Showing posts with label toxic chemicals. Show all posts
Showing posts with label toxic chemicals. Show all posts

Saturday, April 9, 2011

Practical Green Merchandising

(This piece originally appeared in the April 2011 issues of Merchant Magazine and Building Products Digest.)


Choosing winning product lines and getting them into the hands of customers is an art that, when practiced well, makes good merchants great.  The last few years, there’s been a rush by manufacturers to get their green innovations to market.  Many are going to be clear winners and will make a difference in transforming the built environment.  Unfortunately, along with the rush has been the slapdash - products presented as earning LEED credits, or being less toxic, or ecologically benign, when they are not.  Whether by deliberate deception or honest mistake, green washing has created confusion and skepticism in the market. 

It’s not so easy to pick green winners, but there are practical steps that merchandisers can take to reliably evaluate the green-worthiness of any product.  In general, the goal is to identify merchandise that meets certain criteria, both yours and your customers’.  There are a variety of product certifications and, of course, LEED and other green building rating systems provide relatively clear criteria.  But there is no master green products list to go by, and no matter how comprehensive, certifications and building rating systems are not going to cover all the product categories stocked in most stores and yards. 

But if you’re willing to roll up your sleeves and “green it yourself”, there’s another way to look at whether the merchandise you choose to sell is green worthy.  Start by asking:  Does it harm or benefit the environment? Does it pose health risks or promote healthy lifestyles?  Are communities positively or negatively affected in its manufacture?  Does it work?  Will it sell?  These questions should take in the entire lifecycle of the product, which includes looking at the impacts relating to raw materials, manufacturing process, distribution, use and disposal. 

The broad categories addressing human health and safety, ecological safety, and social responsibility provide the background for more specific product criteria and attributes – a partial list:

  • Energy – products that conserve energy, produce renewable energy or are made from renewable energy sources. 

  • Water – products that conserve water usage, especially the use of fresh, potable water, also product alternatives that don’t pollute water sources or aquatic eco-systems.

  • Toxic chemicals – products that are made with non-toxic or least toxic, low risk chemicals and other components.

  • Healthy and sustainable practices – products that contribute to healthy and sustainable practices, such as rainwater harvesting, composting, etc.

The evaluation process starts with the manufacturer who should provide credible product information, preferably with third-party documentation supporting their green claims.  That may not be enough.  Consult with independent experts and review third-party information on the internet, too.  There are several helpful databases online that will show what’s known about specific chemicals.  Comparing products in the same category will help to identify the “greenest” in class.  Finally, there must be a judgment about whether or not the product does the job and will sell – get a sample, take it for a test spin.

If the green merchandiser is defined by product selection, he or she is also defined by products not selected.  There are plenty of useful products for which there may be better or greener options.  But there are also junk products for which the only “green” option is that they simply not exist.  Every dealer in this supply chain has experience with junk, if only by accident.  These are products so poorly designed, manufactured so cheaply, and are so obviously heading straight for the landfill that they cannot be justified no matter how low the price point.  Eliminating the worst junk from inventory is not only practical, it’s also a virtuous step toward sustainability.

Sunday, December 13, 2009

Better Living Through (Green) Chemistry

(Originally published in the December '09 issues of Merchant Magazine and Building Products Digest.)

If you’re like me, that phrase brings back memories of nerdy high school science films extolling the modern marvels of convenience, value and progress, made possible by the Chemical Industry. It was a huge post-war economic engine that expanded its reach into nearly every product category and helped fuel the rise of the American suburb. There are now about 80,000 chemicals on the market, but only a few hundred have been tested for human or ecological safety. One unintended consequence is that many of these chemicals have reached into our ecosystems, including the very top of our food chain – us.

“Body burden” is the term toxicologists use to describe the toxic load an individual might be carrying at a given moment – several hundred substances, some of which will accumulate, others metabolized and excreted. Pregnant mothers will pass these substances to her child. One of the common pathways for exposure to toxic chemicals is through inhaling airborne pollutants. Most people have heard by now that indoor air can be far worse than outdoor air, and that the rise of asthma, multiple sclerosis, and other diseases could be caused by long-term, low-level exposures to the chemicals that surround us in daily life. And of course, we spend most of our time indoors.

The LEED rating systems aim to drastically reduce potential exposures to building occupants by limiting the use of emitting materials in the first place, and promoting active measures for improving indoor air quality. I always recommend stocking products that contribute to LEED credits, especially low-emitting, less-toxic products, that appeal to the green builders in your area. Products like formaldehyde-free plywood and cabinets, formaldehyde-free insulation, zero-VOC adhesives, zero-VOC paints and coatings – the list of less-toxic alternatives is long. But the list of emitting products, products that would not meet LEED’s requirements for indoor air quality, is much longer.

I invite you now to get up (after reading the article first, of course!) and follow your nose around your store. Pick up a few products and pronounce their ingredients. The paints, strippers, cleaners, pest killers, weed killers, plywood and treated lumber – what is the quality of this air that you and your staff breathe everyday? There’s a very good chance that some nasty neurotoxins, carcinogens, and endocrine disruptors are floating around in the mix. Unintended consequences, yes. More importantly, the people who might be exposed to off-gassing chemicals are probably the people you most care about. Swapping out the high-emitting products in your inventory, in favor those with zero or dramatically fewer toxic emissions, contributes to a healthier workplace with fewer liability issues.

In the long run, there are large-scale initiatives underway that will eventually lead to safer alternatives through greener chemistry. The Toxic Substances Control Act, the current federal chemical oversight regime, will likely be strengthened, giving the EPA more power to eliminate toxics and require manufacturers to prove health and safety before bringing new formulations to market. In California, the Green Chemical Initiative is undertaking a range of activities designed to make rapid progress eliminating toxics and stimulating growth of greener alternatives. However, the positive effects of these efforts won’t be felt for years.

In the meantime, the motivated dealer can learn more about body burden, LEED and indoor air quality from dozens of informative online resources – start Googling! SCS, GreenGuard and GreenSeal publish lists of their certified products, and there are other green product databases out there, too. The intended consequences could be felt immediately, leaving those you care most about breathing a little easier.