“We’ve taken modest steps forward, here in Bonn.  But too many issues were...

UN Climate Change 2 years ago

“We’ve taken modest steps forward, here in Bonn.  But too many issues were left unresolved. We’ve left ourselves with a very steep mountain to climb to achieve ambitious outcomes in Baku.”    In his closing speech of the #JuneClimateMeetings, UN Climate Change Executive Secretary Simon Stiell called upon all countries to step up their climate action efforts ahead of #COP29 in Baku in November.    Reflecting on the progress made so far, he stressed the need to leave business-as-usual behind.    “Don’t leave the hardest work to the eleventh hour,” he urged delegates. “The secretariat will be with you every step of the way.”    Read the full closing speech via link in bio.

layersDaily Sustainability Digest

Published about 5 hours ago



Britain’s long-awaited Circular Economy Growth Plan has become pivotal to sustainable construction across the UK, embedding circular economy principles at the core of national policy. Businesses and environmental organisations warn that without a unified framework for whole life carbon assessment, resource efficiency in construction, and end‑of‑life reuse in construction, progress toward net zero carbon buildings will falter. Scotland’s political agenda confirms the recalibration of built‑environment strategy, where embodied carbon, lifecycle assessment, and low carbon design are merging with planning reform to accelerate decarbonising the built environment. Policy now aligns climate targets with sustainable building design, turning environmental sustainability in construction into an economic advantage rather than a regulatory burden.

Technology is reshaping industry assumptions. Innovative fastening systems and improved quality control for heat‑pump installation demonstrate how life cycle cost and building lifecycle performance depend as much on competence as on materials. Reducing the carbon footprint of construction demands rigorous analysis of embodied carbon in materials, life cycle thinking in construction, and eco‑design for buildings that extend durability and adaptability.

The new UK–US fusion energy collaboration, supported by AECOM, signals the fusion of energy innovation with sustainable building practices and green construction supply chains. The market’s shift toward low embodied carbon materials, renewable building materials, and circular construction strategies reflects an ambition to normalise carbon neutral construction within both public and private sectors. Across the industry, impatience is replacing rhetoric; sustainable design, BREEAM certification, and net zero whole life carbon targets are now baseline expectations.

Efficiency, transparency, and sustainable material specification are becoming the determinants of genuine green infrastructure. Sustainable architecture is evolving from aspiration to standard, advancing sustainability as a measurable, deliverable principle for the global construction sector.

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