Feature from Environmental Building News
Cradle to Cradle Certification:
A Peek Inside MBDC's Black Box
An Executive Summary is available for this article.
The C2C Standard
McDonough and Braungart often promote three key concepts for environmental design: waste equals food, use current solar income, and respect diversity. “Waste equals food” is the conceptual basis for the cradle-to-cradle philosophy that all products should be made using materials that can be recycled indefinitely with minimal environmental impact. McDonough and Braungart use the phrase “current solar income” to argue that manufacturing processes should use energy from the sun or other renewable sources, instead of fossil fuels, which are Earth’s stored solar energy reserve. “Respecting diversity” is about evaluating the impact of industrial processes on all plant and animal life, or, as McDonough and Braungart say, “all the children of all species for all time.” The C2C certification program works to express these principles through five categories of evaluation criteria. Two deal with the materials contained in a product, and the other three deal, respectively, with energy use in manufacturing, water use in manufacturing, and corporate social responsibility. Based on ratings in each of these categories, a product can be certified by MBDC as C2C Silver, Gold, or Platinum. MBDC evaluates a product in each of the five areas, and its final score is the lowest of its five individual scores. MBDC also performs a more limited evaluation, using only the two materials categories, to certify a simple product as a “technical nutrient” or a “biological nutrient.”1.0 Material hazard assessment
MBDC’s greatest strength and, according to MBDC’s Jay Bolus, executive vice president for certification, “the heart and soul of the program,” is material chemistry. To achieve any C2C certification requires that all ingredients be identified down to the 100 parts per million (ppm) or 0.01% level and assessed according to 19 human and environmental health criteria (see table). MBDC uses these criteria to categorize chemicals with a “stoplight model”—red, yellow, or green. Chemicals with incomplete environmental data are rated gray and are, according to Bolus, treated as if they were red. For a product to achieve any C2C certification other than Silver, it cannot contain any ingredients classified as red—unless red ingredients have no existing substitutes and the manufacturer contains those ingredients in a controlled, closed-loop technical cycle. “You don’t just look at it and say ‘Is it good or bad?’” McDonough told EBN. “You look at how it is being deployed, and is it contaminating the biosphere?” C2C’s stoplight model for evaluating chemicals derives from MBDC’s Chemical Profiles Knowledge Database. MBDC has populated this database through years of consulting with product manufacturers, whereby MBDC evaluates chemicals that those companies and their suppliers are using. Clients pay MBDC for its growing knowledge of chemicals based on the database.2.0 The nutrient cycle
MBDC identifies technical and biological nutrients as raw materials that are well suited for either perpetual recycling in industrial systems or beneficial or benign participation in biological cycles. According to Bolus, “The idea is that for something to be truly considered a nutrient, it can be recaptured 100% and has no red ingredients.” While C2C nutrient certifications, Bolus explained, “are only relevant for very simple things that are homogeneous—such as plastics, fibers, pigments,” all certified products must comply with some level of material reutilization criteria. This category requires that products are designed and manufactured for technical and biological cycles. The standard examines the levels of product recovery as well as use of component materials that are recycled or rapidly renewable and recyclable or compostable at the end of their useful life. Published C2C literature doesn’t define “recyclable” or “compostable,” but MBDC uses European Union guidelines for biodegradability, Bolus said, and Federal Trade Commission (FTC) guidelines for recyclability. FTC guidelines require an established recycling pathway. However, Bolus told EBN that MBDC might approve a product that falls short of FTC guidelines if the company “has its own takeback program that is available to everyone.”3.0–5.0 Energy, water, and social responsibility
While MBDC expresses its core expertise in C2C’s two materials categories, it piggybacks on other more established certification protocols in C2C’s three remaining categories. In the areas of energy, water, and social responsibility, a product manufacturer is required to first evaluate its own performance and then progressively increase its compliance with relevant protocols. The energy criteria focus on the manufacturer’s use of renewable energy to make a product, with a company required to evaluate its energy use for C2C’s Silver certification. Manufacturers need to use renewable energy for the product’s manufacture to achieve Gold certification, and for the energy used in a product’s entire supply chain to achieve Platinum. The renewable energy may be produced either on site or through the purchase of Green-e® certified renewable energy credits. C2C’s water criteria require companies to work to preserve the quality and supply of water resources. C2C provides a variety of principles and guidelines for companies to work from, with implementation required at the Platinum level. In its social responsibility section, C2C requires manufacturers to adopt corporate ethics and fair labor statements reflecting company goals. To meet C2C Gold certification, companies must assess their performance against one of several third-party standards supporting fair labor practices, such as SA8000 from Social Accountability International. Companies must satisfy certification requirements under the same standard for C2C Platinum.What C2C certification doesn’t mean
For someone seeking to understand the meaning of a C2C certification, it may be easy to confuse the cradle-to-cradle philosophy and ideals discussed by McDonough and Braungart with the actual requirements of C2C certification. Sara Graham, sustainable knowledge manager at HOK, told EBN that based on hearing McDonough speak and reading about his ideas, “I’ve long thought of Cradle to Cradle as the holy grail of industrial process.” However, there are a number of areas where the concept and the reality of certification—at least at the levels that are being achieved today—don’t match. A C2C Silver certification, for example, doesn’t guarantee that a product is free of all red ingredients—the only “knockout” chemical at the Silver level is PVC. Explaining MBDC’s choice of one knockout chemical, McDonough said, “We specifically focused on PVC because there were so many instances where we could optimize around alternatives.” Although C2C identifies red ingredients at the Silver level, and companies are asked to develop plans to phase them out or optimize them, there is no C2C report card for consumers that details what a certified product does or does not include. As another example, a certified biological or technical nutrient may not necessarily be returned to biological or technical cycles as the nutrient cycle concept describes. The minimum requirement for certification is merely that a product be 67% recyclable or biodegradable (for details on that calculation, see the sidebar on page 11). Bolus acknowledged to EBN that the requirement is weak, and explained that in the next version of C2C a product certified as a technical or biological nutrient would have to be 100% recyclable or compostable if it did not contain recycled content.C2C version two
C2C is evolving. Bolus said that a second version would come out in late spring 2007, and, as they do every year, companies will have to recertify to the new standard to maintain their certifications. Version two will address some gaps in C2C, but it will mainly be a revision of existing criteria without fundamental changes, Bolus told EBN. “We’re going to solicit feedback from companies who have gone through the program” to help guide the revision, he said, adding that he was not sure whether other stakeholders would be consulted. In addition to strengthening the recycling requirements for nutrient certification, version two will likely add more knockout chemicals that would automatically bar a product from achieving the Silver rating. MBDC will also reevaluate renewable energy credits, said Bolus, and will revisit “materials and water metrics from a global perspective.” Bolus said MBDC has been working with the Business and Institutional Furniture Manufacturer’s Association (BIFMA) and will “add a lot of detail” to the product emissions criteria. “We’re looking to make Silver more stringent,” Bolus added. MBDC intends for C2C to continue as a widely applicable standard: “We’d like to have the logo mean the same thing regardless of what you see it on,” said Bolus.C2C Certification Process
Manufacturers pay MBDC somewhere from a few thousand dollars to $60,000 for C2C certification. “It depends on how complex the product is,” said Bolus. According to Bolus, about half of the manufacturers who have sought certification first hired MBDC as consultants to help them improve their products. Mark Bonnema, an environmental design engineer for Haworth, Inc., told EBN that when Haworth sought and received Gold C2C certification for specific models of its Zody™ office chair, “we knew where it was because we’d been working with them for a long time.” Bonnema added, “We paid them one price for the consultation and the certification.”Helping manufacturers drill down
C2C helps companies gain a thorough understanding of what is in their products. Most companies rely on components from other manufacturers. To learn what chemicals and materials are in those components, “they get what is on the MSD [Material Data Safety] Sheets,” said Ritchie. MSD Sheets report chemicals down to 1%–5% material composition and to 0.1% for anything carcinogenic or hazardous. “That’s the standard rule that the supply chain has been working off of, not down to 0.01%,” said Ritchie, “so where is that information coming from?” According to Bolus, “hard work” is the answer. “We typically rely on suppliers to tell us what they put in the product,” he said. “We do reserve the right to test it if we’re not sure they’re being honest.” A Web-based tool developed by MBDC allows suppliers to enter proprietary information about their production formulas. That information is revealed to MBDC for analysis but not to anyone else, not even the product manufacturer who is the supplier’s customer. In return for participating, suppliers get feedback on which of their ingredients MBDC considers problematic. Many products have colorants at 100 ppm that are “reds” in MBDC’s database, said Wing. “You find a lot more issues than at the MSD Sheet level,” he said, noting, “You’re deliberately adding ingredients at 100–200 ppm to some plastics, so it is appropriate to drill down to this level.” Wing, as well as representatives of other companies with C2C certifications, said that suppliers usually comply with the requests. “Everybody has their secret recipe,” said Melissa DeSota, who works on the environmental strategy team at Steelcase, Inc., “but they are reassured that they are sharing it only with this third party.” Rick Brow, director of marketing for Centria, agreed: “They were a little reluctant in the beginning, but in the end some of our suppliers took an interest in this for themselves.”Replacing toxic ingredients
Is Platinum attainable?
The couple dozen products now certified by C2C include a handful of biological and technical nutrients and a mix of Silver and Gold products—with most companies achieving Silver. No products so far have obtained C2C’s highest rating, Platinum. “Michael Braungart has said that the first Platinum product is probably three or four years away,” Bolus told EBN. While Wing suggested that “on the chemical side it is possible to get there,” Bonnema gave EBN a few reasons why it would be difficult to go higher than Gold. Bonnema looked at the whole supply chain for the Zody chair to estimate how much renewable energy it would take for Haworth to meet the Platinum requirement. “My first calculation showed that it was a very large dollar number,” he said. “I passed that to MBDC and they said, ‘Wow, we weren’t really expecting that.’ But they don’t necessarily change the certification scheme every time something like that comes up.” Bonnema said he expects the first Platinum to be a simpler product, like a coating.A Higher Standard
Developing a certification system is tricky, especially when, as in C2C’s case, its language is closely tied to a philosophical framework that sets such a high bar. MBDC isn’t shying away from that challenge, however. “Platinum is going to be pretty hard to get,” said McDonough, especially for “existing products that were never designed to be that way.” However, portraying the C2C criteria as “a design assignment,” he emphasized that “Platinum products will result from a conscious design choice.” Some experts, like Ritchie, have questioned whether C2C sets the bar impractically high, while others, like Lent, argue that many of the alternatives set the bar too low. “Many standards that come from collaboration with industry are just the next industry-consented hurdle—a comfortable stretch,” said Lent. “Standards that define an ideal, and rate progress on the way to it, are much more powerful actors for change.”Multiple attribute programs
Final Thoughts
C2C is distinguished by its translation of inspiring ecological thinking into a real-world product certification system, its affiliation with respected thought leaders, and its idealism. Its usefulness, however, is complicated by lack of transparency, gaps in its underlying criteria at both broad and detailed levels, and the lack of boundaries between the C2C standards-developing body, the C2C certification body, and the MBDC consulting body. Architects and design professionals specifying C2C-certified products may believe that they fulfill McDonough and Braungart’s cradle-to-cradle ideals, without realizing that those ideals are reflected only at the unattained Platinum level. However, if C2C’s certification raises concerns, MBDC has clearly spurred innovation from its clients. The primary value of C2C certification may be the manufacturer’s consulting relationship with MBDC, with C2C certification providing a way to market that reputation. MBDC isn’t the only certification company with that kind of arrangement—Air Quality Sciences is the only authorized testing lab in North America for the Greenguard Environmental Institute, and it offers consulting services related to the testing it performs for Greenguard certifications. As with companies working with Greenguard, a number of the companies working with MBDC are industry leaders who are known for trying to improve the environmental performance of their products. And while the C2C certification may on its face appear vulnerable to greenwashing, none of EBN’s sources suggested that the certification was being used to make blatantly misleading environmental claims. The field of product evaluation and certification systems is young, and C2C’s preeminence may be supplanted in coming years by other systems that surpass it in specificity, transparency, separation of functions, comprehensiveness, and engagement of multiple stakeholder groups. MBDC’s Fendley called for more groups to step up to the task—“It seems that the more companies that are out there doing this, the better,” he said. Said Bonnema, “I think it’s going to be interesting in the next three to five years to see which program or programs in sustainability certification really take off.” McDonough, contrasting MBDC’s present work with his dream of a more ecological nutrient cycle, said, “Right now we’re just trying to get some healthy products out there.”For more information:
McDonough Braungart Design Chemistry
Charlottesville, Virginia
434-295-1111
February 1, 2007
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IMAGE CREDITS:
1. Photo: Centria Architectural Systems
2. (no credit)
3. (no credit)
4. (no credit)
5. Photo: Hycrete, Inc.
6. Photo: Haworth, Inc.
7. Photo: Mechoshade Systems, Inc.
8. Photo: Mission Rubber Company
9. Photo: Mary-Page Turner
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