Voting can look different in every state, so it’s important to come up with...

Future Earth 2 years ago

Voting can look different in every state, so it’s important to come up with your own plan. http://Vote.org is a great resource for a lot of this information, and your state likely has a voter resources page of its own too. To learn more about candidates and ballot initiatives you can: Visit candidates’ websites where they outline what they support. Read your local news, many cover local candidates and ballot initiatives. Some other good-to-knows: You do not need to vote with the party you’re registered with in this upcoming election (for presidential candidates, senators, or anyone else on the ballot). While whether you vote is public, who you vote for is not. No one will know who you vote for — unless you tell them and advocate for issues that are important to you!

layersDaily Sustainability Digest

Published about 11 hours ago



Regulatory shifts are reshaping sustainable construction across the UK. New research indicates that cumulative rule changes could raise the cost of an average home by £76,000, reflecting the tension between decarbonisation mandates, biodiversity gain, and developers’ profit margins. The sharper policy landscape is accelerating innovation in low carbon design, sustainable building practices, and the adoption of eco-design for buildings closely aligned with life cycle thinking in construction. Developers are turning to whole life carbon assessment and lifecycle assessment to quantify performance, manage embodied carbon in materials, and forecast life cycle cost with precision. These data-driven methods are driving measurable reductions in the carbon footprint of construction and promoting low embodied carbon materials assessed through environmental product declarations (EPDs).

The economic significance of the transition is evident in Scotland’s green economy, which now employs over 100,000 people and contributes £10.2 billion, demonstrating the maturation of green construction as a national industrial pillar. This transformation places environmental sustainability in construction at the centre of policy debates on infrastructure, resource efficiency, and circular economy in construction. It also reinforces the demand for circular construction strategies and end-of-life reuse in construction—cornerstones of the circular economy that underpin carbon neutral construction and net zero carbon buildings.

The industry is evolving from passive emitter to strategic driver in decarbonising the built environment. Net zero whole life carbon has become a definitive metric for sustainable building design and sustainable material specification, supported by frameworks such as BREEAM and forthcoming updates like BREEAM v7. Investing in energy-efficient buildings, green building materials, and renewable building materials is no longer optional; it defines eligibility in a market driven by sustainable design, carbon footprint reduction, and long-term building lifecycle performance. The new regulatory and economic realities embed sustainability as a core measure of modern construction value and competitiveness.

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