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Green Seal Paint Standards and Certification

Green Seal Paint Standards and Certification. Mark Petruzzi Vice President of Certification. Overview of Presentation. Significance of Standards, Certification in Procurement and Product Stewardship Background on Green Seal, Inc. Green Seal’s Certification Program

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Green Seal Paint Standards and Certification

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  1. Green Seal Paint Standards and Certification Mark Petruzzi Vice President of Certification

  2. Overview of Presentation • Significance of Standards, Certification in Procurement and Product Stewardship • Background on Green Seal, Inc. • Green Seal’s Certification Program • Overview of current Paint Standards • Update of GS-43 certifications

  3. Significance of Standards, Certification in Procurement • Help identify green products/services • Verify legitimate environmental claims • Provide explicit, objective standards • Provide criteria for specifications and bids

  4. Significance of Standards, Certification in Procurement (con’t.) • Certification demonstrates compliance • Expert, independent assessment • Consider product performance • Can provide competitive bids if standards set properly

  5. Significance of Standards, Certification in Procurement (con’t.) • Technical Basis: • Use best available science • Base on life-cycle of product • Identify leadership levels to move market • Procedural Basis: • Use open and transparent process • No financial interest or conflict-of-interest

  6. Green Seal, Inc. Background • Non-profit with environmental mission: Green Seal is dedicated to safeguarding the environment and transforming the marketplace by promoting the manufacture, purchase and use of environmentally responsible products and services.

  7. Green Seal, Inc. Background (cont.) • Science-based • Exclusive focus on products, services, purchasing, operations • Multiple product categories • Multiple criteria (life-cycle approach) • No financial interest in products, companies

  8. Green Seal Meets Applicable Guidelines for Certification • ISO 14020 and 14024 • Principles of Environmental Labeling • Principles and Procedures for Type I EL • EPA Guidelines for 3rd-Party Certifiers • Member of the Global Ecolabelling Network

  9. Green Seal Meets Applicable Guidelines for Certification (con’t.) • Key attributes: • open, transparent process • based on life-cycle evaluation • impartial; no financial interest/conflict • leadership levels in standards • developed by consensus

  10. Green Seal’s Certification Program • GS standards in 35 product categories • Over 800 hundred products/services certified • range from windows, electric chillers, and lodging facilities to institutional cleaners, paints, paper products, etc.

  11. How Green Seal SetsEnvironmental Standards • Establish study category • Call for stakeholders • Appoint Stakeholder Committee (incl. users, manufacturers, trade groups, government, environmentalists, others)* • Environmental evaluation • Draft standard • Public review • Published Response-to-Comments • Stakeholder ballots* • Issue final standard * where resources allow

  12. Manufacturers Seventh Generation Spartan Chemical Clean Environment Co. Church & Dwight 3M Users US Postal Service Aberdeen Proving Ground Int’l Exec Housekeepers Assn American Federation of State, County, & Munic. Employees ServiceMaster Industries Government City of Santa Monica MN Ofc Of Env Assist. MA Exec Ofc of Env Affairs US EPA US GSA Environmental INFORM Global Toxics Campaign, WWF Washington Toxics Coalition Environmental Health Coalition Others UMass Toxics Use Reduction Institute Individual experts Sample Stakeholders

  13. GS-11 OverviewGreen Seal Environmental Standard for Paints This Standard establishes environmental requirements for paints. The standard does not include stains, clear finishes, or paints sold in aerosol cans.

  14. GS-11 OverviewProduct-Specific Performance Requirements • Interior Topcoats: • Scrubbability • Hiding Power (Opacity) • Washability (Stain Removal) • Exterior Topcoats • Hiding Power (Opacity)

  15. GS-11 OverviewProduct-Specific Environmental Requirements • Chemical Component Limitations • VOC limits • Aromatic compound limits • Chemical Component Restrictions • 25 restricted compounds, including methylene chloride, benzene, toluene, ethylbenzene, vinyl chloride, formaldehyde, certain phthalates, and heavy metals

  16. GS-11 OverviewPackaging & Labeling Requirements • Packaging • Paint cans and their components are not fabricated with lead • Labeling Requirements • Basis of certification must be appear with the Green Seal Mark: • “This product meets Green Seal environmental standards for volatile organic compounds (VOCs) and other ingredients.” • Include a brief statement discouraging disposal into drains and encouraging consultation with local authorities for disposal or recycling • Paints formulated without VOCs shall be designated Class A.

  17. GC-3 OverviewGreen Seal Environmental Criteria for Anti-Corrosive Paints Establishes environmental requirements for anti-corrosive paints, defined as coatings formulated and recommended for use in preventing the corrosion of ferrous metal substrates

  18. GC-3 OverviewProduct-Specific Performance Requirements • Adhesion • Hiding Power (Opacity) • Corrosion Resistance

  19. GC-3 OverviewProduct-Specific Environmental Requirements • Chemical Component Limitations • VOC limits • Aromatic Compounds • Chemical Component Restrictions • 25 restricted compounds, including methylene chloride, benzene, toluene, ethylbenzene, vinyl chloride, formaldehyde, certain phthalates, and heavy metals

  20. GC-3 OverviewPackaging & Labeling Requirements • Toxics in Packaging • Paint cans and their components are not fabricated with lead • Labeling Requirements • Basis of certification must be appear with the Green Seal Mark: • “This product meets Green Seal Environmental Criteria for anti-corrosive paints. Product does not exceed 250 g/l volatile organic compounds (VOCs), which can contribute to air pollution. Product does not contain certain toxic chemicals found in similar paints.” • Paints formulated without VOCs shall be designated Class A.

  21. Purpose of GS-43Recycled Paint Standard • Reduce amount of leftover paint in waste stream: convert into viable product • comparable in performance to virgin • close the loop • Increase confidence in consumers • preconceptions, misperceptions • control variability of marketed products

  22. Genesis ofRecycled Paint Standard • PSI’s Paint Product Stewardship Initiative – Markets Workgroup • Need for certification - ensure good quality recycled content paints - purchasers can identify these • Funded by CIWMB through San Joaquin County

  23. Issues in Recycled Paint Standard development • Ensuring performance • consistent levels with inherently variable product • teaming with Master Painters Institute • requirement to meet virgin paint standards • Including consolidated paint • more variable, less predictable

  24. Issues in Recycled Paint Standard development (cont.) • Presence of prohibited ingredients • prohibit in virgin additives • testing of recycled content? • Combining exterior and interior • commonly done in consolidated • long-term performance, health issues?

  25. Issues in Recycled Paint Standard development (cont.) • Post-consumer content • standardize protocols to ensure quality • Federal, State procurement specs vary • VOCs • recycled may be high, esp. high gloss, color • balance with use, waste diversion goals • Federal, State requirements vary

  26. GS-43 OverviewScope of Standard Establishes environmental and performance requirements for recycled-content interior and exterior latex paint, defined as paint made by consolidation and reprocessing or remanufacturing This Standard does not apply to stains, clear finishes, paints sold in aerosol cans, or oil-based paints.

  27. GS-43 OverviewCollecting & Storing Requirements • Original container with a readable label • Visually match with label • No solvent based paints or specialty paints • Physical inspection shows paint is free of : • Biological growth • Putrefaction • Skinning • Livering • Hard settling of the pigment • Corrosion of the container • Excessive debris • Curdling or other evidence of being frozen • Heavy metals • Paint filtered through a 300-micron or finer filter

  28. GS-43 OverviewProduct –Specific Performance Requirements • Meets the applicable MPI detailed performance standard • Tested for pH, viscosity, fineness of grind, and gloss

  29. GS-43 OverviewProduct –Specific Health & Environmental Requirements • Chemical Component Limitations • VOC limits • Aromatic compound limits • Chemical Component Restrictions • 25 restricted compounds, including methylene chloride, benzene, toluene, ethylbenzene, vinyl chloride, formaldehyde, certain phthalates, and heavy metals

  30. GS-43 OverviewPackaging & Labeling Requirements • Product Packaging • Paint cans and their components are not fabricated with lead • Recyclable product containers used where local recycling opportunities exist. • Labeling Requirements • Include a brief statement discouraging improper disposal and encouraging consultation with local authorities for disposal requirements or recycling opportunities. • Basis of certification must be appear with the Green Seal Mark: • “This product meets Green Seal’s environmental standard for consolidated recycled-content latex paint based on its use of a minimum 95% by volume post-consumer material and product performance” • “This product meets Green Seal’s environmental standard for reprocessed recycled-content latex paint based on its use of a minimum 50% by volume post-consumer material and product performance”

  31. GS-43 OverviewEnd of Life Management • Unused latex and non-latex paint shall be removed, utilized, disposed of properly • Leftover paint from remanufacturing process shall be utilized where there are existing markets • Metal and plastic paint containers, pallets, and packaging shall be recycled where there are existing markets.

  32. Update on GS-43 Certifications • Currently two manufacturers being evaluated • One consolidated and one reprocessed • Some issues include: • Meeting MPI requirements (time) • Documentation of criteria • QA/QC or log documents • Obtaining disclosure from raw material supplier • Need complete MSD Sheets for “ingredient” and/or • Need to see all proprietary information • Need complete formulations, hazardous and non-hazardous (virgin and secondary industrial materials)

  33. Conclusions • Product stewardship, procurement aided by certification • Certification must follow substantive and procedural guidelines • Green Seal is US pioneer in environmental certification • Recycled paint standard will provide basis for product stewardship

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