construction standards supported by whole life carbon assessment.

A clear industry shift is emerging toward embodied carbon reduction. Once secondary to operational energy, embodied carbon in materials now drives procurement, finance and planning approvals. Use of low embodied carbon materials, green building materials and renewable building materials demonstrates that green construction is becoming a financial imperative rather than a marketing claim. Market leaders recognise that tracking the building lifecycle performance through lifecycle assessment and life cycle cost analysis ensures credible progress toward net zero carbon buildings and net zero whole life carbon targets.

Across Europe, policy is tightening. The EU’s latest renovation framework embeds binding standards for environmental sustainability in construction, mandating transparency through environmental product declarations (EPDs) and promoting life cycle thinking in construction. The UK Government’s new Climate Security Taskforce and the Climate Change Committee’s intervention underline that decarbonising the built environment now intersects with national resilience.

Investments in circular economy systems, critical mineral supply chains and domestic innovation signal rising momentum for circular construction strategies and resource efficiency in construction. Certification protocols such as BREEAM and BREEAM v7 continue to embed sustainable building design, eco-design for buildings and sustainable building practices into mainstream planning. The sector’s transition to carbon neutral construction illustrates a tangible redefinition of value—where sustainable material specification, end‑of‑life reuse in construction and green infrastructure shape the future of sustainable urban development. Sustainable architecture, once aspirational, now defines policy and profit across the global construction landscape.

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