uniqueweblist.com uniqueweblist.com uniqueweblist.com
Search:    Home Page :> About Us :> Security & Privacy :> Terms of Use :> Place Your Link :> Submit Article   
Add URL
 

People & Communities

Adventure & Sports

Culture & Art

Education & Reference

Property & Agents

Healthcare & Medicine

Family & Home

Issues & News

Technology & Science

Travel & Accommodation

Malls & Shopping

Online & Indoor Games

Teens & Kids

Self Help

Government & Politics

Business & Services

Employment & Careers

Drink & Food

Health & Hygiene

Automobile & Automotive

Computers & Software

Entertainment

Investment & Finance

Fashion & Relationships

 

Home Page » Education & Reference » Environmental Studies
 

Wood-Framed Homes Prove To Be Better for Environment

 
Author: Rudolph Rodriguez
Wood-frame homes are more environmentally friendly than those constructed of steel or concrete, according to a new study by 15 U.S. universities and research institutes.

Additionally, the researchers, known as the Consortium for Research on Renewable Industrial Materials, or CORRIM, concluded that most of the energy required to build an average home is consumed during the manufacture of building materials - not during actual construction.

"These are landmark findings," said Kelly McCloskey, president and CEO of the Wood Promotion Network. "This offers a first-ever snapshot of how building materials impact our environment."

Twenty-three independent researchers collaborated on the project, which used a process called life-cycle analysis to weigh the environmental impact of home construction. Life-cycle analysis gauges the energy required to produce building materials, as well as construct, maintain and demolish a typical home over a period of 75 years.

CORRIM compared the life cycles of two hypothetical homes in Minneapolis - one with a wood frame, the other with a steel frame - and the life cycles of one wood-frame and one concrete-frame home in Atlanta. The study determined that the construction of the Minneapolis steel-frame home used 17 percent more energy than the matching wood-frame home, and the Atlanta concrete-frame home used 16 percent more energy than a matching wood-frame home.

"Everything kind of flows from energy consumption," said Bruce Lippke, professor of forest resources at the University of Washington and one of the researchers who helped conduct the study. "If you're using energy, you're polluting water, polluting air and kicking out carbon dioxide emissions."

The study also concluded that the carbon emissions associated with energy use represent one of the more important environmental impacts. They estimated the global-warming potential of the steel-frame home to be 26 percent higher than the wood-frame home, and the concrete-frame home was 31 percent higher than the comparable wood-frame home.

"The use of wood products instead of steel or concrete can further reduce the greenhouse emissions from fossil fuels wherever lumber mills generate power and heat using bark, sawdust and other byproducts of milling," said Lippke.

The report offers these additional suggestions on how to help reduce the energy demands of home construction:

* Redesign homes to use less fossil-fuel intensive products;

* Change building codes that promote excessive use of wood, steel and concrete;

* Recycle demolition wastes;

* Increase durability of homes through improved products and construction practices.

Author Bio:

To learn more about immigration law and policy, visit www.aila.org. - NU

You can search for this article using: environmental issues, environmental versus epigenetic theories, environmental remediation
 
 
 

Related Articles

 
Interview for "Bringing Out the Best In Others" Author Thomas K. Connellan
 
Crop Circles and Genetic Knowledge
 
From Hola To Hello: Teach English In Mexico
 
Interview for "My Tour of Hell: A Marine's Battle with Combat Trauma" Author David W Powell
 
A Review of The University of Phoenix Online MBA Degree
 
Let Other People Critique Your College Admission Essay
 
Butterflies: Life Cycle of a Butterfly
 
Monsters of Traditional Lore: Dinosaurs by Other Names?
 
Acoustic Transducers for High Altitude Balloon Control
 
Online University Degree - Online Education And Long Distance Learning
 
 
 
 
 

Michigan Schools Shore Up a Failing School System

While other states and school districts are searching for progressive and innovative methods to impr ... - Patricia Hawke
 

Studying When You Have Chronic Fatigue Syndrome - Part 1

Studying can be extremely difficult when you have Chronic Fatigue Syndrome /Post Viral Fatigue Syndr ... - Claire Williams
 

eLearning Critical Analysis

Over recent years, we've been inceasingly amazed by technology that provides us with easier ways of ... - Kristy Annely
 
 

Modification of Earth and Humans

As we see in the movies and genres of cataclysmic events being depicted in images on the silver scre ... - Lance Winslow
 

Amazon Introduces "iTunes for Books"

Amazon.com has announced an upcoming program called Pages. I think of it as "iTunes for books." Page ... - Cathy Stucker
 
 
   Home Page :> Security & Privacy :> Terms of Use
Copyright © 2006-2008 www.uniqueweblist.com - All Rights Reserved.