We continue to FIGHT PLASTICS 💪 After tackling single-use plastics, we need...

EU Environment and Planet 1 year ago

We continue to FIGHT PLASTICS 💪 After tackling single-use plastics, we need to address microplastic pollution. Microplastics under 5 mm in size are extremely difficult to remove and very persistent. The EU agrees on new rules to reduce microplastic pollution a regulation to tackle microplastic pollution from losses of plastic pellets – the industrial raw materials used to make plastic products. These losses are the 3️⃣rd largest source of unintentional microplastic releases into the EU environment. ✋🏻Time to say NO to microplastics in our environment. #noplastic #plasticfree

layersDaily Sustainability Digest

Published about 6 hours ago



Global climate governance is tightening as the construction sector embeds measurable carbon management across the project lifecycle. The UN’s scrutiny of national climate plans signals imminent shifts in codes, procurement conditions, and finance that will influence sustainable construction strategies and accelerate decarbonising the built environment. In the UK, structured programmes are formalising whole life carbon assessment as standard practice, translating sustainability policies into operational governance. Measured baselines, reduction pathways, and data verification now define sustainable building design, with emphasis on embodied carbon and whole life carbon performance driving procurement and material specification.

Suppliers and contractors face growing pressure to demonstrate compliance through verifiable lifecycle assessment and transparent reporting of the carbon footprint of construction assets. The agenda extends beyond familiar certifications such as BREEAM or BREEAM v7; the debate now centres on net zero whole life carbon targets and the capacity to reduce embodied carbon in materials through low carbon construction methods, renewable building materials, and circular economy in construction principles.

Projects adopting resource efficiency in construction, low embodied carbon materials, and life cycle cost optimisation are moving towards genuine carbon neutral construction. Sustainable building practices now demand integration of eco-design for buildings and life cycle thinking in construction to align design intent with operational and embodied impacts. The challenge is achieving these gains without undermining cost or delivery.

Leaders are prioritising environmental sustainability in construction as a core business driver. Success will depend on embedding circular construction strategies, improving building lifecycle performance, and validating environmental product declarations (EPDs) within green construction pipelines. Firms that treat standardised carbon governance as a licence to operate will not only meet evolving regulations but position themselves at the forefront of low carbon design, sustainable material specification, and net zero carbon buildings that define the future of sustainable urban development.

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