Exhibition & Webinar Tue, Mar 22, 2016 5:31 PM
What do the following have in common? Future cities, green energy, design, retrofit and refurbishment, water, waste and materials, building performance and BIM? The answer, says Dr Paul Toyne, Director of Sustainability at Balfour Beatty, is that they are the topic themes for Ecobuild 2014 that starts on March 4.
"Broadly speaking if re-ordered in a sequence that follows the built environment project life cycle, and with the addition of finance and a general heading of procurement to include contracts, they are the right themes to run the UK’s most important live experiment," he continues.
"This experiment would have the hypothesis: 'does the integrated delivery of them using the principles of sustainable development result in a sustainable built environment'.
"Finance is a key ingredient if our experiment is to get off the ground. The recent flooding has brought into sharp relief that climate change is a national security issue. As Nicholas Stern’s Review on the economics of climate change told us back in 2006 delaying moving to a low carbon economy and future-proofing of built environment will make it more expensive for us.
"Stern’s economic assessment increased from 1% of GDP in 2006, to 2% in 2008. How much today in 2014, but more importantly how much in 2018 or later? It should not take the wettest January on record and flooding across vast areas of the UK for us to actually focus on this critical national issue. The costs of the clean-up are still being estimated, but surely we should invest to save against similar future costs. So my experiment would include Government investing in a better “insurance policy” through mitigation and adaptation measures.
"Britain’s sustainable building sector is second to none – we are world leaders in resilience engineering. We would urge the Government to utilise the expertise of the sector to be showcased at this year’s Ecobuild conference. The UK infrastructure sector has the skills, experience and talent to deliver a more sustainable built environment. We want to work in partnership with Government to develop the enabling framework and investment industry needs to deliver these objectives.
"Our citizens’ deserve a much better quality of life than currently offered and we have the professionals that can deliver this - security, health and well-being are fundamental – which includes protection against flooding.
"Industry, Government, sustainability experts and climate change scientists all have a responsibility to make our towns and cities more resilient to climate change whilst pursuing the low carbon economy – creating local employment opportunities and establishing skills exportable to international markets – all aligned to the government’s Industrial Strategy.
"So what do you think? Come to Ecobuild and visit our dedicated professionals who are already designing the resilient, sustainable future of Britain."
Featured News
A new and innovative range of portable ward furniture, especially made to meet the...
Futurebuild 2021 has been postponed to March 2021 to allow organisers to "deliver an...
BUILDING PRODUCT DIRECTORY - LATEST PRODUCTS
Straightcurve® – headquartered in Australia, is renowned for high-end innovative garden edging,...
The Kingspan RLG600 raised access floor panel is intended for light office use and is capable of...
Kingspan RHG600 Simploc is the heavy grade floor system, capable of handling up to a 12kN/m2...
CONSTRUCTION VIDEOS - LATEST VIDEOS
“Building with stone wool insulated sandwich panels” written by Professor Imperadori, is now...
Portakabin | Installation at the iconic Admiralty Arch, London