3Feb/140

Green businesses shocked at UK PM’s plans to slash environmental guidance

UK Prime Minister David Cameron has announced plans to make it easier and cheaper for businesses to meet environmental obligations by slashing 80,000 pages of environmental guidance, which he believes will save businesses GBP 100 million per year.

While organisations like the Home Builders Federation have welcome this, organisations like the UK Green Buildings Council condemn this announcement with CEO Paul King calling the move “utterly reprehensible.” He also said: “It is the same poisonous political rhetoric from Number 10, devaluing environmental regulation in a slash-and-burn manner. These words are not only damaging and irresponsible, but misrepresent the wishes of so many modern businesses, both large and small.”

Moreover, Mads Jensen, ceo of Sefaira, a UK-based company that specialises in cloud-based computing solutions for sustainable building design has said that “if our ambition is to establish UK leadership in the low carbon space, then I am not sure if this latest announcement is helpful. I actually think it could end up hurting rather than helping British export businesses and the British economy”.

 Green businesses shocked at UK PM’s plans to slash environmental guidance
30Jul/130

Part L changes announced by government

300px 2008 07 11 Air conditioners at UNC CH Part L changes announced by government

English: Series of air conditioners at UNC-CH. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

New regulations will come into force next April

The government has unveiled the long-awaited changes to Part L of the building regulations, including rules that new homes must be 6% more efficient.

Homebuilders will continue to have flexibility in meeting carbon dioxide targets, but the changes emphasise that the quality of the building fabric must be a priority.

Non-domestic buildings will have to deliver a 9% improvement compared to the 2010 standards. For these, minimum energy efficiency standards will be strengthened when works include air conditioning and lighting replacements.

Baroness Hanham, parliamentary under secretary of state, announced the changes in a written statement (attached) to the House of Lords today. She said: “These Part L changes take an important and technically meaningful step towards zero carbon homes but one that allows government to reduce the overall regulatory burden upon home builders.”

Meanwhile, the government has officially dropped plans to strengthen the minimum energy efficiency standards for extensions and replacement windows to existing homes.

It also said the government would ‘shortly’ publish a consultation on the next steps to take forward zero carbon homes.

The changes will come into force on April 6, 2014.

John Alker, director of policy and communications at the UK Green Building Council, said: “There can be no excuses for the length of time this has taken, but finally industry has the clarity on Part L that it craves.

“The uplift is less ambitious than any of the options originally consulted upon – even less than government’s previously ‘preferred options’, particularly for non-domestic buildings. However, the fact there is any uplift at all is good news – it’s a victory for all those who know that industry can continue to innovate, to improve standards and reduce carbon cost-effectively.”

Don Foster, building regulations minister, added: “Today’s measures mean businesses and householders will not only benefit from reduced energy bills but they will also know they are doing their bit to tackle climate change.”

 Part L changes announced by government
2Aug/100

At 93, Louvre Pyramid architect I.M. Pei is still going strong

It's 27 years since award-winning architect I.M. Pei began work on his glass pyramid at the Louvre Museum in Paris.

But while the Pritzker Prize Laureate is recently retired, he considers his involvement in the pyramid to be ongoing and suggests there may yet be feathers to add to his cap.

"It was a wonderful experience," he told CNN. "The Louvre for me is a wonderful experience. Because it continues, it didn't get cut off, it was actually a continuous involvement all the way and a lot of people have come and gone, come and gone; but I'm still here."

Pei was awarded the title of Officier de La Legion d'Honneur -- one of France's highest decorations -- in 1993 after completing the 10-year-long project to refurbish the Louvre palace and add the iconic pyramid.

The "Grand Louvre" project is one of many successes in Pei's long and distinguished architecture career.

Born in 1917 in China and raised in Hong Kong, he later moved to the U.S. and studied under master modernist architects Walter Gropius and Marcel Breuer.

Buildings Pei has designed include the Bank of China in Hong Kong (where his father was once a governor), the JFK Memorial Library and Museum in Boston and the East Building of the National Gallery of Art in Washington.

The Museum of Islamic Art in Doha, which opened in 2008, is one of Pei's last major buildings. Although in his eighth decade, he embarked on a serious tour of the Islamic world to better understand its architecture before beginning work on the project.

He remains proudest of his pyramid at the Louvre. The project faced considerable challenges, chief of which was working with an already iconic institution steeped in history. He also faced resistance from the French public.

"It's part of life," he told CNN. "These things don't bother me. I rather enjoyed it, I remember people, an old lady spitting on the sidewalk, that venomous, so unhappy with what I did ... But it all passed."

Today, the pyramid is considered one of the world's major architectural achievements and a beacon for visitors to the museum.

"That came about not because of design but because of the challenge," he said. "If you don't make an icon out of this challenge you fail and I can't think of a place more demanding than this one."

Despite his considerable output, Pei does still have some regrets. "I could have done a lot more in China," he told CNN, "I left something there but not enough."

As for the Pritzker Prize, it was a great honor but he told CNN that "there are many other honors too that are probably more important." Elaborating, he said: "The legion of honor! I'm in France, that's what I say!"

Source:
CNN Icons (with clip)

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