I just moved to a new city so I
could go back to school. Now I've got to furnish an apartment on a graduate
student's budget. How bad for the environment is a
fake-wood bureau or bookcase? .
One of the cardinal rules of green living is to invest in quality items that
don't need to be replaced very often. But it's not always possible to buy
that handcrafted, solid-oak bookcase, especially if you're living off a
university stipend. So unless you're willing to let all your clothes and
books sit in piles on the floor, you may as well educate yourself about the
greenest options in your price range.
At the lower end of the furniture market, many pieces are constructed of
particleboard or a somewhat sturdier material called medium-density
fiberboard. These have at least one environmental edge over solid, virgin
wood: They're made primarily from sawdust and lumber scraps, so your new
dresser won't require cutting down as many trees.
On the other hand, it takes more energy to produce particleboard and MDF
than it does to process lumber boards, because the wood scraps must be
broken down, dried, mixed with adhesives and then heated and pressed into
panels. Plus, some of those scraps might have otherwise been burned as fuel
at the factory.
Plywood is a third kind of composite panel, made of thin sheets of wood that
are stacked and glued together. The wood comes from virgin timber, though
manufacturers are able to squeeze out more from each log than those making
solid wood products. Plywood and MDF are roughly equivalent in terms of the
energy used to produce them.
Then there are air-quality issues. Particleboard, MDF and plywood all have
the potential to emit formaldehyde because of the adhesives used in
manufacturing. Formaldehyde can cause short-term health effects such as
watery eyes and respiratory irritation at levels above 0.1 parts per
million. According to the Environmental Protection Agency, homes with
"significant amounts of new pressed wood" can have formaldehyde levels above
0.3 parts per million. Formaldehyde is also considered a "known human
carcinogen" by the International Agency for Research on Cancer and a
"probable human carcinogen" by the EPA.
Cheap furniture is likely to emit higher levels of the gas, because
low-formaldehyde replacement glues tend to be more expensive. (Plus, boards
made with these glues need to be cured longer, further increasing the price
of the finished product.)
Composite-wood products may soon be a safer option. California recently
passed strict emissions standards for the industry that should eventually
affect the rest of the country, given the size of the California market. In
the meantime, if you're concerned, look for furniture made with low- or
no-formaldehyde adhesives. (If your new bookcase smells a little off, leave
it outside or in a room with an open window for a week.) The greenest types
of particleboard and MDF have high amounts of recycled content or use
alternative fibers -- such as straw or sugarcane residue, known as bagasse
-- in place of wood.
Some retailers, such as Ikea, are experimenting with lightweight panels made
of a honeycomb-like paper core sandwiched between two thin sheets of
particleboard or MDF. These panels use less material than traditional
composite panels, not to mention less energy in their manufacture and
transport. The Lantern also likes the look of the modular furniture from Way
Basics (http://www.waybasics.com),
which is made from post-consumer recycled-paper panels that the company
claims are just as strong as particleboard.
Finally, if your new dresser contains any wood at all, you should spare a
thought for how that wood was sourced. In an ideal world, you'd always be
able to buy furniture certified by a third-party group such as the
Forest Stewardship Council,
but there doesn't seem to be a lot of FSC-approved stuff in the budget price
range. (There has been a stronger push toward certifying lawn furniture, but
that might not be the vibe you're going for in your new place.)
Regardless, you should always ask retailers where the wood comes from and
what sustainability measures are in place at the point of harvest. You may
not get more than a blank stare in return, but it's important to let
companies know that these issues matter to you, especially given the fact
that the United States' heavy appetite for wood products -- we consume about
a fifth of all global exports -- has been implicated in widespread illegal
logging in such places as Indonesia and the Russian Far East.
Of course, the best option, for the planet and your wallet, would be to buy
secondhand pieces. Buying used means avoiding manufacturing impacts, not to
mention lower formaldehyde emissions, and you'll probably be able to get
higher-quality (i.e., longer-lasting) pieces than you would have otherwise.
The Lantern, for example, is inordinately proud of a gorgeous designer couch
she bought last year for about a third of the original price. If you don't
have a grandmother whose attic you can raid, scour junk shops, Craigslist (http://craigslist.org)
and Freecycle (http://www.freecycle.org).
Does Fake-Wood Furniture
Sit Well With the Planet?
wood - furniture.biz >
news