Transparency is the New Benchmark of Sustainable Construction

Transparency is the New Benchmark of Sustainable Construction

Achieving sustainable construction across the GCC through increased transparency and accountability - By Mohamed Amer, Managing Director, ICC MENA
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3 min read

From the visionary skylines of Riyadh and Dubai to the ambitious net-zero targets of the UAE and Saudi Arabia, the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) is building for the future while setting targets for the world.

As GCC governments, developers and manufacturers pursue more responsible building practices, one thing is becoming increasingly clear: transparency is emerging as the foundation for credible sustainability initiatives. In the GCC, where the pace of development is matched only by the scale of ambition, this is both a timely and essential shift.

From Vision to Verification

National visions such as Saudi Arabia’s Vision 2030 and the UAE’s Net Zero 2050 Strategy have placed environmental stewardship at the heart of economic transformation. These are not symbolic gestures but structural commitments to the future.

Liveable Cities for the Next Generation Funded with Sustainable Non-tax Revenue

Governments and designated demand drivers are setting measurable, time-bound targets. The UAE’s Federal Decree Law is one such example, which requires companies emitting more than or equal to 500,000 tons of carbon dioxide emissions per year to monitor and report GHG emissions.

Such metrics will hold companies accountable through verified progress, and the commitments will be evidenced and enforced.

Construction companies and all relevant parties are expected to back up sustainability goals with credentials and certifications, lifecycle assessments and emissions data.

Government bodies are beginning to require environmental product declarations and embodied carbon thresholds. They want to know that the buildings are both efficient and resilient.

Embedding transparency into every stage of the construction lifecycle, from design and procurement to operation and decommissioning, boosts accountability and helps deliver tangible results.

Sustainable Construction Requires Measurable Change

A report by the PwC network mentioned that sustainable technologies for the built environment could reduce lifecycle emissions by more than 50% in the MENA region. To address this challenge effectively, we must fundamentally transform the way we design, source, construct and operate.

Accordingly, material selection becomes increasingly critical, and ensuring product traceability throughout the entire supply chain should remain a top priority.

Low-carbon concrete, recycled steel and bio-based alternatives are increasingly available, but without reliable, independently-verified data, it’s impossible to know whether the choices being made are achieving the desired outcomes.

The International Code Council (ICC) supports the implementation of compliance ecosystems based on science, transparency, verifiability and enforceability.

The International Codes® (I-Codes) support jurisdictions in adopting actionable sustainability frameworks, which provide clear guidance, enforceable standards and measurable results.

The ICC family of solutions includes training and certification, product testing, accreditation services and digital compliance tools that together provide an integrated pathway to help stakeholders implement sustainability goals effectively.

A comprehensive compliance ecosystem ensures that materials, systems and processes are not only aligned with regulations but also verifiably safe, high-performing and sustainable throughout their lifecycle.

Conformity assessment bodies, such as the ICC Evaluation Service (ICC-ES), provide an essential service within the ecosystem, providing independent verification of products’ performance and claims for structural, fire ratings and sustainability.

ICC-ES supports transparency and verifiability through evaluation reports (ESR), environmental product declarations (EPD) and verification of attributes reports (VAR).

An Opportunity for the GCC to Show Regional Readiness

The Gulf region has a unique opportunity to lead in transparent sustainability. With rapid urbanization, iconic megaprojects and growing international influence, what the GCC builds today will shape the region’s environmental future for generations.

The UAE has implemented energy efficiency standards for buildings. Saudi Arabia is investing in net-zero cities like NEOM. Oman, in partnership with ICC, is developing national building codes that incorporate global best practices tailored to local needs.

The I-Codes remain a cornerstone, offering robust frameworks for material performance, energy conservation, water efficiency, etc. This integrated approach aims to create a cohesive and robust system that fosters the highest standards of safety, quality and innovation in the construction industry.

The buildings we construct today will stand for decades. It is important that transparent sustainability is embedded in the entire regulatory ecosystem that governs construction. This ecosystem must integrate up-to-date building codes, product evaluation/certification, inspection, training and ongoing professional development.

Read More: PIF–ACWA Power Partnership: Why This MoU Still Matters for Saudi Arabia’s Sustainable Infrastructure Push

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