10 NOV 2021

TRANSFORMATIVE CLIMATE CHANGE CHARTER LAUNCHED FOR GLOBAL INFRASTRUCTURE SECTOR

International engineering federation FIDIC (the International Federation of Consulting Engineers) has launched a transformative plan of action for the global engineering industry to decarbonise as it sets about turning COP26 climate change ambitions into outcomes on the ground.  

The engineers who design and deliver the world’s infrastructure and built environment have a key strategic role in ensuring the world tackles climate change and achieves net zero by 2050. So FIDIC has launched a Climate Change Charter that sets out specific actions to be taken by individual engineers, companies, member associations and project teams and is calling on the engineering, construction and infrastructure industry to step up and commit to the charter.

Tony Barry, president of FIDIC, commented: “The world has been too slow to reduce climate change emissions. Even going into COP26, global leaders were still not yet in agreement about what needs to be done and how fast it can be done. As engineers, we work across the globe and we have the collective responsibility to inform and implement decarbonisation solutions and reduce other greenhouse emissions. This charter is a clear roadmap for ensuring we do that while eliminating our own climate impact during the process. I urge all organisations in the global engineering, construction and infrastructure sector to sign up to the charter.”

Dr Nelson Ogunshakin OBE, chief executive of FIDIC, added: “Climate change is an existential threat to nature, to the built environment and to the future direction of human civilisation. The engineers that design and build the human world will be more crucial than any other sector to shaping the world’s response and making a success of ending climate change and tackling the consequences of it. So, we have to lead by example.”

The Climate Change Charter represents a significant new call to action by FIDIC, the global consulting engineering industry body which represents over 40,000 companies and more than one million professional engineers and consultants operating in over 100 countries around the world. It sets out clear commitments and actions for reducing and eventually eliminating carbon and other climate emissions from the sector and has been drawn up with the support of experts from around the world.

FIDIC itself is also taking a lead in this process, including its own commitments in the charter.

Dr Ogunshakin also said: “FIDIC has been working to decarbonise its own operations for some time and we are committing through this charter to upgrade our own internal activities, to take a science-based approach to reducing carbon and other greenhouse gas emissions further and to engage with best-in-class offset programmes to address residual operational emissions. We are also committing to annual reporting of scope 1, 2 and 3 emissions and we are proud to be leading this change and proving what is possible.”

The charter sets out specific roadmaps for each part of the industry so that individuals, companies, member associations and project owners have a dedicated plan to sign up to and implement. FIDIC sees this as vital to recognise the important differences in what each part of the industry needs to do as it sets about delivering a net zero infrastructure and built environment around the world.

Click here for further information on the FIDIC Climate Change Charter and how to sign up.

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