Today, the U.S. Green Building Council (USGBC), developers of the global LEED (Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design) green building certification program, and Underwriter Laboratories (UL), the world’s leading safety and certification group, have announced an exclusive strategic partnership centered on building product transparency and occupant health and safety.
The partnership, the first of its kind in the building and certification industry, will roll out several targeted initiatives focused on increasing disclosure, awareness and transparency of building product composition and the manufacturing processes. The goal of the program is to accelerate market transformation and the overall quality and performance of buildings.
The first initiative of the partnership is the creation of a joint Environmental Product Declaration (EPD). EPDs are a standardized way of quantifying the environmental impact of a product or system. The joint USGBC-UL EPDs are a solution to increase transparency in building materials and products that are being used in our buildings, homes, schools, hospitals and other structures.
“UL is the foremost established leader in the EPD field and is uniquely positioned to provide third party assurance for the LEED green building program. We are thrilled to engage in this partnership which we believe will make a great impact across the market – both for manufacturers that want to establish themselves as leaders in the marketplace and for consumers who are increasingly demanding transparency in what is being used to construct and maintain the places where they live, learn, work and play,” said USGBC President, CEO & Founding Chair Rick Fedrizzi.
“Lifecycle impacts and human health are two of the key underpinnings LEED. We believe in buildings and products that limit environmental impact from conception to completion and that optimize the health of our families, colleagues and customers. UL is the world’s leading safety consulting and certification group, and our partnership will advance that mission enormously,” continued Fedrizzi.
“USGBC, creators and developers of the global LEED Green Building Rating system, are natural strategic partners for the work that UL is continuing to lead in the marketplace,” stated Sara Greenstein, president of UL's Environment and Information and Insights Business Unit. “As a global leadership standard for green buildings, USGBC’s commitment to material transparency as a key component of human health and wellness in LEED makes for a partnership that will reverberate throughout the industry.”
Buyers are demanding to know the full extent of a product’s environmental and health impacts,” continued Greenstein. “Transparency into the impacts of a product at each stage of its lifecycle has become a critical driver of purchases and specifications. Since this market is still evolving, and because the quality and consistency of data can vary greatly, we are working diligently to ensure that buyers and LEED users can trust that the information on which they rely is accurate, and that it complies with the new credit requirements. This partnership between USGBC and UL will help businesses, individuals and project teams better understand the products they are including in their building projects, and have greater clarity about how those products can contribute to LEED credits,“ Greenstein concluded.
Scot Horst, Senior Vice President for Global Innovation and LEED at USGBC stated that USGBC would continue to forge strategic alliances such as these in the marketplace in order to drive the customer experience toward increased consumer education.
“As LEED continues to evolve and we look at how USGBC can continue to transform the marketplace, we know that increased consumer education and market knowledge will drive consumer choices to more responsible and sustainable products. This is the first time USGBC is tying the built environment to products that will receive LEED credit, which is a huge step toward preventing green-wash and clear consumer market choice.”
Horst continued, “This partnership will accelerate LEED in the marketplace and help maintain its leadership standard through technical rigor and stringency. Equally important, it will incentivize those product manufacturers out there who are doing amazing things with their products and establishing themselves as leaders within their industry. We want to create a system to reward them.”
EPDs provide a credit achievement path in LEED v4, the newest version of the LEED rating system that is being released this week at USGBC’s annual Greenbuild International Conference & Expo. EPDs will help create avenues for future generations of LEED. “There is a great more to learn about life-cycle assessment and LEED and this USGBC UL partnership is the first step,” concluded Horst.
Related Stories
| Jan 3, 2012
AIA Course: New Developments in Concrete Construction
Earn 1.0 AIA/CES learning units by studying this article and successfully completing the online exam.
| Dec 27, 2011
Ground broken for adaptive reuse project
Located on the Garden State Parkway, the master-planned project initially includes the conversion of a 114-year-old, 365,000-square-foot, six-story warehouse building into 361 loft-style apartments, and the creation of a three-level parking facility.
| Dec 27, 2011
Nova completes $60M Clearwater Conference Center
Comprising an entire city block, the 450,000 sq. ft. facility features over 400 meeting rooms, six theaters, a full-service health spa, complete with an indoor running track, and a commercial kitchen that can efficiently accommodate over 1,000 diners
| Dec 27, 2011
Suffolk Construction celebrates raising of Boston Tea Party Ships & Museum cupola
Topping off ceremony held on 238th Anniversary of Boston Tea Party.
| Dec 27, 2011
USGBC’s Center for Green Schools releases Best of Green Schools 2011
Recipient schools and regions from across the nation - from K-12 to higher education - were recognized for a variety of sustainable, cost-cutting measures, including energy conservation, record numbers of LEED certified buildings and collaborative platforms and policies to green U.S. school infrastructure.
| Dec 20, 2011
BCA’s Best Practices in New Construction available online
This publicly available document is applicable to most building types and distills the long list of guidelines, and longer list of tasks, into easy-to-navigate activities that represent the ideal commissioning process.
| Dec 20, 2011
Aragon Construction leading build-out of foursquare office
The modern, minimalist build-out will have elements of the foursquare “badges” in different aspects of the space, using glass, steel, and vibrantly painted gypsum board.
| Dec 19, 2011
HGA renovates Rowing Center at Cornell University
Renovation provides state-of-the-art waterfront facility.
| Dec 19, 2011
Chicago’s Aqua Tower wins international design award
Aqua was named both regional and international winner of the International Property Award as Best Residential High-Rise Development.
| Dec 14, 2011
Belfer Research Building tops out in New York
Hundreds of construction trades people celebrate reaching the top of concrete structure for facility that will accelerate treatments and cures at world-renowned institution.