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New EFFC/DFI Sustainability Guide No.4: Water Use Released

This article was originally posted on Whitepapers and Case Studies: Zweig List.
Summary
DFI and the EFFC have released Sustainability Guide No. 4: Water Use, offering a practical framework to help geotechnical contractors, designers, and stakeholders reduce water consumption and manage water-related impacts in line with U.N. SDG 6 (Clean Water and Sanitation). Using a “what–why–how–measure” approach, the guide maps how ground engineering activities interact with surface water, groundwater, and supply chains; highlights varying water demands across solutions; and promotes design choices (including nature-based solutions) to cut use and build resilience amid water scarcity, climate stress, and rising regulatory expectations. It follows earlier free guides on Carbon Reduction (SDGs 13, 7), Circular Economy (SDG 12), and Climate Adaptation & Resilience (SDGs 11, 13), all available from the DFI Publications Store; the series shares good practice rather than setting minimum standards.

How is your organization tracking and reducing water use across the geotechnical project lifecycle, and what nature-based or design strategies have delivered the biggest savings?

DFI’s Sustainability Committee continues working with the European Federation of Foundation Contractors’ (EFFC) Sustainability Working Group to develop a series of guides addressing the U.N. Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) that are most relevant to the geoindustry.

Hawthorne, N.J. — The latest guide, EFFC/DFI Sustainability Guide No. 4: Water Use, provides a structured, practice-oriented framework to help geotechnical contractors, designers and project stakeholders to reduce water consumption and manage water-related impacts in alignment with SDG 6 (Clean Water and Sanitation). 

“Climate adaptation and resilience are challenging topics, but a changing climate requires us to move beyond traditional approaches and embed resilience into both our projects and our organizations,” says Kimberly Martin, Ph.D., P.E., ENV SP, Keller North America, and co-chair of the EFFC/DFI Sustainability Guides Task Group. “This guide is an important resource to help our industry learn and navigate the changes we need to make. I want to recognize Marla Gillow of Transport for London for leading the team behind this valuable guide and thank DFI and EFFC for their continued support of this work.”

Recognizing freshwater scarcity, climate-driven hydrological stress and increasing regulatory and client expectations, the guide addresses these across the geotechnical project lifecycle.

Using a “what–why–how–measure” methodology, the guide characterizes how ground engineering activities interact with surface water, groundwater and supply chains. It highlights the variability of water demand across geotechnical solutions and emphasizes the importance of reducing the use of water through design choices such as nature-based solutions.

Sustainability Guides No. 1, No. 2 and No. 3

The first guide in the series, EFFC/DFI Sustainability Guide No. 1: Carbon Reduction, addresses SDGs 13 (Climate Action) and 7 (Renewable and Clean Energy).

The second guide in the series, EFFC/DFI Sustainability Guide No. 2: Circular Economy, focuses on SDG 12 (Responsible Consumption and Production). 

The third guide, EFFC/DFI Sustainability Guide No. 3: Climate Adaptation & Resilience,  addresses SDGs 11 (Sustainable Cities and Communities) and 13 (Climate Action).

The guides are not minimum requirements or sector standards, but rather practical support guides sharing good practice. The guides are free and can be downloaded from the DFI Publications Store.

EFFC/DFI Sustainability Guide -2-


About DFI

DFI (www.dfi.org) is an international association of contractors, engineers, manufacturers, suppliers, academics and owners in the geotechnics industry. Our multidisciplinary membership creates a consensus voice and a common vision for continual improvement in geotechnical and geoenvironmental design, manufacturing and construction. We bring together members for networking, education, communication and collaboration. With our members, we promote the advancement of the  industry through technical committees, educational programs and conferences, publications, research, government relations and outreach. DFI has more than 4,500 members worldwide.

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