UK · Updated 2026 · Explainer
Part Z & Embodied Carbon: Using Surplus Reclaimed Sandstone in Stoke-on-Trent
Whole-life carbon assessments are becoming mandatory on Stoke-on-Trent projects. Reclaimed and surplus sandstone is the fastest lever for reducing A1–A3 embodied carbon in West Midlands. This 2026 guide shows the numbers and the evidence you need.
Embodied carbon savings
Reclaimed sandstone typically avoids 60–95% of the A1–A3 embodied carbon of a new equivalent. On a mid-size Stoke-on-Trent project this can equal 4–12 tonnes CO₂e avoided.
Part Z timeline and what it requires
- Whole-life carbon assessment on all major projects
- Reporting to a central UK register
- Alignment with RICS WLCA methodology
- Evidence of material provenance
Building a compliant evidence pack in Stoke-on-Trent
- Yard invoice with weight/quantity
- Photos and batch references
- Manufacturer EPD comparison for baseline
- Site delivery notes
Cost of sandstone vs carbon benefit
| Grade | Typical price | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Job-lot / bulk | £180 per tonne | Merchant clearance, palletised |
| Standard graded | £330 per tonne | Sorted, ready-to-fit stock |
| Heritage / premium | £480 per tonne | Character grade, hand-picked |
Frequently asked questions
+Is Part Z law yet?
Not yet fully — it's a private-members bill and industry alignment. Adoption on public and BREEAM projects is already widespread.
+How is carbon quantified for surplus?
A1–A3 emissions are usually set to zero for genuine reclaim; A4 (transport) uses actual distance.
+Is reclaimed sandstone frost-proof?
Yes — stone that has survived 100+ UK winters is proven. Check for spalling from salt damage.