BAM exceeds its five-year carbon reductions targets

BAM exceeds its five-year carbon reductions targets

Hemel Hempstead, 17 May 2021 - BAM Construct UK has made significantly more progress in carbon reductions than envisaged against its longstanding targets, even allowing for the effect of the current pandemic.

Using 2015 as a baseline, BAM set a five-year target to reduce its emissions by 25%. Jesse Putzel, BAM’s Head of Sustainability, said: ‘We were among the first to have targets approved by the Science Based Targets Initiative. By 2019, we had reduced emissions by 34%, which is significant outperformance. We achieved the majority of these significant carbon reductions from improving efficiencies like reducing energy and fuel use, not through offsetting our impacts.’

During 2020, the pandemic had a positive impact on carbon reductions, with emissions reduced by 45% compared with 2015.

BAM’s longer-term target in 2015 was to go on to reduce emissions by 50% by 2030. This has now been replaced by a commitment to be set zero by then or before. BAM is one of the few signatories in the construction industry to the World Green Building Council’s Net Zero Carbon Buildings Commitment. The company has agreed to be independently audited on progress, publicly reporting on performance, and actively influence its clients and wider stakeholders to also achieve net zero.

BAM and its partners were able to minimise embodied carbon at a major London office scheme to such an extent that the as-built carbon savings (10,000 tCO2e) were greater than the whole of BAM’s carbon footprint.

At Kings Cross Sports Centre BAM delivered a net zero in construction project.

BAM also chose to measure as-built carbon on a new primary school in Bristol and is developing a zero carbon version of this.  It is carrying out work on a DfE pathfinder net zero project, to inform its school building.

BAM’s track record includes some of the UKs most sustainable buildings, including net-zero education buildings such as the PassivHaus net zero Montgomery School in Exeter and the Co-operative Group’s HQ in Manchester, a building designed to be carbon negative. Across the group BAM is currently creating net zero hospitals and net-zero and energy neutral housing.