Building to Zero: making sustainability 'normal' in the built environment
The Built Environment globally is responsible for 40% of carbon emissions, 50% of resource use, is the largest investment asset class, and is predicted to double in size by 2050. So you might expect it to have a prominent role in the UN COP process and national net-zero targets, especially as buildings have such a tangible presence in our daily life (most westeners spend 90% of our life indoors). But you'd be wrong... Buildings gets far less attention than Energy or Transport, and Agriculture is the only sector doing worse at decarbonising.
Australia, however, would seem to be bucking that trend. Our rooftop solar uptake and NABERS commercial building rating scheme are the envy of many countries, progressive policies are still being rolled out by government at all levels despite growing political pushback on net-zero, and there is a strong cohort of corporates and industry associations that are actively pursuing sustainability within their niche areas.
What is missing is the cultural change necessary to take sustainability beyond these niche areas into mainstream supply chains.
This series of four events (two back-to-back sessions at Sydney Climate Action Week in March 2026 and the World Sustainable Built Environment Conference at Melbourne in June 2026) will consider how the Australian built environment sector can build on its existing achievements to drive the rapid and radical transition to net zero that is needed, looking at opportunities locally and globally. The focus will be on culture rather than capacity: we have all the technology we need, what is lacking is the political, social and industry will to implement them.
SCAW26
1. Follow the money: Investment + Insurance
2. Selling like hot cakes: Marketing + Media
WSBE26
3. Design as a super power: Profession + Practice
4. Big ship slow to turn: Construction + Innovation
Note: location to be confirmed but expected to be in the city centre, and we hope to allow for online attendance also.