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Green material

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Green material

It is common in the construction and manufacturing industries to come across terms such as green building, sustainable materials, and other variants of “green” and “sustainability”. These two words are often used in place of one another, but the reality is that they are not interchangeable and do not mean the same thing. 

In a nutshell, while sustainable materials can be considered green, not all green materials are sustainable.

Regulation in the usage of these terms is currently minimal, and manufacturers tend to call their products “green” or “sustainable” when they technically may not be. Bodies such as the EPA (the US Environmental Protection Agency) have come up with ecolabels such as the ENERGY STAR to help consumers quickly gauge the environmental impact of products. However, enforcement of this initiative is still ambiguous.

Green materials are renewable, naturally occurring, and do not directly contribute to the pollution of the earth. Sustainable materials take into consideration much more than the constitution of the material or its environmental impact. It involves other factors, such as how the material is produced and transported, and how these processes, in turn, affect the environment, the economy, and society as a whole.

In this article, you will learn about:

What are green materials?

Materials are classified as green materials solely based on how they intrinsically affect the environment. This classification does not take into consideration any other secondary or indirect factors that have to do with the material. 

Naturally occurring materials (such as wood), ceramics, glass and composite materials are common examples of green materials. Green materials have the following characteristics [1]:

The requirements for green materials are relatively easy to comply with compared with sustainable materials.

What are sustainable materials?

Compared to green materials, the definition of sustainable materials is much broader and more explicit, leaving little room for misconceptions. 

As per the EPA, sustainability “creates and maintains the conditions under which humans and nature can exist in productive harmony, that permit fulfilling the social, economic and other requirements of present and future generations.” Not only is sustainability concerned with the environment, but it also factors in the impact on social and economic conditions many years into the future. 

Sustainable materials are produced from raw materials that are renewable and sourced in a manner that does not negatively impact the environment or decrease its supply permanently. This often entails replacing what has been used at a rate equal to or higher than its consumption so that future generations will have sufficient access to the resources.

There is an ecological angle to sustainable materials, as well. The use of these materials should not negatively affect the long term wellbeing of plants and animals (including humans), maintaining the delicate ecological balance of life. 

In other words, the habitats of plant and animal life must be protected from permanent destruction during the extraction of natural materials if they are to be deemed sustainable. 

In addition, sustainable materials have low embodied energy, which means the total energy used in the supply chain to make the material available for use must be minimal.

In practice, when green or sustainable materials are used in construction, the construction is referred to as a “green building”. A green building has the following characteristics [2]:

Sustainable materials vs green materials

The differences between sustainable materials and green materials are not confined to what the materials are made of. They are more about the processes and policies that produce them. 

For example, suppose company A and company B produce the same product; one product might be considered green while the other sustainable due to the differences in:

Another example can be given in the form of two buildings. Buildings A and B may be built with the same materials, but one is deemed sustainable while the other is not. This happens if the design of Building A has zero net-energy consumption while Building B consumes a high amount of energy. 

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