Nature Based Solutions | UKGBC /our-work/topics/nature-based-solutions/ The voice of our sustainable built environment Mon, 01 Jun 2026 11:41:48 +0000 en-GB hourly 1 /wp-content/uploads/2023/02/cropped-UKGBC-favicon-1.png Nature Based Solutions | UKGBC /our-work/topics/nature-based-solutions/ 32 32 Regenerative Places Consultation Launch /events/regenerative-places-consultation-launch/ Thu, 14 May 2026 10:53:49 +0000 /?post_type=event&p=70337 We invite you to respond to our consultation on our new Regenerative Places Framework. This webinar will provide you with the opportunity to learn more about the Regenerative Places task group, the framework itself and ask questions.

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This event will introduce the Regenerative Places Framework for Housing and invite you to give feedback to ensure it’s clear and widely supported. The Framework explores how we can enable place-based regenerative approaches to home retrofit and new housing, catalysing long-term economic, social and ecological benefits.

In this webinar, we’ll walk you through the proposal and the key questions we’re seeking feedback on. This is your chance to help shape the future of the industry.

Why Attend?

Hear about

the Regenerative Places Framework from the team who is writing and developing it.

Get clarity

on what’s being proposed and how to give feedback.

Discover

how to contribute to its finalisation and be part of our regenerative places work going forward.

Who Should Attend?

This event is designed for anyone who may be interested in responding to the Regenerative Places Framework consultation, particularly those involved in housing development or retrofit. It is an opportunity for all built environment stakeholders to provide feedback. We encourage anyone with an interest in regenerative design in the built environment to join this webinar and respond to the consultation, from experienced professionals to those with a general interest.

WITH THANKS TO OUR PARTNERS

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Framework for a Nature-Positive Built Environment Launch (online) /events/framework-for-a-nature-positive-built-environment-launch/ Thu, 18 Dec 2025 10:27:52 +0000 /?post_type=event&p=68793 Join us for the launch of the Nature Positive Framework for the Built Environment.

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About this Event

This webinar will launch a new Framework for a Nature-Positive Built Environment. Building on existing guidance and aligning to the global goal to halt and revers nature loss by 2030 (using a 2020 baseline), and to achieve full recovery by 2050, this Framework sets out the steps and actions for built environment stakeholders to implement across assets, infrastructure and within organisations.

During this session, we will provide an overview of the Framework’s content, share industry specialist perspectives, and highlight practical actions you can start taking now.

You will leave with a clear understanding of how this Framework can support the transition to a nature-positive built environment.

Why Attend

Discover

what nature positive really means for the built environment and why it matters.

Understand

the benefits of a nature positive approach for your projects and organisation.

Get practical guidance

on the steps and actions you can take to start implementing it today.

Who Should Attend?

  • Design and Construction teams – Architects, urban planners, engineers, consultants, contractors.
  • Supply Chain – Materials suppliers and product manufacturers.
  • Developers, asset owners and managers, and occupiers.
  • Policymakers – local authorities and national governments.

Speakers

  • Chair – Yetunde Abdul, UKGBC Director of Industry Transformation
  • Keynote Speaker – Dr Tony Juniper CBE, Natural England
  • Project Lead – Macarena Cárdenas, UKGBC Senior Advisor: Resilience and Nature.

UKGBC cancellation and refund policy

Please see our website for more details on our cancellations and refunds: /ukgbc-cancellation-and-refund-policy/ 

Resilience & Nature Programme Partners

With thanks to our programme partners who make our work on nature possible.

PROJECT PARTNER

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Nature in Contracts /news/nature-in-contracts/ Fri, 19 Sep 2025 08:46:26 +0000 /?post_type=news&p=67815 Yesterday, we joined over 50 individuals from across industry for the “Nature in Contracts” in-person…

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Yesterday, we joined over 50 individuals from across industry for the “Nature in Contracts” in-person event, a collaborative effort led by The Chancery Lane, and strongly supported by Hoare Lea and us at UKGBC.

It was inspiring to see such an engaged room discussing how something as technical as contracts can actually become a lever for real change.

In my lightning talk, I drew on our work at UKGBC developing the Framework Definition for a Nature-Positive Built Environment, for which we are collaborating with the industry to help add clarity on what nature-positive really means for our sector, and I’m excited to share some of those insights below.

For me, the most important thing about contracts is this: they aren’t just paperwork or protection for liability. They can drive accountability, foster collaboration, and embed nature-positive action throughout the built environment.

Why Nature-Positive Matters

The global goal is clear: to halve and reverse biodiversity loss by 2030 and to be nature-positive by 2050.

The urgency is real. In just 50 years, global wildlife populations have collapsed by 73 percent. In the UK, wildlife has fallen by 9 percent since 1970, on top of centuries of decline. These numbers can feel abstract, and it is easy to feel detached from them.

But let me bring it closer to home. Nature has no boundaries. Ecosystems are continuous, and depletion here or on the other side of the world ultimately affects the air we breathe, the water we drink, and the materials we rely on- where the most vulnerable ones are the most affected.

When nature is depleted, people and businesses are at risk. The physical, financial, social, and moral consequences of inaction are enormous, and I am sure that anyone reading this blog would like a limited and depleted future.

The built environment’s role

The built environment sits at the heart of this challenge, but for the same reason, is a huge part of the solution.

If you consider that over half of all global resource extraction feeds construction, and that cities drive 75% of biodiversity loss through land use, material demand, and energy use, how much good, how much nature enhancement , could we give back to nature if we acted appropriately for it?

There are so many chances where we can get this right. Every stage of the building cycle, from materials to operation to waste, leaves an impact on nature. How could it be if that impact were positive?

The exam question is: What actions can the built environment take to halt biodiversity loss and enhance nature? And ultimately, what does a nature-positive built environment look like?

A Framework for Change

This is where ҵ’s Framework Definition for a Nature-Positive Built Environment comes in.

As project lead, I’ve seen how valuable it can be to have a shared vision that sets out scope, responsibilities, and the concrete actions needed to reverse biodiversity loss. The framework is about ensuring that across organisations, projects, and supply chains, stakeholders are aware of their impacts and equipped to make better decisions for nature at every stage.

Here is where contracts can come in.

Clear blue summer skies and vibrant green patchwork fields above the iconic Cotswold village of Painswick, with its honey coloured limestone cottages and historic church spire. Representative of nature and biodiversity.

Why Contracts?

Embed accountability

for nature-positive actions.

Act as a reminder

of what’s necessary for a thriving future.

Serve as an invitation

to collaborate, aligning diverse stakeholders around a shared commitment to do better for people and nature.

There is no single silver bullet to becoming nature-positive. We need a diversity of actions, and contracts can be one practical tool we have for adding business resilience, as well as, and most importantly, environmental resilience.

Here’s What I Captured from the Discussions

1

Nature as an Investment

Nature isn’t a nice to have. Green spaces and nature-based solutions reduce maintenance costs, improve wellbeing, and make places more desirable. Contracts can lock in these long-terms benefits.
2

Clarity and Pragmatism

Clear, measurable obligations give teams confidence. Clauses need to be pragmatic, enforceable and collaborative as much as possible.
3

Complexity and Integration

Nature-positve action is complex, touching climate, wellbeing, corporate responsibility, and ethics. Contracts can guide teams, making expectations clear and helping everyone know what to do and why.
4

Metrics and Patience

Metrics are key to set measure progress and align to targets. Too many misaligned metrucs create confusion and add complexity in a world that cannot cope with reporting already. It’s best to apply “less is more” and progress in this aspect takes patience, realistic targets, and tolerance for gradual improvement.
5

Supply Chain and Maintenance

Supply chain was perhaps the most mentioned term at the event, and I mentioned it myself. Tracing where materials come from and using contracts to monitor and manage impacts can make a real difference.

“Business is such a powerful creative force on this planet; a force that is able to contribute either constructively or destructively to the future vitality of life on Earth.”

— Giles Hutchins, Regenerative Leadership

Contracts aren’t just paperwork. Done well, they turn intentions into action, align stakeholders, and help the built environment leave a positive legacy for people and nature.

A Powerful Reminder

Yesterday’s conversations reminded me just how much power our industry holds, and how much responsibility comes with it. If we can make even our contracts vehicles for positive change, then we are taking action in our hands (and paper) to lock in the shift in our system towards a future where both people and nature thrive.

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Embodied Ecological Impacts Conference /events/embodied-ecological-impacts-conference/ Wed, 18 Sep 2024 15:08:00 +0000 /?post_type=event&p=61233 This event, free to members, will deep-dive into embodied ecological impacts, sharing the issues and the solutions to help you reduce your organisations impact on nature.

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We are experiencing a severe ecological crisis. The built environment needs to step up its ambition to address theses issues – after all, we are a sector with major impact. In our industry, we tend to focus on the impact we have on nature or around the site: green roofs and walls, street trees, urban greening, or Biodiversity Net Gain (BNG). However, while crucially important, these do little to solve the global loss of biodiversity we are experiencing.

To address the built environments impacts properly we need to look at impact via our supply chain and the extraction of materials. Similar to embodied carbon, embodied ecological impacts are caused by the resource extraction and manufacturing process, such as the production and transportation of raw materials and the disposal of unused materials. These impacts occur offsite, mainly via materials extraction and the supply chain.

Continuing UKGBC’s work on Embodied Ecological Impacts (EEI), this conference – free to members- will bring together experts to share knowledge and explore knowledge gaps. There are still many unknowns when it comes to decision making on built environment projects. These include:

  • Lack of transparency in supply chains
  • Lack of consensus on metrics and data needs
  • Lack of best practice examples

Through keynote lectures, panel discussions and interactive activities, this event will address these challenges and explore ways of overcoming them.

We will discuss the role of data and metrics, but also the urgent need to act in the absence of this data. We will share existing best practice and have the opportunity to meet individuals working at the cutting edge of this topic and build new networks.

We’ll feature pioneers from varied backgrounds and perspectives – such as academia, developers, or contractors – and we’ll hear from sectors beyond the build environment to learn from their experience.

Who is this conference for?

This event is for everyone who is trying to assess embodied ecological impacts on their projects. Architects, engineers, consultants, as well as contractors and manufacturers will all benefit from the insights of this event.

Why attend

1. Learn from experts in the field

and hear their insights projects, best practice and latest case studies.

2. Understand

the latest developments on metrics and data.

3. Build relationships

with other professionals working on embodied ecological impacts.

4. Share your expertise with UKGBC

to inform our future scope of work.

Agenda

11:00 Welcome  

11:10 Opening keynote 

11:30 Panel: The engineers perspective 

12:15 Interactive activity 

12:45 Lunch 

13:45 Afternoon keynote: Data and metrics 

14:00 Panel: Data and metrics 

14:45 Coffee break and interactive activity 

15:15 Learning from other sectors 

15:45 Closing reflections 

16:00 Networking and drinks 

Speakers

We have a great line-up for speakers already confirmed, with more to come. They include:

  • Smith Mordak, CEO, UKGBC
  • Laura Batty, Senior Associate, Heyne Tillett Steel
  • Kai Liebetanz, Head of Nature, UKGBC
  • Will Arnold, Head of Climate Action, IStructE
  • Sunand Prasad, Principal, Perkins&Will
  • Eva MacNamara, Director, Expedition Engineering
  • Alfred Muge, Programme Officer, UNEP-WCMC
  • Cristina Secades, Principal Consultant, Biodiversify
  • Jenny Merriman, Technical Director, WSP
  • Morgan Taylor, Director, Greengage
  • Brogan MacDonald, Head of Sustainability in Building Structures, Ramboll
  • Annabelle Richards, Senior Manager Nature, Lloyds Banking Group

We look forward to seeing you at our first EEI conference!

UKGBC cancellation and refund policy 

Please see our website for more details on our cancellations and refunds: /ukgbc-cancellation-and-refund-policy/  

Project partners

Resilience & Nature Programme Partners

With thanks to our programme partners who make our work on nature possible.

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Nature-disclosure in the built environment module 2: How to measure and report(Online) /events/nature-disclosure-in-the-built-environment-module-2-how-to-measure-and-report/ Tue, 03 Sep 2024 10:14:11 +0000 /?post_type=event&p=60848 This masterclass on nature-disclosure will explain how to go about creating a nature-disclosure and responsive nature strategy, and how to use tools like TNFD for disclosure

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Nature is in crisis. Over the space of one lifetime, we’ve seen a 69% decline in wildlife populations around the world (1970 and 2018; WWF). Changes in land use, pollution and exploitation of natural resources are seen as the main causes, alongside the climate crisis.   

Companies have a huge role to play in reducing societies impact on the natural world. The starting point for that is understanding organisational impact through assessment and reporting. Through this we can understand more clearly how our businesses impact biodiversity, and how businesses depend on nature; the so called double materiality of nature. Strategies to address these risks and impacts can then be produced.  

The role of business in this is crucial and is starting to get recognised. However, the way businesses impact nature and depend on it is currently lacking transparency. This has been recognised internationally, and nature disclosure is key recommendation in the Global Biodiversity Framework. Additionally, the EU’s Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive (CSRD) requires nature disclosure. Increasing alignment between different initiatives, including Taskforce on Nature-related Financial Disclosures (TNFD) are a sign of growing maturity of nature-related disclosures. Now is the time to get ahead and start the process of disclosing your organisations nature dependency and impact. 

About the masterclass 

In this second masterclass of two we will explain how to go about producing a nature-disclosure and responsive strategy, and how to use tools like TNFD for disclosure. We’ll highlight challenges and issues through direct case studies and experience of those who have been through the process already. 

This session is part two of a two part series on nature disclosure. Our first masterclass, on the why and what of nature-disclosure, is available to sign-up using the button below.  

Delegates can sign-up for one or both of these masterclasses  

In this masterclass we’ll cover:

What is nature disclosure and why’s it important

A deep dive into the differing approaches for incorporating nature into a disclosure

Setting a strategy

A step by step guide through the process of developing a nature strategy which will allow for an organisation to simply collect data for disclosure and report on positive actions

TNFD

A walk through of the LEAP approach and disclosure pillars for TNFD

Case studies and examples from UKGBC member

Exploring examples of nature strategy and disclosure

Who’s it for?  

This masterclass is for business leaders and ESG professionals across the built environment and finance seeking to measure and manage their nature-related impacts via TNFD or another disclosure process. The masterclass is for those who will be involved in developing a strategy, setting metrics and overseeing or delivering the disclosure.  

No prior experience of nature-disclosure is required.  

Why Join the course?

1. Get up to speed on setting a nature-disclosure strategy and using frameworks such as TNFD ahead of year-end reporting.

2. Understand the steps needed to report on your businesses nature impact.

3. Get to grips with TNFD and the LEAP approach

4. Learn about the available metrics for measuring nature impacts

5. Meet other people across industry and share learnings

Course hosts  

Morgan Taylor, Director, . Morgan leads Greengages nature team, providing ecological and green infrastructure design input into projects enabling biodiversity net gains and complementing wider climate change adaptation measures. He provides clear and concise advice on how to manage ecology throughout planning and development. Morgan was included in the ENDS Report Power List 2023 of the most influential environmental professionals in the UK. 
 
is an independent sustainability consultancy with offices in London, Manchester, Sheffield, and Bristol. Established for over 17 years, we’re an award-winning team of consultants with expertise across the full spectrum of sustainability including energy and carbon management, ESG, sustainable finance, social sustainability, biodiversity and green infrastructure/urban greening. 

CPD hours: 2.5 

Tickets 

Keystone members are entitled to free places for this masterclass. Please contact learning@UKGBC.org for more information.  

If you’re unsure if your organisation is a member, please check our Membership Directory.   

Delivering this course for your team 

UKGBC can offer this course/programme as a closed course for your team or people from across only your organisation. Please get in touch with us to discuss your requirements learning@UKGBC.org  

UKGBC cancellation and refund policy 

Please see our website for more details on our cancellations and refunds: /ukgbc-cancellation-and-refund-policy/  

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Nature-disclosure in the built environment module 1: Why’s nature important and what’s nature-disclosure? (London) /events/nature-disclosure-in-the-built-environment-module-1-whys-nature-important-and-whats-nature-disclosure/ Tue, 03 Sep 2024 10:13:57 +0000 /?post_type=event&p=60806 Join this masterclass to learn more about the importance to nature and what nature-disclosure is

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Nature is in crisis. Over the space of one lifetime, we’ve seen a 69% decline in wildlife populations around the world (1970 and 2018; WWF). Changes in land use, pollution and exploitation of natural resources are seen as the main causes, alongside the climate crisis.   

Companies have a huge role to play in reducing societies impact on the natural world. The starting point for that is understanding organisational impact through assessment and reporting. Through this we can understand more clearly how our businesses impact biodiversity, and how businesses depend on nature; the so called double materiality of nature. Strategies to address these risks and impacts can then be produced.  

The role of business in this is crucial and is starting to get recognised. However, the way businesses impact nature and depend on it is currently lacking transparency. This has been recognised internationally, and nature disclosure is key recommendation in the Global Biodiversity Framework. Additionally, the EU’s Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive (CSRD) requires nature disclosure. Increasing alignment between different initiatives, including Taskforce on Nature-related Financial Disclosures (TNFD) are a sign of growing maturity of nature-related disclosures. Now is the time to get ahead and start the process of disclosing your organisations nature dependency and impact. 

About the masterclass 

In this this first masterclass of two, we will explore the importance of nature to the built environment. We’ll discuss the crisis in nature, and our reliance on natural systems not only for materials, but also for human and economic prosperity. We’ll also look at the drivers for reporting on nature and what nature-disclosure is.  

This session is part one of a two-part series. In our second masterclass we’ll look at the practicalities of how to effectively disclose business impacts on nature through frameworks such as TNFD.  

Delegates can sign-up for one or both of these masterclasses  

In this masterclass we’ll cover:

Why does nature matter?

Introduction to the ideas of natural capital and ecosystem services

The drivers

Top down and bottom up, covering existing and emerging regulation

Reframing our interaction with nature

An introduction to the terminology and ideas behind nature-related strategy and disclosure, including exploration of new ways to view our interface with the natural world

What is nature disclosure?

An introduction to the concept of disclosure itself and how this aligns with strategy setting and action by organisations

Ways of measuring impact, dependency, risk and opportunity

An introduction to the available metrics for measuring nature-related interface which can be targeted within strategy and disclosed within reporting

Who’s it for?  

This masterclass is for business leaders and ESG professionals across the built environment and finance seeking to better understand their businesses impact on nature, and what’s involved in nature disclosure.   

No prior experience of nature-disclosure is required.  

Why join the course?

1. Get up to speed with the why and what of nature-disclosure ahead of year-end reporting

2. Understand the importance of nature to business and the built environment

3. Understand what nature-disclosure is and gain confidence in advocating for it within your organisation

4. Learn about the available metrics for measuring nature impacts

5. Meet other people across industry and share learnings

Course hosts  

Morgan Taylor, Director, . Morgan leads Greengages nature team, providing ecological and green infrastructure design input into projects enabling biodiversity net gains and complementing wider climate change adaptation measures. He provides clear and concise advice on how to manage ecology throughout planning and development. Morgan was included in the ENDS Report Power List 2023 of the most influential environmental professionals in the UK. 
 
is an independent sustainability consultancy with offices in London, Manchester, Sheffield, and Bristol. Established for over 17 years, we’re an award-winning team of consultants with expertise across the full spectrum of sustainability including energy and carbon management, ESG, sustainable finance, social sustainability, biodiversity and green infrastructure/urban greening. 

CPD hours: 2.5 

Tickets 

Keystone members are entitled to free places for this masterclass. Please contact learning@UKGBC.org for more information.  

If you’re unsure if your organisation is a member, please check our Membership Directory.   

Delivering this course for your team 

UKGBC can offer this course/programme as a closed course for your team or people from across only your organisation. Please get in touch with us to discuss your requirements learning@UKGBC.org  

UKGBC cancellation and refund policy 

Please see our website for more details on our cancellations and refunds: /ukgbc-cancellation-and-refund-policy/  

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Impactful offsetting: using regenerative farming to generate carbon credits /news/impactful-offsetting-using-regenerative-farming-to-generate-carbon-credits/ Tue, 27 Aug 2024 11:07:22 +0000 /?post_type=news&p=60777 The need for impactful offsetting in the built environment  Written by Gemma Drake, UKGBC:  To…

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The need for impactful offsetting in the built environment 

Written by Gemma Drake, UKGBC: 

To be net zero, an individual building must do two things. Firstly, it must meet minimum energy use intensity and embodied carbon limits in order to follow a science-based decarbonisation pathway in line with 1.5˚C (to be defined by the forthcoming ). Secondly, after these targets have been achieved, carbon offsetting of residual emissions along with the procurement or generation of additional renewable energy is needed to reach the net zero state. 

While there has been much important journalism on the challenges of offsetting effectively, . The critical question of how to offset in a way that truly has an impact, remains at the forefront of the climate crisis. Realising projects that remove greenhouse gases and enable the transition is paramount. Effective offsetting has a real emissions impact through additionality, permanence, no double counting and robust quantification of emissions reductions and removals (see the for more detail), whilst also enabling a broader positive impact through its co-benefits. 

ҵ’s Carbon Offsetting and Pricing Guidance provides the built environment industry with a step-by-step process for taking a holistic approach to ambitious offsetting. The guidance was updated in June 2024 to bring it in line with the revised and the Integrity Council for the Voluntary Carbon Market’s (ICVCM) .  

There are various types of offsets available, and these can be categorised into avoidance, reduction or removal offsetting projects. , there can be a place for reduction offsetting projects, particularly when they come with numerous co-benefits, such as .  

There has been an increasing discussion amongst ҵ’s members in the UK built environment around local offsetting. According to the , in 2021, only 0.1% of the credits purchased by UK companies in the voluntary carbon market were sourced from UK offsetting schemes. A growing local offsetting market would deliver positive environmental and social co-benefits to the UK and enable companies to more easily conduct due diligence on the offsetting projects they are supporting.  

In a recent report from Arup and BusinessLDN, , they propose a London offsetting fund comprising three distinct portfolios. These portfolios are retrofit, nature, and engineered. By having three portfolios, organisations can procure a combination of credits that align to their climate ambitions and business goals.  

The nature portfolio encompasses credits from protected nature-based removals schemes, and this offers the co-benefits of biodiversity and ecosystem protection.  

Regenerative agriculture is an example of a nature-based scheme

 Written by Archana Veerabahu, Agreena: 

This summer, UKGBC ran a visit to in collaboration with to showcase a regenerative agriculture offsetting project to our members and meet Rob Waterson, the Farm Manager at Welford Park Estate, to understand how they are moving towards regenerative agricultural practices.

is a climate-smart approach to farming that restores natural processes to deliver resilient agricultural systems. Regenerative farming practices include cover cropping, crop rotation, reduced tillage, sustainable use of crop residues and use of organic fertilisers.

By transitioning to regenerative agriculture farmers can reduce their carbon emissions and sequester carbon in their soils. Regenerative agriculture also delivers many additional ecosystem benefits such as improved soil health, greater water retention and enhanced biodiversity.

Crops grown alongside wildflower meadow enhances biodiversity

The need for a wide scale transition to regenerative agriculture in the UK has never been more urgent. In England and Wales intensive agriculture has caused arable soils to lose about and soil degradation was calculated in 2010 to cost £1.2 billion every year.

The potential for storing carbon in our soils is significant though – UK soils currently store about 10 billion tonnes of carbon, roughly equal to 80 years of annual UK greenhouse gas emissions.

The built environment sector has a vital role to play in supporting this by helping to channel climate capital toward the principal stewards of our land – UK farmers. The greater the speed and flow of climate capital, the faster and more effectively UK farmers can undertake the transition.

How does Agreena facilitate regenerative farming? 

In the early years of transitioning to regenerative farming, farmers can face a short-term drop in yields and a need for additional investment. Given that many farmers are operating with razor thin margins, they are unable to make the move to regenerative agriculture in the absence of transitional financial support.  
 
Agreena is working with organisations to address this ‘finance gap’, bringing corporate finance into the farming sector. As Europe’s largest soil carbon programme, AgreenaCarbon supports more than 1,000 farmers as they adopt regenerative practices across 2,000,000+ hectares of arable farmland in 19 countries. 

The generates high-quality, verified credits from UK farms, adhering to and traceable to the exact fields they were generated in. 

Agreena uses a combination of advanced remote-sensing technology, machine learning and physical soil sampling for robust measurement, reporting, and verification (MRV) that underpins its carbon credits. Each high-quality soil carbon credit represents one metric tonne of CO2e removed or reduced due to regenerative practices. These credits act as a much-needed financial incentive for farmers to adopt sustainable methods. In the long term, this scalable model supports the transition to regenerative agriculture, restoring soils, and enhancing biodiversity in the UK and Europe. 

What did UKGBC members learn during the visit?

Discussions focused on the generation of soil carbon credits, carbon financing, and ensuring credit integrity through Բ’s advanced – including how Agreena matches farmers’ data and satellite information with ground-truthing and soil sampling. Demonstrations provided a practical understanding of the importance of regenerative practices, such as crop residue management (utilising the waste materials left over after harvest such as leaves, stalks and stems).

Rob Waterston, Farm Manager at Welford Park Estate said: 

It was really interesting to chat with these businesses and learn about the challenges they’re facing with their carbon footprints. Networking with them gave me a chance to explain how agriculture can sequester CO2 and what we need to do to make it happen.

The visit reinforced how important it is to have these conversations to promote awareness about sustainable agricultural practices and how carbon farming is part of our future.” 

If you would like to learn more about carbon offsetting and pricing in the built environment, you can read ҵ’s Carbon Offsetting and Pricing Guidance and attend our on the 8th of October.  

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Bitesize Learning /resources/bitesize-learning/ Thu, 25 Jul 2024 08:23:36 +0000 /?post_type=resource&p=59245 UKGBC's Bitesize Learning is a growing suite of introductory-level sustainability resources designed to build knowledge and confidence across industry on key sustainability topics.

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The suite of learning resources here aims to demystify key sustainability concepts and create a common language for non-technical experts to confidently get involved in sustainable building topics.

Using jargon-free, easy-to-understand language, UKGBC’s Bitesize Learning provides a jumping-off point for non-sustainability professionals to begin their sustainability learning journey.

Our learning resource have been split into topic areas to make them easier to navigate.

On this page

What’s available?

Alongside infographics, definitions and fact sheets, we also have the following 1 and 2 page guides:

Explainer Guides (1-page) break down key climate and nature topics into digestible chunks outlining:

  • How it is defined.
  • Its importance in tackling the climate crisis.
  • How it relates to the built environment.
  • Relevant resources to consolidate knowledge.

Practical Guides (2-pages) detail sustainable building across the value chain outlining:

  • Key principles.
  • Practical approaches for stakeholders.
  • Case studies to bring the approach to life.
  • Further resources to continue learning.

New Climate Finance Guides

1

NEW! Climate, green and sustainability linked bonds

2

NEW! Green and sustainability linked loans

3

Sustainable Investment

Net Zero Carbon

Net Zero & Whole Life Carbon

1

Net Zero Carbon Buildings and Infrastructure Bitesize explainer guide

2

Operational & Embodied Carbon Bitesize Explainer

3

Scope 1, 2 & 3 Emissions Bitesize explainer guide

4

Net Zero Carbon Organisations Bitesize explainer guide

5

Whole Life Carbon Bitesize explainer guide

6

NEW! Tackling the Performance Gap Bitesize practical guide

Carbon Pricing, Carbon Offsetting & Renewable Energy

1

Carbon Pricing Bitesize explainer guide

2

Carbon Offsetting Bitesize explainer guide

3

Renewable Energy Bitesize explainer guide

Nature, Resource use and the Circular Economy

Explainer and Practical Guides

1

Circular Economy Bitesize explainer guide

2

NEW! Design for Deconstruction Bitesize practical guide

3

NEW! Reducing Embodied Ecological Impacts bitesize practical guide

4

Biodiversity & Environmental Net Gain Bitesize explainer guide

Factsheets & Infographics

1

Biodiversity Net Gain Definitions

2

Biodiversity Net Gain: The basics and the big picture Infographic

3

Comparing BNG, ENG and EIA Infographic

4

BNG: Local Nature Recovery Factsheet

5

BNG: On-site off-site Proximity Principle Factsheet

6

BNG: The Mitigation Hierarchy Factsheet

7

BNG: Using and Contributing to Existing Targets Factsheet

8

Nature-based solutions labs Infographics

Resilience

1

Climate Resilience Bitesize explainer guide

2

Climate Resilience Definitions

3

Adapting our Homes for Heat

Sustainability across the Value Chain

1

Sustainable Investment Bitesize practical guide

2

Sustainable Design Bitesize practical guide

3

Sustainable Procurement I Bitesize practical guide

4

NEW! Sustainable Procurement II Bitesize practical guide

5

Sustainable Construction Bitesize practical guide

6

Sustainable Operations & Maintenance Bitesize practical guide

7

Sustainable Deconstruction & End of Life Bitesize practical guide

8

NEW! Certifications

Retrofit

1

Retrofit Bitesize explainer guide

2

NEW! Retrofit Bitesize practical guide

Something missing? Tell us what else you would like bitesize learning on via this short feedback form.

Using these guides

If you’d like to use these guides within your organisation, please contact Learning@UKGBC.org

Want to learn in a different way?

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Nature-Based Solutions Infographics /resources/nature-based-solutions-infographics/ Tue, 09 Jul 2024 12:40:18 +0000 /?post_type=resource&p=59264 Discover how to best retrofit and maintain nature-based solutions within our built environment with these two informative infographics.

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Nature-Based Solutions will be crucial tools for our communities to mitigate climate change, adapt to climate change and to bring nature back into our towns and cities. These Nature-Based Solutions infographics respond to key challenges faced by professionals in the industry and outline some steps forward for successful NBS implementation.

Acknowledging that many nature practitioners are facing similar challenges, UKGBC’s NBS Labs were designed for learning and peer-to-peer knowledge exchange, specifically around maintenance and stewardship of nature-based solutions, as well as existing buildings and retrofit. We heard from a range of speakers about the challenges faced, lessons learnt, and solutions they had whilst implementing urban NBS.

In order to share some of the challenges, recommendations, and considerations practitioners should take when implementing NBS into an urban environment, we’ve created two infographics that share these key learnings.

The first explores the challenges and key considerations for retrofitting NBS and the second considers maintenance and stewardship of existing solutions.

Nature-Based Solutions Infographics

Download the NBS Labs Infographics

NBS Labs Infographics

This document includes both infographics – one covering retrofit, and the other maintenance and stewardship.
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NBS Labs Project Partners

We’d like to thank the following partners for making the Nature-Based Solutions Labs possible.

Resilience & Nature Programme Partners

With thanks to our programme partners who make our work on nature possible.

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Explore how to retrofit and maintain Nature-Based Solutions in our communities using our new infographics /news/explore-how-to-retrofit-and-maintain-nature-based-solutions-in-our-communities-using-our-new-infographics/ Tue, 09 Jul 2024 08:00:00 +0000 /?post_type=news&p=59263 These infographics are an output from ҵ’s Nature Based Solutions Labs

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Nature-Based Solutions will be crucial as we transform our cities – bringing back biodiversity to our communities and increasing their resilience to our changing climate.  

In our 2022 report, ‘The Value of Urban Nature-Based Solutions’ we examined the benefits of implementing NBS in our towns and communities – exploring the different ways the value of these solutions can be demonstrated.  

Building on this report, ҵ’s Nature-Based Solutions Labs provided built environment stakeholders with the opportunity to work through some of challenges and solutions of implementing nature-based solutions in an urban context.  

Acknowledging that many practitioners are facing similar challenges, the NBS Labs were designed for learning and peer-to-peer knowledge exchange, specifically around maintenance and stewardship, as well as existing buildings and retrofit. We heard from a range of speakers about the challenges faced, lessons learnt, and solutions they had whilst implementing urban NBS.  

In order to share some of the challenges, recommendations, and considerations practitioners should take when implementing NBS into an urban environment, we’ve created two infographics that share these key learnings.  

The first explores the challenges and key considerations for retrofitting NBS and the second considers maintenance and stewardship of existing solutions.  

NBS Labs Project Partners

We’d like to thank the following partners for making the Nature-Based Solutions Labs possible.

Resilience & Nature Programme Partners

With thanks to our programme partners who make our work on nature possible.

The post Explore how to retrofit and maintain Nature-Based Solutions in our communities using our new infographics appeared first on UKGBC.

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