Wildlife trafficking is one of the most profitable criminal activities in the world, with devastating effects on biodiversity đŚđâ¨
The Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES) protects:â¨đ´ over 40,900 endangered speciesâ¨đŚ about 6,610 species of animalsâ¨đż 34,310 species of plantsâ¨
It regulates international trade to prevent overexploitation â from live animals and plants to products such as ivory, leather goods, timber and traditional medicines.
By becoming a party to @cites in 2015, the EU strengthened its role in global efforts to protect wildlife and prevent illegal trade.â¨
This work supports the KunmingâMontreal Global Biodiversity Framework, particularly:
- Target 4: Halting species extinction and recovering threatened species
- Target 5: Ensuring that the use, harvesting and trade of wild species is sustainable, safe and legalâ¨
Together we can protect the worldâs wildlife from extinction đâ¨â¨â¨#COP30 #UNBiodiversity #ForNature #Wildlife
Innovation in sustainable construction is entering a decisive phase as technologies for decarbonising the built environment mature. New materials, digital workflows and renewable fuel systems are converging to reduce the carbon footprint of construction and align the sector with net zero carbon objectives. Johnson Mattheyâs deployment of biomethanol technology in China demonstrates how scalable low carbon building solutions can reshape global supply chains through sustainable building practices and circular economy principles.
Architects and engineers are re-evaluating Whole Life Carbon and Whole Life Carbon Assessment impacts across retrofit and redevelopment projects. Londonâs Bellâs Yard retrofit and Stratfordâs Ash Mews transformation exemplify sustainable building design that integrates life cycle thinking in construction with ecoâdesign for buildings to limit demolition waste and improve resource efficiency in construction. The shift from newâbuild excess to adaptive reuse illustrates low impact construction driven by whole life carbon assessment and lifecycle assessment methodologies.
Artificial intelligence is now embedded in project scheduling, lifecycle optimisation and performance monitoring. Dataâled tools are refining sustainable material specification, supporting carbon footprint reduction and enhancing building lifecycle performance. Digital integration is accelerating environmental sustainability in construction, helping project teams measure Life Cycle Cost and improve the environmental product declarations (EPDs) of green building materials and low carbon construction materials.
The transition remains uneven. Illegal waste practices and fragmented standards continue to hinder circular construction strategies and the evolution of carbon neutral construction. Progress depends on aligning finance, regulation and design around a coherent Circular Economy in construction model. Achieving true sustainability will require net zero whole life carbon frameworks, consistent BREEAM and BREEAM v7 adoption, and deeper commitment to ecoâfriendly construction and sustainable architecture. When such measures become mainstream, green construction will define the language of sustainable urban development and transform the environmental impact of construction worldwide.
Whole Life Carbon is a platform for the entire construction industryâboth in the UK and internationally. We track the latest publications, debates, and events related to whole life guidance and sustainability. If you have any enquiries or opinions to share, please do
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