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Going green: a guide to environmental groups & programs: Wood & Wood Products presents a summary primer of major environmental programs that are having an impact on the North American wood products market.


It is difficult to talk about woodworking and the environment these days without the conversation quickly turning to topics like wood certification or "green" buildings.

Slowly but surely, more and more wood products companies are taking the initiative or being directed by their customers to utilize environmental materials in their products. Among the most common acronyms that have become part of the environmental movement vernacular are FSC FSC

See: Foreign Sales Corporation
, SFI SFI Sustainable Forestry Initiative (forest certification program of AF&PA)
SFI Santa Fe Institute (scientific research in Santa Fe, New Mexico)
SFI Science Foundation Ireland
SFI Six Figure Income
 and LEED.

To help its readers get a better grip on the major voluntary environmental programs and the sometimes competing groups behind them, Wood & Wood Products has assembled this 'Green Guide" It is organized into four major categories: Green Buildings, Forest & Wood Certification, Independent Audit Groups and Industry Association Initiatives.

For complete information about any individual program, visit the sponsoring group's Web site.

GREEN BUILDINGS

The leadership in Environmental and Energy Development system, developed by the U.S. Green Building Council, is the dominant brand for green building certification. LEED has led to the creation of a coalition of 32 disenfranchised North American North American

named after North America.


North American blastomycosis
see North American blastomycosis.

North American cattle tick
see boophilusannulatus.
 trade associations that want a say in the LEED standard setting process. LEED has also prompted the National Association of Home Builders The National Association of Home Builders (NAHB) is one of the largest trade associations in the United States. Headquartered in Washington, DC, the association organizes one of the largest conventions in North America, The International Builders' Show, which draws more than  to develop green guidelines for residential construction. There also exist dozens of local or regional green building programs not listed here due to their number and relatively limited scope.

Although LEED offers professional accreditation, training and other resources, its project certification program is the hot-button issue Noun 1. hot-button issue - an issue that elicits strong emotional reactions
gut issue

issue - an important question that is in dispute and must be settled; "the issue could be settled by requiring public education for everyone"; "politicians never discuss
. Project certification involves a voluntary process by which commercial buildings register with LEED to submit documentation and calculations to satisfy prerequisites in five categories: site planning Site planning in landscape architecture and architecture refers to the organizational stage of the landscape design process. It involves the organization of land use zoning, access, circulation, privacy, security, shelter, land drainage, and other factors. , energy consumption, water usage, indoor environmental quality and building materials Building materials used in the construction industry to create .

These categories of materials and products are used by and construction project managers to specify the materials and methods used for .
. A building becomes LEED Certified if it satisfies at least 26 of the 67 possible credits available in these categories.

Two of these potential credits are of concern to the woodworking industry: one for using FSC certified wood under the "materials and resources" category, and another for using low-emitting composite wood and agrifiber products under the "indoor environmental quality" category.

So far, fewer than 200 buildings have become LEED Certified, but another 1,700 projects are registered to become certified. The USGBC USGBC United States Green Building Council  has extended its brand with the release of LEED-EB LEED-EB Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design for Existing Buildings (US Green Building Council USGBC)  for remodeling remodeling /re·mod·el·ing/ (re-mod´el-ing) reorganization or renovation of an old structure.

bone remodeling
 existing buildings and LEED-CI for commercial interiors. Among new programs in the works is LEED-H for home construction.

While LEED certification is voluntary, several federal government agencies and more than one dozen cities and counties, require any public building projects to meet LEED standards.

U.S. Green Building Council / LEED Certification Program

Web site: www.usgbc.org

Home Base: Washington, DC

Inception: :1993 (USGBC); 2000 (LEED)

Membership: Approximately 5,500 organizations from all aspects of the building industry, including building product manufacturers.

FYI "For your information." See digispeak.

FYI - For Your Information
: The USGBC started :12 years ago in what it describes as an effort "to promote buildings that are environmentally responsible, profitable and healthy places to live and work." The organization is most well known for its LEED-NC program, which was the first-ever rating system for determining whether a newly constructed building is green.

North American Coalition on Green Building

Web site: None, its position paper may be found at www.apawood.org

Home Base: No dedicated office

Inception: 2003

Membership: Consists of 32 organizations with a material interest in the green building movement, including the American Forest & Paper Assn., the APA-Engineered Wood Assn., the Composite Panel Assn., the Architectural Woodworking Assn., the Kitchen Cabinet Manufacturers Assn. and the Canadian Plastics Industry Assn.

FYI: The NACGB was created in an effort by a diverse range of U.S. and Canadian building products associations to leverage their strength in numbers in numbered parts; as, a book published in numbers.

See also: Number
 to lobby for greater input in green building initiatives, including the LEED standards setting process. The coalition has no bylaws The rules and regulations enacted by an association or a corporation to provide a framework for its operation and management.

Bylaws may specify the qualifications, rights, and liabilities of membership, and the powers, duties, and grounds for the dissolution of an
, board of directors, budget, staff or Web site. What it does have is a position paper that criticizes the USGBC for not working with "all stakeholders Stakeholders

All parties that have an interest, financial or otherwise, in a firm-stockholders, creditors, bondholders, employees, customers, management, the community, and the government.
" and suggests that government should not depend on LEED "as a system to ensure green buildings."

The position paper--a one-page document--states that the coalition supports the concept of green buildings, but not the LEED system itself. Its reasons are twofold. First, the coalition says the USGBC does not base its standards on objective scientific criteria. Second, the coalition says any green building rating standards "should be developed through an accredited accredited

recognition by an appropriate authority that the performance of a particular institution has satisfied a prestated set of criteria.


accredited herds
cattle herds which have achieved a low level of reactors to, e.g.
 standards development organization," such as the American National Standards Institute See ANSI.

(body, standard) American National Standards Institute - (ANSI) The private, non-profit organisation (501(c)3) responsible for approving US standards in many areas, including computers and communications. ANSI is a member of ISO.
. NACGB implies that the USGBC is not fully transparent and does not allow dissenting views in its consensus process.

The NAGGB does not offer a green building program of its own, but instead offers to work with the USGBC to improve the LEED program where it sees faults.

National Association of Home Builder's "Model Green Home Building Guidelines"

Web site: www.nahb.org/gbg

Home Base: Washington, DC

Inception: 2004

Membership: NAHB is comprised of 800 state and local associations with 220,000 individual members.

FYI: The NAHB says it developed its green home building guidelines "in a consensus process by a group of more than 60 stakeholders representing key players in the green home building industry."

Designed to bring green home building to the mainstream market, these guidelines are available for download on the NAHB Web site. The association says it hopes these voluntary guidelines will help facilitate local and regional green home building efforts. Guidelines focus on the following areas: Lot preparation and design; resource efficiency, energy efficiency; water efficiency/conservation; occupancy comfort and indoor environmental quality; and how to educate homeowners on maintaining these systems.

Building America

Web site: www.buildingamerica.gov

Home Base: Washington, DC

Inception: 1995

Membership: Five teams of building experts that have worked with more than 523 industry partners.

FYI: This program is part of the U.S. Department of Energy's Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy Renewable energy utilizes natural resources such as sunlight, wind, tides and geothermal heat, which are naturally replenished. Renewable energy technologies range from solar power, wind power, and hydroelectricity to biomass and biofuels for transportation.  Department. It is a private/public partnership that conducts research to find energy-efficient solutions for new and existing housing that can be implemented on a production basis. The program aims to produce homes on a community scale that use, on average, 30 to 90 percent less energy than traditional homes.

Though its focus is on energy solutions, its research methods focus on a "systems engineering approach to home building." This means Building America wants to unite segments of the building industry that traditionally work independently of one another--including architects, engineers, builders, equipment manufacturers, material suppliers, community planners, mortgage lenders and contractor trades.

Green Building Initiative

Web site: www.thegbi.org

Home Base: Portland, OR

Inception: 2004

Membership: 3,000 associate members, including builders, architects, developers, building owners, realtors and others involved in residential and commercial construction. Membership opportunities also are available for product manufacturers, retailers and other organizations.

FYI: This new organization touts itself as the practical alternative for green building solutions. GBI GBI Georgia Bureau of Investigation
GBI Green Building Initiative
GBI Ground Based Interceptor
GBI Grand Bahama Island
GBI Green Bank Interferometer
GBI Generic Bus Interface
GBI Gain By Inventory
GBI Garrett Bureau of Investigation
 says its goal is "to bring green building to the majority--to give mainstream builders and architects the information and tools to create better living environments."

The non-profit firm works closely with the NAHB and local home builders associations to provide: information on green building approaches that are "environmentally progressive, practical and affordable;" Web-based support such as model guidelines, case studies and online technical assistance; promotional and marketing support for local green building programs; educational seminars for builders and other stakeholders in the building industry; and market research regarding evolving consumer trends and attitudes.

Green Globes

Web site: www.greenlobes.com

Home Base: Canada and the United Kingdom

Inception: 1996

Membership: None required.

FYI: Green Globes is "an online building and management environmental audit" that represents an alternative to LEED. Participants complete a confidential questionnaire of approximately 75 questions--some of which require data input, but most of which are yes-or-no questions--at any project stage. A subsequent report details the percentage of points awarded for best energy and environmental design standards Design standards

Specifications of materials, physical measurements, processes, performance of products, and characteristics of services rendered. Design standards may be established by individual manufacturers, trade associations, and national or
 and practices.

The Green Globes program began in the UK and was brought to North America North America, third largest continent (1990 est. pop. 365,000,000), c.9,400,000 sq mi (24,346,000 sq km), the northern of the two continents of the Western Hemisphere.  only recently. Two studies have been conducted in an attempt to harmonize Green Globes' standards with LEED's standards. Green Globes says its process is less cumbersome than LEED's and is a team-oriented approach to green buildings.

FOREST & WOOD CERTIFICATION

No single accepted forest management standard exists. Each system, as defined by the types of organizations described in this section, approaches sustainable forest management Sustainable forest management (SFM) is the management of forests according to the principles of sustainable development. It is also the current culmination in a progression of basic forest management concepts preceded by Sustainable forestry and sustainable yield forestry  differently. Still, there are some commonalities.

Most systems will offer two types of certification: one for sustainably managed forests and another for chain-of-custody supply tracking. Most systems also rely on third-party auditors to determine if their standard is being followed, to ensure the legitimacy of the standard and the certifier.

This section begins with an organization called Metafore, which offers a comprehensive guide to forest certification information, and then describes the four most pervasive forest certification schemes in North America.

Metafore / Forest Certification Resource Center

Web site: www.metafore.org or www.certifiedwood.org

Home Base: Portland, OR

Inception: 1997

Staff: 11 facilitators.

FYI: Metafore is NOT a wood certification group, but W&WP included it here because it is an organization that provides a great deal of information about wood certification and wood certification organizations.

In addition to the organization's Global Wood Initiative, a program designed to disseminate information to global buyers and sellers of forest products, Metafore also offers Wood for Building Green--A Practical Guide, which is a tool designed for architects, designers, developers and builders interested "in building forests by building green." The publication includes information on salvaged wood, recycled content and certified wood products, as well as resources for achieving wood-related green building program credits.

Most useful to woodworkers is Metafore's Forest Certification Resource Center, a comprehensive portal that includes the following highlights: a database of more than 800 certified forests throughout the world and more than 4,500 certified locations supplying wood and paper products; a Forest Certification Comparison Matrix, which provides comparative information on the key aspects of certification systems in North America; and auditor links to 27 auditors working with CSA (1) (Canadian Standards Association, Toronto, Ontario, www.csa.ca) A standards-defining organization founded in 1919. It is involved in many industries, including electronics, communications and information technology. , FSC, SFI and other forest certification schemes.

Forest Stewardship Council The Forest Stewardship Council (FSC) is a non-profit organization based in Bonn, Germany. The Council's stated mission is "to promote environmentally appropriate, socially beneficial and economically viable management of the world's forests".  

Web site: www.fscus.org (U.S.); www.fsc.org (international)

Home Base: Bonn, Germany, and Washington, DC

Inception: 1993 (international); 1995 (U.S.)

Membership: Loggers, foresters, environmentalists and sociologists with national offices in more than 40 countries.

FYI: The FSC is a non-profit organization A non-profit organization (abbreviated "NPO", also "non-profit" or "not-for-profit") is a legally constituted organization whose primary objective is to support or to actively engage in activities of public or private interest without any commercial or monetary profit purposes.  whose purpose is to encourage responsible management of the world's forests. It says it does this by setting principles, criteria and standards meant to ensure forestry is practiced "in an environmentally responsible, socially beneficial and economically viable way."

To obtain FSC certification, mills, manufacturers and distributors--as well as many retailers--undergo regular evaluations by auditors independent of the FSC. There are 12 FSC-accredited certifiers in the world, and each has its own evaluative process.

Certifiers evaluate both forest management activities (forest certification) as well as tracking of forest products (chain-of-custody certification). A full assessment is conducted every five years to renew the certification, with annual audits supplementing that process.

FSC claims to have more than 140 million acres of forests being managed under its certification program worldwide, including 30 million acres in the United States United States, officially United States of America, republic (2005 est. pop. 295,734,000), 3,539,227 sq mi (9,166,598 sq km), North America. The United States is the world's third largest country in population and the fourth largest country in area. . FSC also says more than 4,000 companies around the world are part of the FSC chain-of-custody system.

FSC certification is the only wood certification accepted by the USGBC as a credit toward its LEED certification program.

Sustainable Forestry Initiative The Sustainable Forestry Initiative is a program to certify forests to insure they are being managed in a sustainable manner.

SFI was started in 1994 by members of the American Forest and Paper Association.
 

Web site: www.aboutsfi.org

Home Base: Washington, DC

Inception: 1994

Membership: The SFI program is administered by the American Forest & Paper Assn.

FYI: The AF&PA developed the SFI program "to document the commitment of their members and the program's licensees to keep forests healthy and practice the highest level of sustainable forestry Sustainable forestry is a forest management practice. The basic tenet of sustainable forestry is that the amount of goods and services yielded from a forest should be at a level the forest is capable of producing without degradation of the soil, watershed features or seed source ." Participation in the SFI program is a condition of membership in the AF&PA, which has dismissed 17 of its members for failing to meet that standard.

An independent organization, the Sustainable Forestry Board, oversees the SFI program and is responsible for verification procedures. Like the FSC, though, third-party auditing groups ensure the program's members are following SFI forest sustainability and chain-of-custody standards. An average of 1.7 million trees is planted each day in SFI-certified forests, the group says.

American Tree Farm System Forest farming is an agroforestry practice characterized by intentional, integrated, intensive and interactive management of an existing forested ecosystem wherein forest health is of paramount concern. It is neither forestry nor farming in the traditional sense.  

Web site: www.treefarmsystem.org

Home Base: Washington, DC

Inception: 1941

Membership: 51,000 family forest owners.

FYI: ATFS's certification scheme requires, "Tree farmers share a unique commitment to protect wildlife habitat and watersheds, to conserve soil and to provide recreation for their communities while producing wood for America."

Certification of tree farms under the ATFS AtFS - Attributed File System  is overseen by the American Forest Foundation, which requires farms to meet its Standards of Sustainability for Forest Certification to become a Certified Tree Farm. Like previously mentioned certification programs, ATFS certification is voluntary. Unlike FSC and SFI, its inspectors are not from a third-party group. Instead, ATFS "established minimum education and experience requirements for certifying foresters and forest technicians, and it developed a national standardized standardized

pertaining to data that have been submitted to standardization procedures.


standardized morbidity rate
see morbidity rate.

standardized mortality rate
see mortality rate.
 training curriculum for its inspectors." Farms are re-inspected every five years.

Canadian Standards Assn.

Web site: www.csa-international.org

Home Base: Toronto, ON

Inception: 1919

Membership: 9,000 members "from all walks of life."

FYI: CSA's Forest Products Marking program identifies products based on both forest management and chain-of-custody standards. The CSA mark is recognized throughout Canada, the U.S. and other countries. The CSA conducts annual surveillance audits, as well as unannounced audits, to assure on-going conformance con·for·mance  
n.
Conformity.

Noun 1. conformance - correspondence in form or appearance
conformity

agreement, correspondence - compatibility of observations; "there was no agreement between theory and
 with its requirements.

THIRD-PARTY AUDIT GROUPS

Organizations like FSC and SFI develop forest certification standards that require third-party auditing groups to assess whether operations comply with those standards.

In addition to legitimizing the forest certifiers' programs by virtue of their independent nature, these auditors have the technical expertise needed to confirm a forest's management system and chain-of-custody practices.

Here is information on the three best-known firms involved in auditing North American forests and chain of custody The movement and location of physical evidence from the time it is obtained until the time it is presented in court.

Judges in bench trials and jurors in jury trials are obligated to decide cases on the evidence that is presented to them in court.
 certification.

Scientific Certification Systems

Web site: www.scscertified.com

Home Base: Emeryville, CA

Inception: 1991

Staff: Seven professionals and technicians, who report to three main supervisors.

FYI: This group is an accredited certification body for the FSC. It has certified more than 14 million acres in the last 12 years on land ranging from small 100-hectare parcels to 2.5-million-hectare forests. SCS also offers chain-of-custody certification and has audited and certified more than 500 manufacturers, distributors and retailers who make or carry certified wood products. These chain-of-custody certifications span 29 countries on five continents. The organization also certifies environmentally preferable products.

SmartWood

Web site: www.smartwood.org

Home Base: Richmond, VT

Inception: 1989

Staff: Not available.

FYI: SmartWood claims to be the first independent forestry certifier, and it helped establish the FSC in 1993. A part of the Rainforest ALliance The Rainforest Alliance is a non-governmental organization (NGO) founded in 1987. In is based in New York, United States.

Their stated mission is to protect ecosystems and the people and wildlife that depend on them by transforming land-use practices, business practices and
, SmartWood says it has certified more than 69 million acres in more than 50 countries. Products made from SmartWood-certified operations include Lumber, paper, furniture, flooring, musical instruments and non-timber forest products Non-timber forest products or NTFPs comprise all goods derived from forests of both plant and animal origin other than timber. NTFPs contribute to household income and subsistence and are of cultural importance in many rural societies.  such as maple syrup maple syrup: see under maple.  and Brazil nuts Brazil nut, common name for the Lecythidaceae, a family of tropical trees. It includes the anchovy pear (Grias cauliflora), a West Indian species with edible fruit used for pickles, and several lumber trees of South America, e.g. . SmartWood says none of its certificates have ever been appealed formally.

SGS SGS Société Générale de Surveillance
SGS Symantec Gateway Security (appliance)
SGS School of Graduate Studies
SGS Subgrid Scale
SGS Singapore Government Securities
SGS Shell Global Solutions
 Systems and Services Certification Inc.

Web site: www.sgs.com

Home Base: Rutherford, NJ

Inception: 1878

Staff: International structure with more than a dozen offices around the globe.

FYI: SGS is an accredited auditor with FSC, SFI, CSA and a European certifier called Programme for the Endorsement of Forest Certification Schemes The Programme for the Endorsement of Forest Certification schemes (PEFC) is a system that tries to ensure the sustainability of wood products. Founded in 1999 as the forest owners and forest industry's answer to the Forest Stewardship Council, it is an independent, , according to according to
prep.
1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians.

2. In keeping with: according to instructions.

3.
 Metafore. SGS's Web site says its FSC-accredited Qualifor program has issued more than 1,000 chain-of-custody and more than 190 forest management certificates in more than 60 countries.

ASSOCIATION-SPONSORED INITIATIVES

Several wood-related North American trade associations have played an active role in developing green programs, including the two described below.

Business and Institutional Furniture Manufacturers Assn. International's "Sustainability Guidelines"

Web site: www.bifma.org

Home Base: Grand Rapids Grand Rapids, city (1990 pop. 189,126), seat of Kent co., SW central Mich., on the Grand River; inc. 1850. The second largest city in the state, it is a distribution, wholesale, and industrial center for an area that yields fruit, dairy products, farm produce, , MI

Inception: 2005

Membership: More than 260 office and contract furniture manufacturers and suppliers.

FYI: BIFMA released its voluntary guideLines, designed by its Sustainability Subcommittee, earlier this year. According to the association, the guidelines are meant as a "roadmap for any office furniture [company] desiring to become ... more sustainable" and "as an add-on to a company's existing environmental management system."

In addition to these guidelines, the association is developing a standard and testing procedure for VOC (Vertical Online Community) See vertical portal.  and formaldehyde formaldehyde (fôrmăl`dəhīd'), HCHO, the simplest aldehyde. It melts at −92°C;, boils at −21°C;, and is soluble in water, alcohol, and ether; at STP, it is a flammable, poisonous, colorless gas with a suffocating  emissions from furniture. BIFMA hopes the USGBC will incorporate its furniture emissions standard within the LEED certification program.

Composite Panel Assn.'s "Environmentallv Preferable Product" Program

Web site: www.pbmdf.com

Home Base: Gaithersburg, MD, and Montreal, QUE

Inception: 2003

Membership: AvailabLe to members and non-members of the CPA (Computer Press Association, Landing, NJ) An earlier membership organization founded in 1983 that promoted excellence in computer journalism. Its annual awards honored outstanding examples in print, broadcast and electronic media. The CPA disbanded in 2000. .

FYI: The phrase "environmentaLLy preferable products" was defined by the federal government in 2002 as "products and services that have a lesser or reduced effect on human health and the environment when compared to other products and services that serve the same purpose." The CPA adopted this voluntary specification and certifies products to the federal standard through its Grademark Program.

The Grademark Program is an independent branch of the CPA that functions much like third-party auditors for forest certification schemes. It may certify all grades of particleboard par·ti·cle·board or particle board  
n.
A structural material made of wood fragments, such as chips or shavings, that are mechanically pressed into sheet form and bonded together with resin.
 and MDF (1) (Main Distribution Frame) A wiring rack that connects outside lines with internal lines. It is used to connect public or private lines coming into the building to internal networks.  engineered and produced for all applications as EPP (1) (Enhanced Parallel Port) See IEEE 1284.

(2) (Ethernet Packet Processor) A chip from Kalpana, Inc., Santa Clara, CA that doubles speed of Ethernet transmission to 20Mbits/sec. In 1994, Kalpana was acquired by Cisco.
 certified.

To be deemed environmentally preferable, products must meet two requirements: First, 100 percent of the fiber used in certified products must be either recycled fiber, recovered fiber or a combination of both; second, products must meet ANSI (American National Standards Institute, New York, www.ansi.org) A membership organization founded in 1918 that coordinates the development of U.S. voluntary national standards in both the private and public sectors. It is the U.S. member body to ISO and IEC.  formaldehyde emissions standards. Forty-four mills, representing nearly two-thirds of the North American capacity of particleboard and MDF production, are participating in the EPP program. The CPA is currently working on the development of a downstream program that would allow wood products manufacturers to promote their use of EPP certified panels in their products.
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Title Annotation:GREEN GUIDE
Author:Coleman, Katie
Publication:Wood & Wood Products
Date:Nov 1, 2005
Words:2916
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