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Scotland’s leading source of expertise in civil engineering policy has said a new report highlights the need for bolder steps to enable quicker and more effective decarbonisation of our infrastructure.
The Institution of Civil Engineers (ICE) Scotland commissioned Mott MacDonald to look into how best to support the delivery of Net Zero and decarbonise Scotland’s infrastructure.
The report was developed following consultation with stakeholders across the infrastructure planning and delivery landscape - including the Scottish Government, infrastructure providers, local authorities, academia, and the business sector.
It concluded that Scotland is still falling short of targets and leadership, funding, and leadership, funding and a planning and regulatory system to ensure decarbonisation is embedded throughout infrastructure.
There are five key recommendations:
ICE Scotland director, Hannah Smith, said: “It is clear from this report that there is a huge amount of positive work being done in our sector. But it is also clear that work must be accelerated, or we will simply not meet the 2045 commitment to Net Zero.
“This report is not a panacea but rather the blueprint for future activity. We believe the first step must be the creation of a forum – similar to the Scottish Infrastructure Commission – to utilise the expertise across infrastructure providers and ensure all those involved remain focused on ensuring decarbonisation becomes a reality.”
Mott MacDonald’s principal sustainability consultant, Alan Hendry, said: “It is clear from our research and conversations with those commissioning, designing and delivering infrastructure in Scotland that there is some great work happening on the Net Zero agenda. However, the key message is that the scale and pace of this needs to increase significantly if we are to meet our Net Zero targets.”
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