🌐Today is the #EarthOvershootDay — the day we’ve exhausted all the natural resources our planet can generate for 2024. Compared to last year, this year's overshoot happened one day earlier.
The circular economy implemented globally can #MoveTheDate in the opposite direction.
Let’s take climate change, for example. We can bring this down from a massive 191% above the boundary to 46% above the boundary. It will be enough to limit temperature rise to 2-degrees and prevent some of the most dangerous impacts of climate breakdown.
Even more positively, the ocean acidification, phosphorus cycle, nitrogen cycle, and land-system change boundaries can all be brought back within safe limits.
Read more about the circular economy’s environmental benefits in the Circularity Gap Report 2023 (link in bio).
Sustainable construction is transitioning from aspiration to structured transformation as environmental sustainability in construction becomes inseparable from economic resilience. Water scarcity and biodiversity loss are rising alongside carbon on the global risk register, pressing designers toward water-efficient and nature-positive strategies embedded in sustainable building design. The movement toward eco-design for buildings reflects a growing maturity in sustainable urban development, where life cycle thinking in construction and measurable biodiversity net gain define long-term value.
The materials agenda is intensifying as research underlines that low embodied carbon materials must be prioritised through rigorous whole life carbon assessment. Green hydrogen allocation for steelmaking highlights the urgency of reducing embodied carbon in materials through resource efficiency in construction and circular construction strategies. High-carbon steel will increasingly be supplanted by renewable building materials and verified green building products endorsed by systems such as BREEAM and BREEAM v7. Developers adopting low carbon construction materials built on environmental product declarations (EPDs) are aligning with the circular economy in construction and lowering the carbon footprint of construction across the supply chain.
France’s revised roadmap toward net zero carbon buildings and broader decarbonising of the built environment signifies a firm policy drive to phase out fossil fuels from buildings by mid-century. Net zero whole life carbon principles are steering the sector towards energy-efficient buildings that integrate low carbon design, advanced load management, and retrofit solutions proven through lifecycle assessment and life cycle cost modelling.
Projects that internalise carbon footprint reduction and end-of-life reuse in construction will maintain competitiveness and finance access. Assets neglecting whole life carbon, sustainable material specification, or credible lifecycle performance risk rapid obsolescence. The industry is pivoting to carbon neutral construction underpinned by sustainable building practices, green infrastructure, and measurable environmental impact of construction. Durable success now depends on embracing circular economy logic and committing to sustainable design that minimises embodied and operational emissions across every phase of the building lifecycle.
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