Introducing the Heritage Now! Campaign
Climate action in the built environment often focuses on new technologies and new construction—but most of the opportunity for impact lies in the buildings, places, and knowledge we already have. This webinar introduces Heritage Now!—a global campaign advancing heritage-informed decarbonization strategies that connect climate action, cultural heritage, and community resilience.
Heritage-Informed Decarbonization Around the Globe
Communities worldwide are developing innovative programs and policies that reduce carbon emissions through building reuse, retrofit, and traditional practices. Drawing from the new Decarbonizing the Built Environment through Heritage Toolkit, this webinar highlights practical examples and case studies demonstrating how preservation and climate goals can work together.
Implementing Heritage-Informed Decarbonization Policies
Communities worldwide are developing innovative programs and policies that reduce carbon emissions through building reuse, retrofit, and traditional practices. Drawing from the new Decarbonizing the Built Environment through Heritage Toolkit, this webinar highlights practical examples and case studies demonstrating how preservation and climate goals can work together.
Add your program to the calendar!
Heritage Now! aims to amplify the programs of our partners worldwide. Join the campaign to add your organization’s events to the calendar of events.
The Campaign History
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In April of 2024, Lori Ferriss represented DBTH and Climate Heritage Network at the Annual Assembly of the UNEP Global Alliance for Buildings and Construction. Her role was to represent the importance of cultural heritage in building sector climate action and identify key levers for impact for DBTH across workstreams including circular economy, sufficiency, and market transformation.
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One of the 2025 Sharm El Sheikh Mitigation Ambition and Implementation Work Programme topics is “enabling mitigation solutions in the waste sector, including through circular economy approaches.” This topic will be explored at the MWP’s Sixth Global Dialogue, whose outputs are expected to inform COP30’s mitigation decision. At SB62, working with the LGMA constituency group led by ICLEI, CHN representatives were able to intervene on the culture and heritage dimensions of circular economy during a planning session for the Sixth Dialogue organized by the MWP Co-Chairs. Learn more about CHN’s actions at SB62 here.
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The Sharm El Sheikh Mitigation Ambition and Implementation Work Programme (MWP) has proved a key UNFCCC battleground on fossil-fuel phaseout and other contentious GHG issues. The MWP’s Sixth Global Dialogue, whose outputs are expected to inform COP30’s mitigation decision, will focus on “enabling mitigation solutions in the waste sector, including through circular economy approaches.” Following our intervention at SB62 on this subject, DBTH made an official submission on the role of heritage in a circular economy.
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DBTH will represent the important role of heritage-informed decarbonization in Addis Ababa, including at the MWP 6th Global Dialogue on waste and circularity.
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DBTH participated in a meeting of the UNFCCC COP30 Activation Group 19 on Culture, Cultural Heritage Protection, and Climate Action and the SHIFT convening, co-hosted by the German Sustainable Building Council and Architecture 2030, advocating for heritage-transformed approaches to built environment policy in the global north. Read more here.
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DBTH officially launched the Heritage Now! campaign at COP30 through a series of presentations, a formal UNFCCC side event, and through the Global Climate Action Agenda. Check out our Learnings and Stories to learn more:
https://www.builtbuildings.org/learnings-and-stories/built-buildings-outcomes-at-cop30
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DBTH will be featured at two events at the UN Environment Programme Global ABC’s Sustainable Buildings and Construction Summit.
Workshop Culture, Heritage, and Social Sustainability: Foundations for a Sustainable and Resilient Future, co-led by Climate Heritage Network and Architecture 2030, will bring together stakeholders across the buildings and construction value chain to share successful examples of cultural and social sustainability across regions and scales, identify common barriers for scaling this work, and brainstorm how to share knowledge and apply best practices across global contexts.
Advancing Culture and Heritage in the UNFCCC Global Climate Action Agenda, convened by the Cornell Atkinson Center for Sustainability and the Climate Heritage Network will bring together a growing coalition of organizations, practitioners, and members of the public to build momentum around cultural heritage as a core strategy for built environment decarbonization.