Date: 17 July 2024
The National Glass Association (NGA) is proud to be selected for a $2.1-million grant to help advance the availability and quality of Environmental Product Declarations (EPD) for architectural glass, facilitate improved environmental transparency, and support efforts to reduce embodied greenhouse gas emissions in the construction industry. NGA and other recipient organizations are a part of an important collective to address climate change with construction material EPD projects.
“Having our grant application selected by EPA presents a great opportunity for NGA member companies, giving needed resources for our members to provide high quality information to their customers to support sustainable building,” said Nicole Harris, NGA president & CEO. “This will help NGA advance its goal to elevate the image of glass as a safe, healthy, sustainable and inspiring building product.”
EPA estimates that the construction materials used in buildings and other built infrastructure account for more than 15% of annual global greenhouse gas emissions. According to the EPA announcement, "The U.S. leads the world in the production of clean construction materials, and these transformative awards from President Biden’s Inflation Reduction Act...will reduce climate pollution by helping businesses measure the carbon emissions associated with extracting, transporting and manufacturing their products."
NGA’s VP of Advocacy and Technical Services, Urmilla Sowell, stated, “The grant will enable NGA to collect regionalized life-cycle inventory data for primary flat glass, develop a tool to generate EPDs to streamline the creation of processed glass EPDs, and provide technical and financial assistance to glass fabricators for processed glass EPDs. Additionally, it will gather end-of-life life-cycle assessment data to enhance understanding of glass recycling and its environmental impacts. We will present more details on this new NGA initiative to the attendees of the NGA Glass Conference: Milwaukee, on August 6 at 1:15 pm CT."
Ranging from $250,000 to $10 million, the grants will help businesses develop robust, high-quality EPDs, across 14 material categories. According to EPA, "These efforts will help standardize and expand the market for construction products with lower greenhouse gas emissions. They will make it easier for federal, state and local governments and other institutional buyers to ensure the construction projects they fund use more climate-friendly products and materials."
“Benchmarking as part of EPD development will lead to continuous improvement within the industry now and in the future, enabling business decisions based on improved information for both environmental and financial impacts,” commented Tom Culp of Birch Point Consulting and NGA’s energy code consultant. “This comprehensive approach will facilitate improved environmental transparency and support efforts to reduce embodied greenhouse gas emissions in the construction industry, aligning with federal initiatives and promoting sustainable practices across the glass industry supply chain.”
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