Green products are the catalysts that drive our movement toward a cleaner earth, but what makes a product green? Since the term “green” is used so often today for so many different concepts, how do we quantify it? According to the US Green Building Council, it’s all about what goes in, what comes out and what effect the product has on our environment and clean earth sustainability. Green rules are vast, but true “eco-friendly” products will always belong to one or more of the following eco-positive categories:
Products made with recycled, salvaged or agricultural waste content
Products with pre-consumer recycled content
Salvaged products
Products with post-consumer recycled content
Products made from agricultural waste material
Products that conserve natural resources
Products that reduce material use
Products with exceptional durability or low maintenance requirements
Certified wood products
Rapidly renewable products
Products that avoid toxic or other emissions
Natural or minimally processed products
Alternatives to ozone-depleting substances
Alternatives to hazardous products
Products that reduce or eliminate pesticide treatments
Products that reduce storm water pollution
Products that reduce impacts from construction or demolition activities
Products that reduce pollution or waste from operations
Products that save energy or water
Building components that reduce heating and cooling loads
Equipment that conserves energy and manages loads
Renewable energy and fuel cell equipment
Fixtures and equipment that conserve water
Products that contribute to a safe, healthy built environment
Products that do not release significant pollutants into the building
Products that block the introduction, development, or spread of indoor contaminants
Products that remove indoor pollutants
Products that warn occupants of health hazards in the building