BAM Construct UK - the company behind the £50million Aston
Student Village development, the new Wolverhampton Interchange, and
the work at central Birmingham's Bramall Music School - has reached
its target for halving waste to landfill two years early.
Construction waste production relative to turnover was down for the
fifth year running. In 2008 BAM adopted the WRAP target of halving
waste to landfill by 2012. In 2010 it exceeded this target
two years ahead of schedule, BAM now has a diversion rate
from landfill of 85%.
The announcement came in BAM's fourth sustainability report
published today. It sets out the company's performance and
describes its progress against its targets. The report also
sets out targets and aspirations taking BAM to 2015 and covers a
programme for managing climate change, waste management,
sustainable design, responsible sourcing and partnerships.
Key among these commitments is a reduction of carbon emissions
by 25% against a 2008 baseline, and a further 25% reduction in
construction waste against 2010's baseline. The company is now
aiming for zero non-hazardous waste to landfill. It has also
committed to providing 1,000 new employment and training
opportunities through its operations.
The company's community impact is also revealed. During 2010,
BAM contributed around £600,000 to local communities, made up
of £467,223 to the community through cash, staff time and
gifts in-kind, and a further £130,000 from employees, clients
and suppliers.
The company introduced a volunteering allowance of two days'
paid leave for all staff. BAM adopted Barnardo's as its charity
partner for a period of two years.
In the past few weeks BAM - which helped to rejuvenate much of
BrindleyPlace for developer Argent - has been listed as Britain's
best contractor to work for, 14th in the UK's Best Green Companies
and achieved gold status in Business in the Community's Corporate
Responsibility Index
Graham Cash, Chief Executive of BAM Construct UK, said:
'Sustainability is intrinsic to how we deliver solutions for our
clients every day. It's how we do business. We see the market for
sustainable low-carbon buildings expanding every year. To show how
important it is to us we have developed a set of longer-term
targets right up to 2015. We were in the forefront of leading
the industry in embedding health and safety principles. We are
committed to achieving similar progress on sustainability.'
Further highlights include:
Total CO2 emissions fell slightly to 19,626 tonnes. BAM reduced
fuel use by 480,000 litres, emissions from its premises by 8% and
transport emissions by 6%. Normalized against turnover, its CO2
emissions rose slightly by 4% due to the severe winter weather
conditions.
Introduced BAM SMaRT - an innovative online monitoring system to
measure the environmental performance of all its sites, allowing
better data capture and analysis.
Introduced BIM (building information modeling) 3D modeling on
design projects, enabling it to optimise design solutions helping
to construct buildings more cost-effectively.
In 2010 it introduced a transport strategy. BAM's 2500 employees
drove 720,000 fewer business miles and used 44,000 fewer litres of
fuel in its commercial fleet. Average company car fleet emissions
reduced to 133kg CO2/km.
Reduced office supply deliveries by 17%, reduced paper usage by
12%, colour and black and white copies (9% and 14%) and 83% of the
paper it used was from a sustainable source.