The Sensible Environmentalist
Where�s The Green Steel?
(NAPS)�DEAR DR. MOORE:
My son thinks steel is environmentally
friendlier than
wood because it�s recyclable
but I think wood is better
because it grows back. Who�s
right?
You�ve touched on a pet peeve
of mine�the fact
that many environmental
groups support
the use of steel
or cement over
wood, even though
wood is the most
renewable and sustainable
of all the
major building materials.
Wood also has the least
impact in terms of total energy
use, greenhouse gases, air and
water pollution, and solid waste.
These groups demand that
wood be certified as coming from
sustainably managed forests�
which is as it should be. In North
America alone, there are now
three independent certification
programs, all requiring third party
audits of forestry activities
and the number of acres certified
has risen dramatically. This can
only be good for the environment.
But where�s the green steel and
concrete? Why isn�t the environmental
movement demanding
that these industries submit to
their own independent audits for
sustainability? Steel and concrete
are both nonrenewable, require
vast amounts of energy to manufacture
and recycle and are major
contributors of carbon dioxide and
other greenhouse gas emissions.
At the very least, they should not
be given preference.
I�ve ruffled more than a few
feathers by pointing this out but it
makes sense to me that using
wood is good for the environment.
When we use wood, we create
demand in the market, which
gives landowners around the
world an incentive to plant more
trees and keep lands forested. As
an added benefit, growing forests
take carbon dioxide out of the
atmosphere, which helps to offset
emissions released through industrial
processes.
There are those who claim that
each time we use wood we cause a
little more forest to be lost. This
cannot possibly be true when you
consider that North Americans
consume more wood per capita
than anyone else in the world and
yet our forests cover about the
same area of land as they did 100
years ago. Does this not stand as
proof that our forests are being
renewed?
We have the tools at our disposal
to achieve real environmental
progress. As a sensible environmentalist,
I believe that one answer is
to choose renewable, energy efficient
materials such as wood.