Update from the Arctic and Antarctic 🧊
Arctic sea ice likely reached its annual minimum extent on Sept.19, making 2023 the 6th lowest year in the satellite record, according to researchers at @NASA and NSIDC. The decline of Arctic sea ice is part of a decades-long response to warming temperatures.
Meanwhile, Antarctic sea ice reached its lowest maximum extent on record on Sept. 10, when the ice cover should have been growing at a much faster pace during the darkest and coldest months. ​​Scientists think the slow growth could be from a combination of factors like El Niño, wind patterns, and warming ocean temperatures.
#NASA #Earth #Climate #ClimateChange #Ice #SeaIce #Antarctica #Arctic #EarthFromSpace
Regulatory uncertainty in Europe highlights persistent friction between ambition and delivery. Delays to the EU’s deforestation regulations continue to complicate the sourcing of renewable building materials such as certified timber and biomass. These materials are central to eco-design for buildings and life cycle cost evaluation within green construction projects seeking BREEAM or BREEAM v7 certification. The administrative lag is raising concerns about the traceability of products covered by environmental product declarations (EPDs) and the coherence of sustainability benchmark systems across borders.
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