UKGBC unveils The State of Sustainability

Sustainability Wed, Oct 4, 2017 10:38 AM

The UK Green Building Council (UKGBC) has launched a series of online infographics designed to profile ‘The State of Sustainability in the UK Built Environment’.

The specially commissioned project provides an accessible overview of the industry’s sustainability performance and impact across five priority areas:

With input from wide-ranging stakeholders, including a significant number of UKGBC’s own members such as Arup, BRE and University of Leeds, the project has brought existing datasets together alongside some data that was previously unpublished.

UKGBC views the project outputs as an important step in clarifying the scale of the sustainability challenge facing the built environment industry. As the organisation embarks on its second decade, it calls for all built environment professionals to take responsibility for making positive and transformational change happen.

Stand out stats include:

The landmark series was launched at UKGBC’s largest ever event, with over 400 built environment professionals in attendance to celebrate the charity’s 10th year of operation.

In addition to the ‘State of Sustainability in the UK Built Environment’ project launch, guests also witnessed the unveiling of a new brand identity for UKGBC and heard from David Partridge, Managing Partner of Argent LLP, who takes over as Chair of UKGBC’s Board of Trustees. The event was made possible thanks to the generous support of sponsors: Atelier Ten, Barratt Developments, BRE, Kingspan, Landsec and The Crown Estate.

Julie Hirigoyen, Chief Executive at the UK Green Building Council, said: “This series of infographics and insight has been produced in response to demand from UKGBC members for clarity and perspective on the journey ahead. I’m incredibly proud of what we’ve produced, but it’s not the whole picture: it’s clear that there’s a large amount of important data that simply isn’t being collected. In many cases, the data that does exist has so much variation in time and scope as to make direct comparisons very tricky.

“This project was designed to bring the data that is available to life, and in collaboration with experts, to highlight where we urgently need to either measure new aspects or take different actions to address the magnitude of the challenges we face.

“Now more than ever, our industry must show leadership and galvanise around some of these issues. We need bold and decisive action to make sustainable development truly second nature in the built environment.”