This depth of analysis is impossible when focusing solely on individual components.
She’s also pleased with the decision to have an annual holding to account, rather than the five year timeframe we’ve previously been using.Hopefully, she says, this will put more pressure on wealthy nations to demonstrate progress.. At Bryden Wood, we believe that making a shift towards smaller, repeatable, manufactured elements is an important part of the path forward.

Approaching design and construction in this way helps to reduce material waste, producing more efficient and sustainable built assets.When looking at the vast scale of a project like Hinkley Point, at its enormous costs and lengthy timescales, it’s clear to see what the problems are.We need a solution that’s much faster, more scalable and deployable, and we need it right away.

Hinkley Point is still a number of years off completion..Achieving net zero by 2050.

It’s also important to remember that the challenge of turning the climate crisis around rests solely on the shoulders of our working generation.
Although future timescales can sometimes feel abstract, 2050 really isn’t far away and our net zero deadline is looming.The microchip is the bit that does the hard work.
It's the intelligent bit and the bit that adds value.. Chips are enabling tools that do a lot of work and add a lot of value.Within our wider Design to Value approach and methodology, they provide a common language for all the people involved in a project, they enable collaboration and the rapid development and testing of multiple ideas.
We've seen the benefits they deliver..Using the same concept to enable advanced and automated design will only multiply those benefits.. To learn more about our Design to Value approach, sign up for our monthly newsletter here:.
(Editor: Eco Swimwear)