Fall 2024 / quarterly
The QUARTERLY shares free curated content from around the world — covering projects, resources, policy and lots more — to make staying informed easier.
Overview
You Are Here
It’s November, and we’re thrilled to be celebrating our first year as a new non-profit.
We couldn’t be more grateful for the community’s keen interest in our efforts and the growing invitations to speak, write, and teach.
What’s more, we’re incredibly proud to share our progress, impact, and areas of focus for the coming year.
This QUARTERLY reflects on the past year’s issues and why each theme matters. It also underscores the union of the design and carbon communities’ exemplary work addressing climate change, giving us a deep sense of pragmatic optimism moving forward.
This inaugural issue introduced Lot21, explaining our origins in the design industry and why we built a new platform with climate-positive resources to advance a common cause.
It’s because design touches every person on the planet, and our lot can play a pivotal role in advancing climate action faster.
We recognized this century’s overwhelming climate challenges, the opportunities that respond to them, and why the design community can help overcome them. We also underscored the need for more designers to gain a seat at the table to guide conversations about decarbonization.
And that’s why we’re here: to inform, inspire, and ultimately help empower more designers across disciplines to participate and move the needle together.
We started with science by citing simple, measurable facts, with links to dive deeper and learn more. From this factual foundation, we explored ‘what design can do,’ highlighting exciting cross-disciplinary opportunities today and all the more tomorrow.
Crucially, in this issue, we described why removing the excess carbon emissions trapped in our atmosphere is necessary to restore our climate. In addition, we shed light on the creative opportunities arising as carbon removal opens a new frontier for the design community.
Now, we can see innovation rapidly evolving in university labs, tech companies of all sizes, and progressive design studios. And it’s attracting global investment and generating jobs across market sectors, seeding new design opportunities that will grow in the future.
We compared & contrasted one of the world’s greatest societal transitions caused by climate change and why it’s historically unparalleled. Similarly scaled transitions occurred in the past — over a few centuries. In contrast, this great transition must shift the world from relying on planet-warming fossil fuels to running on renewable energy and reaching Net Zero by 2050 — in a few decades.
For another perspective, we compared the Keeling Curve (carbon accumulation in our atmosphere over time) and the Rogers Curve (adoption of new goods and services over time) because these curves help us recognize different aspects of human behavior and what it takes to change.
But more than this, the two measurement curves reveal the critical need to align their trajectories to reach Net Zero by 2050.
We viewed collaboration as a cross-disciplinary practice and considered how it benefits from integrating technical feasibility, business viability, and human desirability to render more robust results. And we looked at this model’s application to the climate crisis because climate change is too complex for one discipline, field, or industry to resolve alone.
We showed how the climate crisis demands a more diverse portfolio of solutions, the integration of sound perspectives, and collaboration across different communities of practice.
That’s why I’ve intentionally moved between the design and carbon communities of practice in recent years to braid their know-how together. This approach makes it abundantly clear that we have much to learn from one another.
You’ve made our first year remarkably rewarding, and we’re eager to build on this momentum.
Moving ahead, we’ll continue emphasizing carbon removal solutions that are crucial for restoring our climate, guided by the three pillars of climate action — effectively balancing adaptation (climate resilience), mitigation (carbon reduction), and restoration (carbon removal).
Following this framework, we’ll promote design for decarbonization and the benefits of integrating the design and carbon communities’ diverse skill sets and mindsets.
As each new season unfolds, we’ll share exemplary projects that advance climate action, highlight concepts from university students that will hearten you, and promote the climate policies that will impact everyone who shapes the built environment — everywhere.
Four seasons have passed; we know you are here, and your growing support uplifts us all now.
With you, we can do a lot more!
Lew Epstein
Founder / CEO
How to Participate
All the listings below are available on Lot21, and you’re invited to use them freely.
First, we suggest considering where you are on your climate journey to find a good starting place to learn without becoming overwhelmed. The Carbon Almanac Network’s The Daily Difference offers an easy, conversational way to begin. Bloomberg Green provides a more business-oriented yet accessible starting place. Both suggestions are free.
Every QUARTERLY newsletter ends with our Listening & Reading Suggestions. They connect you to podcasts, articles, and videos from those actively engaged in climate action worldwide. It’s an easy way to access diverse points of view that can help you cultivate your own.
If you want to join an advocacy group or test the waters, explore your state’s resources in our national policy directory here. Advocacy groups vary widely from hyper-local and grassroots to industry-focused and international. We suggest sampling a few to find like-minded people and learn alongside those specializing in policy development.
We’re adding more resources to our national policy directory in 2025 to make participation more accessible, so be sure to revisit your state from time to time.
Consider the following frameworks for a deeper dive into different strategies and solutions that you can readily participate in.
— Climate Framework, unites industry & academia in an effort to upskill our collective capacity for climate action
— Doughnut Economics Action Lab, turns the ideas behind Doughnut Economics into transformative action
— Project Drawdown Roadmap, identifies science-based solutions to reduce greenhouse gases in the atmosphere
— Project Regeneration Frameworks, describe critical actions that can stem the climate crisis in one generation
— Systems Change Lab, spurs action at the pace and scale needed to tackle some of the world’s greatest challenges
You can participate by sharing materials, tools, or projects using Lot21’s online easy-entry forms. This is a great way to help other community members advance climate action faster. And, if you have other suggestions for how our growing community can participate, please email us at info@lot21.org. We love hearing from you!
Projects
Collected works at the forefront of climate action
The Warsaw Uprising Mound Park / Toposcape + Archigrest
This multi-award-winning project reclaims and renews a degraded brownfield to create a thriving urban park full of biodiversity.
Shaped with a combination of post-war Warsaw building rubble and bioreceptive concrete — the park has become a climate-resilient environment for native plant life and animal habitats, water run-off management, and tree cover offering protection from the increasing urban heat island effect.
Tscherning Headquarters / GXN
The headquarters for Tscherning, a family-owned deconstruction company, demonstrates that materials from demolition sites are valuable resources for adaptive reuse.
Using exclusively reclaimed elements, such as brickwork from an old prison and stairs from a public school, the project pushes the boundaries of sustainable design by solely relying on reused materials, which reduces the new headquarters’ carbon footprint.
Mammoth Plant / Climeworks
Located in Iceland, Mammoth is Climeworks’ second commercial Direct Air Capture (DAC) plant, and it is about ten times bigger than its predecessor plant, Orca.
Mammoth represents a demonstrable step in Climeworks’ scale-up roadmap, moving carbon removal capacity from thousands to tens of thousands of tons per year — an important milestone on the way to megaton capacity by 2030 and gigaton by 2050.
Resources
Materials and tools to help decarbonize the world
Concrete / low embodied carbon
Low-embodied carbon concrete resources are increasing rapidly. To make them easier to navigate, we have divided them into three subcategories listed below.
Explore these examples and many other resources in our materials directory.
Concrete categories explore innovative formulations that can significantly reduce carbon footprint by sequestering CO2, incorporating upcycled waste materials, or bio-based alternatives. These next-generation concrete solutions go beyond traditional supplementary cementitious materials (SCMs) to create more sustainable solutions for the built environment.
Carbon & Climate / visualizations
Carbon & Climate visualizations have emerged as crucial tools for communications about increasing carbon emissions and climate change around the world.
Dive deeper and discover far more in our growing tools directory.
Visualization tools translate data differently. Begin by sampling a few selections below.
Carbon Visuals turns data into visuals to make sense of big environmental challenges — climate change, air pollution, water, and resource use at a personal, local, or global level.
Climate Impact Map is a team of economists, climate scientists, data engineers, and risk analysts that are building the world’s most comprehensive body of research quantifying the impacts of climate change, sector-by-sector and community-by-community.
Climate Change Graphs from the New York Times provides 30 climate change graphs to explore our planet’s warming oceans, intensifying storms, and rising air temperatures as well as its greenhouse gas emissions and climate solutions.
Policy
Advancing climate action through legislation
National / policy in action
Our National policy directory includes a selection of measures in all 50 states that support decarbonization. Searching by state is easy with our alphabetical finder and every measure is tagged — Proposed (or) Passed — to quickly learn its status.
Below are two examples of measures passed by the state of Minnesota.
Compare states — leading or needing climate legislation now.
Due to this bill, the design community can more readily rely on an infrastructure supportive of decarbonization, which requires utilities in the state to provide at least 55% of the electricity from renewables by 2035 and 100% carbon-free sources by 2040.
Minnesota’s Governor released this climate action framework, with millions invested in developing solar energy, promoting electric transportation, improving working lands, carbon storage, and climate adaptation and resilience measures.
International / agreements
Our International directory connects designers to each country’s Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs), industry advocacy groups, and how to participate. The NDCs make it easy to compare each country’s global greenhouse gas emissions (GHG) and gain a more comprehensive view of global climate action.
Explore countries — their NDCs and GHGs listed under the letter A.
Afghanistan NDCs / 2021 / global GHG emissions: 0.01%
Albania NDCs / 2022 / global GHG emissions: 6.67%
Algeria NDCs / 2022 / global GHG emissions: 3.11%
Andorra NDCs / 2022 / global GHG emissions: 0.55%
Angola NDCs / 2020 / global GHG emissions: 0.14%
Antigua & Barbuda NDCs / 2021 / global GHG emissions: 0.18%
Argentina NDCs / 2020 / global GHG emissions: 0.71%
Armenia NDCs / 2022 / global GHG emissions: 0.55%
Australia NDCs / 2020 / global GHG emissions: 0.14%
Austria NDCs / 2021 / global GHG emissions: 0.18%
Azerbaijan NDCs / 2020 / global GHG emissions: 0.71%
All countries can be easily found in our alphabetical directory here.
Lots
New initiatives to help decarbonize the world
FRAMING THE CHALLENGE
THE BUILT ENVIRONMENT
Path To Zero Carbon
Kjell Anderson is the Director of Sustainable Design and leader of LMN’s Green Team and Carbon Leadership Forum chapter founder.
Among Kjell’s many notable achievements are his contributions to Path To Zero Carbon, LMN’s research and solutions for one of the most significant challenges of the 21st century, the climate crisis. This new series researches, summarizes, and prioritizes critical actions we can take today across the built environment.
CIRCULAR CARBON
ENRICHED WITH BIOCHAR
Cast Carbon
Emily Majewski is Co-founder of Cast Carbon which combines biochar (pyrolyzed biomass) with natural clay, fibers, and binding minerals to make circular, biodegradable materials for the built environment that sequester carbon.
Because we won’t build tomorrow’s world with today’s materials, Cast Carbon believes that for bold, nature-aligned visions to manifest, we need transcendent materials that can create new worlds now.
A PUBLIC GOOD
SUPPLY AND DEMAND
WILL BE POLICY DRIVEN
Carbon Removal Standards Initiative
Rick Wayman is the Co-founder of the new Carbon Removal Standards Initiative (CRSI), which envisions a carbon removal industry that is transparent, accountable, and worthy of public investment.
To fulfill this purpose, CRSI provides technical assistance and capacity building for carbon removal policy focused on quantification standards. Read MORE about the rigor CRSI is bringing to guide new regulatory standards.
Listening & Reading Suggestions
World Resources Institute:COP29 Resource Hub
The Carbon Almanac:More Than Hope
A Matter Of Degrees:Minnesota’s Climate Breakthrough
Legion44:A Film About The Rise Of Carbon Dioxide Removal
Carbonfuture:Accelerating The Carbon Removal Industry With Trust
Zero:The Unstoppable March Towards Electrification: The Grid Series
We formed Lot21 to
help the design community
decarbonize the world.
Lot21 is a 501(c)(3) (EIN 92-1723199) non-profit, non-partisan organization
Copyright © Lot21 2024. All rights reserved.