EarthSource Forest Products

EarthSource Forest Products, a division of Plywood and Lumber Sales, Inc., sells FSC-certified hardwood plywood and lumber of the following species: maple, cherry, red oak, white oak, ash, Honduras mahogany, walnut, machiche, amapola, and many more.
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  • Third-party forest certification based on standards developed by the Forest Stewardship Council (FSC) is the best way to ensure that wood products come from well-managed forests. Wood products must go through a chain-of-custody certification process to carry an FSC stamp.

    Manufactured wood products can meet the FSC certification requirements with less than 100% certified wood content through percentage-based claims (30% certified content is required if only virgin wood fiber is used; certified-wood content as low as 17.5% is allowable if the rest of the fiber content is from recycled sources).

    With a few special-case exceptions, FSC-based certification is a requirement for GreenSpec inclusion of any nonsalvaged solid-wood product and most other wood products. A few manufactured wood products, including engineered lumber and particleboard/MDF, can be included if they have other environmental advantages--such as absence of formaldehyde binders. Engineered wood products in GreenSpec do not qualify by virtue of their resource efficiency benefits alone (for more on this, see EBN, Vol. 8, No. 11).

EarthSource Forest Products, a division of Plywood and Lumber Sales, Inc., sells FSC-certified hardwood plywood and lumber of the following species: maple, cherry, red oak, white oak, ash, Honduras mahogany, walnut, machiche, amapola, and many more. EarthSource also sells salvaged and rediscovered lumber such as fir, redwood, and hickory. EarthSource has introduced a line of exotic hardwood flooring FSC-certified from sustainable forests around the world.

06 11 00: Wood Framing

GreenSpec lists wood framing lumber that is made of FSC-certified wood or reclaimed wood. Greenspec also lists Preserved-Wood Framing Lumber that provides enhanced durability without the environmental concerns of conventional wood preservatives.

Some companies listed here may sell both FSC-certified and noncertified products or carry other types of certification that don't qualify for GreenSpec. To ensure the use of environmentally responsible wood products, be sure to specify FSC-certified wood when buying from these companies.

06 16 00: Sheathing

Sheathing comprises a significant portion of the materials used with many building types. Careful consideration of product selection and use can reduce the environmental impacts of a project.

Wall sheathing is often used only as an additional layer of weather protection, although it may also be required for racking resistance. When let-in diagonal bracing is used to provide racking resistance, wood-panel sheathing can sometimes be eliminated or replaced with more resource-efficient or insulative products.

Phenol-formaldehyde (PF) binders are used in plywood, while OSB can be made with PF or the non-formaldehyde-emitting methyl diisocyanate (MDI), a polyurethane binder. Ironically, exterior-rated products using PF binders are less of an offgassing concern than interior-grade panels made with urea-formaldehyde.

Oriented-strand board (OSB) can be an efficient use of forest resources because it can be produced from small-diameter or low-grade tree species. Wood products can carry the “FSC Mixed” label under a percentage-based standard based on the average certified and non-certified throughput of the facility at which they are made.

Products listed here have one or more of the following attributes: FSC-certification; nonformaldehyde binders; relatively nontoxic borate preservative treatments; or other environmental advantages over conventional OSB and plywood.

06 16 23: Subflooring

Subflooring creates the structural plane of the floor, over which the finish flooring layers are applied. Phenol-formaldehyde (PF) binders are used in plywood, while OSB can be made with PF or the non-formaldehyde-emitting methyl diisocyanate (MDI), a polyurethane binder. Formaldehyde emissions from these structural products are exempt from major North American emissions standards, including those from the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) and the California Air Resources Board (CARB).

Oriented-strand board (OSB) can be an efficient use of forest resources because it can be produced from small-diameter or low-grade tree species. Some subflooring products combine the function of a subfloor and underlayment, reducing material use. Products listed here contain no-added formaldehyde (NAF) or are available with FSC-certified content. Magnesium oxide panels, which are particularly insect and moisture resistant, are also listed here.

06 25 00: Prefinished Paneling

GreenSpec lists here prefinished panels made with recycled content, agricultural waste fiber such as straw, rapidly renewable materials such as bamboo, or FSC-certified wood, that all reduce pressure on forest resources. Some of the products we list also use low-emitting, non-urea-formaldehyde binders.

06 42 00: Wood Paneling

GreenSpec lists wood paneling that is made of FSC-certified wood.

Some companies listed here may sell both FSC-certified and noncertified products or carry other types of certification that don't qualify for GreenSpec. To ensure the use of environmentally responsible wood products, be sure to specify FSC-certified wood when buying from these companies.

06 42 16: Wood-Veneer Paneling

Wood veneer panels are made with veneers that can be laminated to a variety of cores, including plywood and medium density fiberboard (MDF).

These cores once used urea formaldehyde, a known carcinogen, as a binder, but no-added urea formaldehyde (NAUF) and no-added formaldehyde (NAF) cores that use low-emitting phenol formaldehyde and methyl diisocyanate (MDI) binders, respectively, are now readily available.

Products listed in GreenSpec use cores that contain no-added-urea-formaldehyde (NAUF) or no-added-formaldehyde (NAF) binders and meet the California Air Resources Board (CARB) Phase 2 emission standards for formaldehyde; they may also contain FSC-certified wood content or recovered waste fiber.

LEED Credits

MRc3: Materials Reuse

MRc3.1: Materials Reuse

MRc6: Certified Wood

MRc7: Certified Wood

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