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

EU Environment and Planet 9 months 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

Published about 11 hours ago



Technologically advanced materials are reshaping sustainable construction as carbon-sequestering innovations progress from concept to deployment. Heidelberg Materials’ integration of CarbonCure concrete technology demonstrates how captured CO₂ can enhance strength while reducing the embodied carbon of materials, directly addressing the carbon footprint of construction. This marks a decisive step toward net zero whole life carbon outcomes and aligns with the broader drive to decarbonise the built environment through low carbon construction materials.

The sector is also seeing renewed focus on renewable building materials such as engineered timber. Products promoted by manufacturers like West Fraser highlight timber’s dual capacity for carbon storage and cost efficiency, reinforcing its role in sustainable building design. Architects and developers are now applying lifecycle assessment and whole life carbon assessment principles to balance structural performance, life cycle cost, and the environmental sustainability in construction practices.

Policy and regulation are reinforcing these shifts. Insights from COP30 and the UK’s fiscal frameworks confirm that sustainable building practices, embodied carbon reduction, and energy-efficient buildings form the basis for measurable sustainability within green construction policy. BREEAM and upcoming BREEAM v7 standards are accelerating adoption of eco-design for buildings, ensuring that net zero carbon buildings move from aspiration to obligation across urban infrastructure.

Emerging sensing and data systems are redefining resource efficiency in construction. High-resolution soil analysis tools such as those within the Earth Rover programme exemplify circular construction strategies, improving site selection and supporting the circular economy in construction by optimising natural carbon sinks and reducing environmental impact of construction.

This collective momentum signals the next phase in low carbon design: an integrated approach where low embodied carbon materials, sustainable material specification, and building lifecycle performance guide strategic investment. Sustainable architecture and eco-friendly construction are no longer niche pursuits but core drivers of carbon neutral construction and long-term environmental sustainability.

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