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Material stewardship is an approach to source, produce, design, use, reuse, and recycle materials in a ecologically and socially most responsible way to achieve material sustainability. In this sense, material stewardship is closely connected to concept of a closed loop product lifecycle.[1].
Contents
1Stages of material stewardship
2Categories for material stewardship
3Material stewardship systems
4References
5External links
Stages of material stewardship[edit]
To classify the stages of material stewardship, the EN15804 (Sustainability of construction works - Environmental product declarations)[2] provides a useful structure:
A1-A3 - Product stage
A4+A5 - Construction process
B1-B7 - Use phase
C1-C4 - End of life
D - Benefits and loads beyond the system boundary
A similar structure has been developed by Christopher D. Taylor e.a.[1]:
Mining/Refining
Manufacturing
Service
End of life
Categories for material stewardship[edit]
The categories for assessing material stewardship are along the lines of the triple bottomline of sustainability with the ecological and social category in the first place, sometimes complemented by economy.
The Cradle to Cradle Certified Product Standard specifies the following categories[3]:
Material Health Requirements
Product Circularity Requirements
Clean Air & Climate Protection Requirements
Water & Soil Stewardship Requirements
Social Fairness Requirements
Material stewardship systems[edit]
Various material stewardship systems provide criteria, award and promote the responsible sourcing, use, reuse, recycling of materials.
One of the first has been the certification system issued by the Forest Stewardship Council (FSC), which has been established as an association in 1993[4]
With the rise of consumer awareness for sustainability in general and the growing number of green building labels in the construction sector in specific, various material stewardship systems have been established:
Aluminium Stewardship Initiative - ASI[5]
:de:Cradle_to_Cradle|Cradle-to-Cradle[6]
Concrete Sustainability Council - CSC[7]
Fair Stone standard|Fairstone[8]
Forest Stewardship Council|Forest Stewardship Council - FSC[9]
Natureplus[10]
Programme for the Endorsement of Forest Certification|PEFC[11]
Responsible Steel[12]
References[edit]
↑ 1.01.1Christopher, Taylor (2016). "Towards Materials Sustainability through Materials Stewardship". MDPI Sustainability: 2.
↑DIN EN 15804:2020-03, Nachhaltigkeit von Bauwerken_- Umweltproduktdeklarationen_- Grundregeln für die Produktkategorie Bauprodukte; Deutsche Fassung EN_15804:2012+A2:2019, Beuth Verlag GmbH, retrieved 2021-08-01
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