A move to natural capital accounting1 and redefining value in contract tendering are among the recommendations in the report Transforming Construction for a Low Carbon Future, out today.
The report has been produced by the National Federation of Builders鈥 (NFB) Major Contractors Group (MCG).
The MCG is urging government and other public sector clients to measure carbon when procuring construction work use. They advocate using the Public Services (Social Value) Act 2012 to use Lifetime Carbon as a procurement tool to assess the value of goods and services.
鈥淭he industrial strategy for construction majors on value, and one large section of value can be and should be the fight towards net zero emissions,鈥 said Gren Tipper, director of the Construction Clients' Leadership Group (CCLG). 鈥淭he industry has had decades of lowest price tendering and without much thought to value鈥 The biggest added value aspect today is getting carbon reduction right.鈥
Another proposal for reducing the construction industry鈥檚 greenhouse gas emissions is to use less steel and concrete.
鈥淐ement and steel manufacturing are together responsible for about 16% of global carbon emissions,鈥 said Eddy Taylor, Laing O鈥橰ourke鈥檚 environment leader. 鈥淭herefore, one of our key priorities is to meet our clients' needs whilst using as little cement and steel as possible. Another big priority is minimising the carbon emissions of the assets that we build after we hand them over to our clients. Success depends on collaborating with our design teams, clients and end users, making sure we deploy the right products, techniques and technologies in ways that work for the end users as well as lowering carbon.鈥
MCG chair Mark Wakeford said: 鈥淭he year 2050 might seem a long time away but it鈥檚 really not much time to radically change our industry. We must start now and the government, in whatever guise they return, must lead the way and make this a firm priority post election. Anyone still operating the same way as they are today in 20 years鈥 time will be lucky to still be in business. There are no excuses: government, contractors, the supply chain, manufacturers, designers and the trades must all embrace the challenge now, as highlighted in our recommendations.
鈥淭he report we are launching today is a call-to-arms; we鈥檙e telling the government and the industry alike to wake up to the reality of zero carbon and act now.鈥
The full report,Transforming Construction for a Low Carbon Future, is available at
1. For more information on natural capital accounting, the Office for National Statistics聽 has produced a background paper with the Department for Environment, Food & Rural Affairs (Defra). It is available at
Got a story? Email news@theconstructionindex.co.uk