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Building and Construction Sector Show Collective Force at COP28

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The built environment was centre stage during the ‘Multilevel Action, Urbanisation and Built Environment/Transport’ day at the UN Climate Summit COP28. The World Green Building Council (WorldGBC), a global network of 75+ national Green Building Councils (GBCs), and leading businesses in the buildings and construction sector presented a unified call to action to political leaders, stressing the critical role of the built environment to deliver climate solutions.

 

The Open Letter was accompanied by a policy briefing that laid out the regulatory outcomes urgently needed to scale up action and deliver on the sector’s huge potential. It also supported the Buildings Breakthrough (a high-level political announcement that was launched and endorsed by 25+ countries in the context of the Breakthrough Agenda global process), calling for ‘near-zero emission and resilient buildings as the new normal by 2030’.

The statement

The Open Letter went beyond simply mitigating the negative impacts of the sector’s emissions, and made bold claims about its potential for enormous contributions to social equity and financial prosperity. The letter highlighted that beyond the opportunity to reduce 37% of total carbon emissions, the building and construction sector could also create $1.5 trillion in sustainable investment opportunities in emerging markets, and lift 2.8 billion people out of energy poverty.

 

The letter was fronted by signatories of WorldGBC’s Net Zero Carbon Buildings Commitment (a leadership initiative in the sustainable built environment arena), WorldGBC corporate partners (including ARUP, Buro Happold, CEMEX, Saint Gobain, Signify, Siemens, Skanska, Stora Enso, Schneider Electric, Knauf Insulation, WSP) and Green Building Councils (representing 46,000 private and public sector members around the world). A total of over 350 organisations and businesses put their support behind the letter and the numbers are growing daily. These leaders operate across every region on the planet, both on a local and global scale.

The challenge

The building and construction sector accounts for nearly 40% of global energy-related carbon emissions. It is a huge industry nexus and demand sector, with cities consuming 70% of all global resources. Whilst awareness of the sector’s impact and its potential as a climate solution is rising, so are its operating emissions, which have grown by an average of 1% year on year from 2015 to 2021.

 

The resilience of the global building stock is insufficient to cope with a growing population alongside the impacts of climate change. Flooding and extreme heat pose an imminent risk not only to human life, but also to social cohesion and economic stability.

 

Last but certainly not least, the financial stakes are high. We saw companies that are not treating decarbonisation as a serious business need and are therefore already paying a carbon premium in the short term; in the long term, they will miss out on emerging opportunities to secure market share, faced with shifting decarbonisation investment and regulatory environments.

The Open Letter ask

The WorldGBC network and its partners are calling for:

  • Strong political leadership to scale the sustainable transformation of the built environment.
  • Climate Mitigation: Parties commit to the integration of building codes, sub-national policy and commitment within their Nationally Determined Contributions, and pledge to double their energy efficiency improvements and triple global renewable energy capacity by 2030.
  • Climate Adaptation: Parties agree on a global goal for adaptation and recognise the role of buildings in anticipating, adapting, and responding to climate impacts and commit to making greater efforts to integrate resilience and adaptation into existing policies and programmes, including within the building sector.
  • Climate Finance: Parties agree to increased funding for energy efficiency improvements and Loss and Damage, and support a global reform of financial institutions for more just, equitable and effective debt lending and borrowing.
  • The Global Stocktake: Parties to commit to the Buildings Breakthrough as a platform for collaboration between national governments and stakeholders to accelerate action and optimise the role of buildings in closing the gaps identified in the Global Stocktake.

 

Cristina Gamboa, CEO, WorldGBC, said, “Climate Action is often misunderstood as human efforts to save the planet. In fact, it is humanity’s effort to save itself and the environment we have created to facilitate prosperity, equity and growth. It’s about every government that wants to maintain stability and cohesion, every business that wants to remain successful and financially viable, and every person who enjoys the comforts of modern life. In the built environment, we are falling short of the goals that will preserve us. And we don’t need to. Solutions already exist to secure a better future. We can still get back on track. To do that, we need an enabling policy environment, industry ambition, and finance to leverage the huge potential of the built environment. The numbers of industry leaders backing our Open Letter make a powerful statement to send to policymakers. The industry is ready for change. The world is calling for change. This COP28 can be the moment where leaders uphold their commitments and set out an energy-efficient, regenerative, and just transition for the building sector. Are you ready?”

 

Find out more here or follow the campaign on social media at #BuildingTheTransition.

 

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Singapore Pavilion at COP28 Showcases Robust Ecosystem for Accelerating Collective Climate Action

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The Singapore Pavilion at the 28th Conference of the Parties of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (COP28) successfully concluded on 12 December 2023. Themed “Accelerating Collective Climate Action”, the programmes at the Pavilion showcased  Singapore’s commitment to global climate goals, emphasised the city-state’s vision to achieve net zero  by 2050, and highlighted innovative and collaborative solutions backed by a strong ecosystem of partners across the private and people sectors, international organisations, and governments.

 

The Pavilion attracted in-person visitorship of more than 6,000, along with nearly 60,000 unique online visitors across its 12 days of programming. The diverse range of programmes – involving around 100  partner entities, including panel discussions, workshops, fireside chats as well as “pitch days” — covered multifaceted climate issues and provided attendees with opportunities for knowledge exchange and partnership development.

 

Numerous noteworthy announcements, launches and memoranda of understanding (MOU) signings took place at the Pavilion, as well as key announcements demonstrating concrete action Singapore is taking to support and accelerate the green transition in the region and beyond. These include the FAST P (Financing Asia’s Transition Partnership), Singapore-Asia Taxonomy and the Transition Credits  Coalition (TRACTION). In addition, Singapore signed its first Implementation Agreement with Papua  New Guinea on carbon credits cooperation under Article 6 of the Paris Agreement.

 

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During the Pavilion’s closing ceremony, Minister for Sustainability and the Environment Grace Fu said: “I am heartened by the ‘bias to action’ that we have witnessed here at the Pavilion. Many new climate initiatives and partnerships have been unveiled on this stage, by the Singapore government as well as our Partners. Like Singapore itself, our Pavilion has been ‘small, but mighty’. It is not about size, but impact. It is not about quantity, but quality. And it is not about making a once-off splash, but a sustained  commitment with follow-through actions.”

 

The Singapore Pavilion was visited by foreign dignitaries, organisational and business leaders and key change-makers in the global climate ecosystem, reflecting Singapore’s position as a trusted regional and international partner that convenes climate collaborators and solutions. The Pavilion has provided a space for the private, public and people sectors from various countries and backgrounds to gather and work towards advancing climate action and building a better and more sustainable future for all.

 

All images courtesy of COP28 Singapore Pavilion.