You are wasting more food than you can imagine!🍞🍝🍌   In the...

EU Environment and Planet 2 months ago

You are wasting more food than you can imagine!🍞🍝🍌   In the EU: 🇪🇺we generated 132 kg of food waste per inhabitant in 2022 🇪🇺households generated 54% of food waste, accounting for 72 kg per inhabitant   Globally: 🏡households waste over 1 billion meals worth of edible food every day 🚚around 13.2% of food produced is lost between harvest and retail   We can change this trend. Buy responsibly, compost your food waste and get creative in the kitchen to avoid waste.   Less food waste = more sustainable production and consumption = circular economy #flwday #foodloss

layersDaily Sustainability Digest

Published about 7 hours ago



The sustainable construction sector faces rising tension between climate commitments and cost pressures. Nearly half of UK firms report delaying or suspending green initiatives due to escalating expenses, exposing the fragile balance between economic viability and environmental sustainability in construction. This slowdown threatens progress toward whole life carbon targets and undermines momentum in embodied carbon reduction. Investors and developers are reassessing how whole life carbon assessments and life cycle costs align with tightening regulation and ESG expectations, prompting closer evaluation of resource efficiency in construction and sustainable building practices.

Debates over social equity in the clean energy transition reveal persistent divides, with many corporations overlooking how labour and communities will adapt to low carbon building strategies. Addressing these gaps is fundamental to a circular economy in construction, where end-of-life reuse and sustainable material specification require broader policy coordination and transparent environmental product declarations (EPDs). Without this alignment, corporate sustainability pledges risk missing vital dimensions of environmental justice.

Recent data offers renewed optimism. Research indicates that behavioural change and materials efficiency can accelerate pathways toward net zero carbon buildings and carbon neutral construction at comparatively low cost. Life cycle thinking in construction and low embodied carbon materials are proving critical contributors to decarbonising the built environment. The latest modelling reinforces that energy-efficient buildings and sustainable building design offer the fastest route to carbon footprint reduction, as explored in a new study highlighting energy demand reductions, with BREEAM and the upcoming BREEAM v7 framework enabling stronger verification of sustainable design credentials.

Progress towards net zero whole life carbon depends on scaling eco-design for buildings, renewable building materials, and circular construction strategies that improve building lifecycle performance. These shifts signal a structural transformation in sustainable architecture and green construction. Achieving measurable carbon footprint reduction will require integrated lifecycle assessment and evidence-based design, repositioning low carbon construction materials as a core enabler of green infrastructure and sustainable urban development.

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Whole Life Carbon is a platform for the entire construction industry—both 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 get in touch.