Today is the International Day of Action for Rivers 🏞️ Take a look at the...

EU Environment and Planet 1 year ago

Today is the International Day of Action for Rivers 🏞️ Take a look at the longest river in Italy – the Po river. Rising in the Cottian Alps and emptying into the Adriatic Sea, the Po’s drainage basin covers over 70,000 km2, creating Italy’s most fertile plain. This image of northern Italy, produced with data from the Copernicus Land Monitoring Service Hydro River Network Database, shows the Po River and its many tributaries. Copernicus data is key to monitoring bodies of water around the world, delivering essential insights for their conservation and sustainable management. In Europe, we preserve our rivers because we know they play an important role for agriculture, industry, and wildlife. That’s why our Biodiversity Strategy aims to restore 25,000 km of free-flowing rivers by 2030.

layersDaily Sustainability Digest

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Policy urgency and material innovation are reshaping sustainable construction across the UK. The Climate Change Committee’s call for sustained investment in resilience signals a decisive move from ambition to obligation, aligning infrastructure with environmental sustainability in construction and revealing the true cost of inaction. Adaptation spending that targets heatwaves, flooding, and infrastructure vulnerability is increasingly linked to whole life carbon assessment and lifecycle assessment, bringing accountability to the carbon footprint of construction.

Technological progress is reflecting the same shift. Floating solar energy and large-scale energy storage projects demonstrate sustainable building practices grounded in low carbon design and resource efficiency in construction. Net zero whole life carbon principles are informing new models of building lifecycle performance, driving the transition toward energy-efficient buildings that support national decarbonisation goals.

Material choices are now a defining factor in sustainable building design. The demand for low embodied carbon materials and renewable building materials is rising as developers pursue circular construction strategies and end-of-life reuse in construction. The evolution of low carbon construction materials, guided by standards such as BREEAM and BREEAM v7, signals the integration of eco-design for buildings with rigorous sustainability metrics.

The sector faces increasing scrutiny over greenwashing, but genuine progress is emerging through carbon neutral construction and sustainable material specification that reflect measurable reductions in embodied carbon in materials and whole life carbon. This convergence of regulation, innovation, and life cycle cost awareness is moving sustainable construction from niche to norm, advancing the circular economy in construction and accelerating the path to net zero carbon buildings.

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