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Net zero and resilience: infrastructure’s joint climate challenge 

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Tough deci­sions are being tak­en across the sec­tor to lim­it the cli­mate impact of infrastructure’s con­struc­tion, oper­a­tion and use


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Mark Hills­don
15 Jul 2022

From the destruc­tive pow­er of storms and floods to the threats posed by heat­waves and droughts, the world is hav­ing to come to terms with more and more extreme weath­er events caused by cli­mate change.

For decades the glob­al reac­tion has been slow, the sci­ence ignored and the evi­dence side-lined as an incon­ve­nient truth. But now the need to change is front and cen­tre, from cut­ting and mit­i­gat­ing the emis­sions we already pro­duce, to adapt­ing and increas­ing our resilience to unpre­dictable weath­er.

Cen­tral to cut­ting car­bon is the goal of net zero, until recent­ly a vague and neb­u­lous tar­get, which looked good on mar­ket­ing mate­r­i­al but few real­ly under­stood what it meant and entailed. This changed, says Rachel Skin­ner, an exec­u­tive direc­tor at lead­ing engi­neer­ing pro­fes­sion­al ser­vices con­sul­tan­cy WSP, when the Sci­ence Based Tar­gets Ini­tia­tive (SBTi) issued its own stan­dard. “For the first time organ­i­sa­tions across the world were all able to say exact­ly what we meant by net zero,” she says.

The stan­dard sets out how com­pa­nies can align their near- and long-term cli­mate action with lim­it­ing glob­al warm­ing to 1.5°C, she con­tin­ues. “It makes clear that the first job is to reduce your emis­sions as far as you can, before using off­set­ting as a last resort.”

But while there’s opti­mism, there is also real­ism. Last month in its annu­al progress report to par­lia­ment, the UK’s Cli­mate Change Com­mit­tee (CCC) was high­ly crit­i­cal of the government’s efforts to enact poli­cies that would get the UK to net zero by 2050. CCC chair John Gum­mer, Baron Deben, said: “Holes must be plugged in its strat­e­gy urgent­ly. The win­dow to deliv­er real progress is short. We are eagle-eyed for the promised action.”

There was par­tic­u­lar crit­i­cism for the government’s poli­cies around insu­la­tion and the fail­ure to enact promised plans to address the fact that UK homes are among the draugh­ti­est and least ener­gy-effi­cient in Europe.

“A huge lev­el of change is need­ed over the next decade if we stand any chance of get­ting to net zero by 2050,” adds Skin­ner, whose own organ­i­sa­tion has com­mit­ted to halv­ing the car­bon impacts of its designs and advice by 2030.

The need to keep building

But while a net-zero plan­et by 2050 is the goal, new infra­struc­ture projects will con­tin­ue to be devel­oped. Some three quar­ters of the glob­al infra­struc­ture that’s need­ed by 2050 is still to be built, yet the con­struc­tion indus­try accounts for 38% of glob­al CO2 emis­sions.

But moth­balling the con­struc­tion sec­tor is not an option. The world needs flood defences and new hubs for the likes of wind and hydro­gen ener­gy, while a key argu­ment to come out of COP26 in Glas­gow was that the push for sus­tain­abil­i­ty needs to be equi­table.

Peo­ple in devel­op­ing coun­tries need a roof over their heads, clean water and sewage sys­tems too, says Dr Andrew Min­son, con­crete and sus­tain­able con­struc­tion direc­tor at the Glob­al Cement and Con­crete Asso­ci­a­tion (GCCA). “To get to net zero it’s not enough to say we have to do with­out, and leave these devel­op­ing coun­tries strand­ed.”

The cement indus­try is one the most ener­gy-inten­sive and hard­est to abate, con­cedes Min­son, but it does have a roadmap to achieve net zero by 2050. This is large­ly based around using waste mate­ri­als to replace the cement need­ed to make new low car­bon con­crete. Recent­ly, a sec­tor-wide ini­tia­tive called Con­creteZe­ro launched to help the indus­try reach net zero, with WSP being one of 17 found­ing mem­bers.

Soci­ety needs to be a lot more hon­est with itself. We need to get past all these paper-thin promis­es and claims that can’t be born out in real­i­ty but which make us all feel good, and get on with cre­at­ing real change

Design­ers, Min­son says, can use tools like the GCCA’s roadmap “in very cre­ative ways and deliv­er projects that are sus­tain­able,” such as con­crete paving that is porous to help reduce flood­ing. Over­all, he adds, the roadmap shows the sector’s poten­tial to reduce car­bon across the built envi­ron­ment by 40% by 2030, sav­ing five bil­lion tonnes of car­bon in the process.

“We’re not wait­ing for a eure­ka moment,” says Min­son. “It’s not a tech­nol­o­gy bar­ri­er, it’s actu­al­ly a pol­i­cy bar­ri­er.” Gov­ern­ments are respon­si­ble for around 60% of pro­cure­ment for infra­struc­ture projects, he says, but they’re not spec­i­fy­ing break-through tech­nolo­gies such as low car­bon con­crete. “And that’s actu­al­ly not for any tech­ni­cal rea­son at all, it’s actu­al­ly because of habit.”

Infrastructure’s dual role

Accord­ing to James Heath, chief exec­u­tive of the UK’s Nation­al Infra­struc­ture Com­mis­sion (NIC), infra­struc­ture has a role to play at two lev­els. “First­ly, projects can help boost society’s pro­tec­tion against and adap­ta­tion to cli­mate change, tak­ing the form of things like sus­tain­able flood resilience mea­sures. Sec­ond­ly, infra­struc­ture assets them­selves need to be more resilient to the risks in how they are designed and oper­at­ed.”

The commission’s design prin­ci­ples for nation­al infra­struc­ture have been adopt­ed by gov­ern­ment for all major projects, he says. “They place cli­mate as the very first prin­ci­ple; not only should projects be built and oper­at­ed in a way that reduce emis­sions, but its design should enable the peo­ple and busi­ness­es using it to reduce their wider cli­mate impacts too.” For instance, he adds, the blue­print for Tide­way, a new 25km super sew­er under the Thames, include active trav­el spaces and parks, as well as the tun­nel itself.

Rail­ways are one of the sec­tors that need to adapt to cli­mate change now, while also look­ing at how to make itself more resilient in the future. In the UK, Net­work Rail has recent­ly pro­duced its third adap­tion report which, says group safe­ty & engi­neer­ing direc­tor Mar­tin Fro­bish­er, shows “how the rail­way responds when the cli­mate bites back (and) also how we min­imise our emis­sions in order that we do less harm.”

Earth­works pose one of the biggest headaches, he says. Large­ly built in Vic­to­ri­an times, and to no set design code, they are much steep­er than they need to be, mak­ing them par­tic­u­lar­ly sus­cep­ti­ble to land­slips caused by heavy rain.

Rebuild­ing thou­sands of miles of rail­way embank­ments is unfea­si­ble, he con­tin­ues, so instead Net­work Rail: “is focussing on mod­ern teleme­try, instru­men­ta­tion and bet­ter weath­er fore­cast­ing so that we can safe­ly man­age the rail­ways dur­ing extreme weath­er.”

Bet­ter drainage is also set to play a cru­cial role, with big, open chan­nels, which can con­vey huge vol­umes of water, replac­ing restric­tive under­ground pipes which often can’t cope with the type of del­uge we’re now expe­ri­enc­ing as a result of cli­mate change. The chan­nels are a cost-effec­tive solu­tion too and are made by using sim­ple fab­ric blan­kets impreg­nat­ed with con­crete rather than expen­sive shut­ter­ing, says Fro­bish­er. These are laid in chan­nels and then sprayed with water and left to set.

The track itself is most sus­cep­ti­ble to heat, but learn­ing lessons from coun­tries such as Sau­di Ara­bia, all new track in the UK is now stretched and installed under ten­sion. When it does heat up, the ten­sion relax­es, pre­vent­ing the track from buck­ling.

Mit­i­ga­tion is also a part of future-proof­ing the rail net­work, adds Fro­bish­er, and decar­bon­is­ing the net­work is a pri­or­i­ty too, with elec­tric replac­ing diesel and solar pan­els now stan­dard on most new sta­tions.

Uni­ty with­in the indus­try and cre­ative solu­tions to mit­i­gat­ing cli­mate costs can help the infra­struc­ture sec­tor achieve both its net zero and resilience aims.

“Soci­ety needs to be a lot more hon­est with itself,” says Skin­ner. “We need to get past all these paper-thin promis­es and claims that can’t be born out in real­i­ty but which make us all feel good, and get on with cre­at­ing real change.”

The impe­tus to change is real. It now relies on col­lab­o­ra­tion by all lev­els of gov­ern­ment, busi­ness­es and com­mu­ni­ties to make that change a real­i­ty.


Related articles


Tough decisions are being taken across the sector to limit the climate impact of infrastructure’s construction, operation and use

From the destructive power of storms and floods to the threats posed by heatwaves and droughts, the world is having to come to terms with more and more extreme weather events caused by climate change.

For decades the global reaction has been slow, the science ignored and the evidence side-lined as an inconvenient truth. But now the need to change is front and centre, from cutting and mitigating the emissions we already produce, to adapting and increasing our resilience to unpredictable weather.

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