BuildSteel™ is tracking the sustainability initiatives of Steel Framing Industry Association (SFIA) members and their partners. Here is some recent sustainability news related to the cold-formed steel (CFS) framing industry.
Steel Framing Drives Sustainable Housing in Rwanda
The City of Kigali, Rwanda’s capital, earned global recognition for sustainable, affordable housing built with steel framing. The World Economic Forum and UN-Habitat’s Global Partnership for Local Investment honored the Bwiza Riverside Homes project, which ADHI Africa Holding Ltd. developed. The 30-hectare community has over 60% of its units meeting Rwanda’s affordable housing policy. The project supports low-carbon growth and serves as a model for developing cities.
Cold-formed steel (CFS) framing drives the project’s sustainability success. The framing technology speeds construction, reduces waste and lowers embodied carbon. These features demonstrate how steel framing supports environmental performance and long-term durability.
Each home also uses energy-efficient materials certified by IFC’s EDGE Advanced Green Building Standard. Sponge-city infrastructure, permeable pavements and reinforced soil retaining walls improve water management and flood resilience.
The homes achieve up to 70% energy savings and reduce embodied energy, according to ADHI CEO Hassan Adan Hassan.
Steel Dynamics Expands Low-Carbon Steel Offerings
Steel Dynamics Inc., one of the largest U.S. steel producers and recyclers, announced two new lower-embodied-carbon products, BIOEDGE™ and EDGE™. The SFIA member developed these products to help customers meet emissions reduction and sustainability goals. The company produces BIOEDGE and EDGE exclusively with electric arc furnace technology. It matches each product with Green-e Energy certified renewable or emission-free nuclear energy certificates, reducing Scope 2 emissions.
Steel Dynamics plans to offer the EDGE product family across all steel operations. The company expects immediate interest from automotive and construction customers.
Read the Steel Dynamics press release.
Steel Recognized for Durability and Sustainability
Atlas General Construction, a Bay Area contractor, introduced its “10 Modern Building Materials Atlas Is Deploying in 2025” initiative to advance durability and sustainability. The program showcases materials that improve strength, efficiency and long-term performance. Each system demonstrates a commitment to engineering smarter, more resilient structures that endure changing environments.
The list highlights recycled structural steel. Atlas integrates recycled steel components into framing and reinforcement systems to maximize strength and sustainability. Fabrication partners source materials from mills that use electric arc furnaces running on renewable energy, cutting emissions and supporting circular production.

The demand for low‑embodied‑carbon materials is at an all‑time high, enabling specifiers to strategically source LEC cold‑formed steel (CFS) framing and minimize project environmental impact. Photo Credit: ClarkDietrich
“Structural steel, once criticized for its carbon intensity, now benefits from closed-loop production, up to 95% recyclable without degradation,” reports BBN Times.
Recycled steel improves seismic resilience with exceptional ductility and fatigue resistance — qualities essential for California’s earthquake-prone terrain. This focus on steel drives the next generation of sustainable construction, BBN Times says.
Additional Resources
- Update #25 | Sustainability News from the University of Waikato, Southeast Asia and Steel Dynamics
- Update #24 | Sustainability News from CFS Home Builders, ArcelorMittal Dofasco and Steel Dynamics
- Update #23 | Sustainability News from U.S. Steel, Steel Dynamics and ClarkDietrich
- Update #22 | Sustainability News from Cleveland-Cliffs, U.S. Steel and the Upcoming Green Steel Summit
- Update #21 | Sustainability News from the EPA, ResponsibleSteel and U.S. Steel
- Update #20 | Sustainability News from ClarkDietrich, ArcelorMittal and U.S. Steel
- Update #19 | Sustainability News from ArcelorMittal, Cleveland-Cliffs and Nucor4
- Update #18 | Sustainability News from U.S. Steel, Nucor and Cleveland-Cliffs
- Update #17 | Sustainability News from ClarkDietrich, Cleveland-Cliffs and U.S. Steel
- Update #16 | Sustainability News from Nucor, Cleveland-Cliffs and the U.S. General Services Administration
- Update #15 | Sustainability News from MRI Steel Framing, U.S. Steel and the U.S. Senate
- Update #14 | Sustainability News from Cleveland-Cliffs, U.S. Steel, and Nucor
- Update #13 | Sustainability News from ArcelorMittal Dofasco, U.S. Steel and Nucor
- Update #12 | Sustainability News from Nucor, U.S. Steel, and Steel Dynamics
- Update #11 | Sustainability News from Steel Dynamics, Cleveland-Cliffs and Carnegie Mellon
- Update #10 | Sustainability News from ArcelorMittal, U.S. Steel and Nucor
- Update #9 | Sustainability News from Nucor, Cleveland-Cliffs and U.S. Steel
- Update #8 | Sustainability News from FrameCAD, Cleveland-Cliffs and ArcelorMittal Dofasco
- Update #7 | Sustainability news from ArcelorMittal, SDI and U.S. Steel
- Update #6 | Sustainability news from Cleveland-Cliffs, Worldsteel and U.S. Steel
- Update #5 | News from Nucor, Cleveland-Cliffs and a New Low-Emissions Steel Coalition
- Update #4 | Steel Framing Industry Sustainability Initiatives
- Update #3 | Steel Framing Industry Sustainability Initiatives
- Update #2 | Steel Framing Industry Sustainability Initiatives
- Update #1 | Steel Framing Industry Sustainability Initiatives