ENVIRONMENT AGENCY URGES SUPPLIERS TO GO GREEN

Environmental Panorama
International
October of 2007

 

Head Office Press Office - 22-Oct-2007 - The Environment Agency has announced a new print contract worth around £1 million over the next three years.

"The Environment Agency tries to lead by example when it comes to working with environmentally friendly businesses that provide services like printing. In this contract we looked to employ business with good green credentials, this helps us work with suppliers who we can trust will take their environmental responsibility seriously" Said Dawn FitzGerald, Design Manager at the Environment Agency.

"This decision highlights the benefits of businesses getting serious about reducing consumption and wastage. If you want to be more eco friendly then recycling used paper is a great start, but why not think about every element of your business, from the electricity that keeps the printing press turning to the chemicals you use on the paper, even the plastic cups by your water cooler. These are all areas where you could make significant reductions"

Bellmont, Cambrian Press, Colourprint, Lexon, Linney and Polar were the print companies that made it through the tough selection process involving 60 applicants. The contract, which will supply the Environment Agency head office, will commission both litho and digital work to each company on a case by case basis.

"We were looking for print companies that have sound environmental credentials like the ISO 14001, which is only awarded to business achieving the highest standards in reducing their environmental impact. We also visited all twelve short listed printers so that we could see how they actually ran their business.

"Producing products or services using less resources, less wastage, and less pollution isn’t just good for the environment, it can be good for business too. Increasingly organisations are looking for more than just product quality in their suppliers, and ensuring that you are at the frontline of such changes means both your business and the environment can benefit."

+ More

Environment Agency launches new tool to help reduce carbon footprint from construction projects

National Press Office - 22-Oct-2007 - A new online tool that will help construction companies plan carbon-wise projects and reduce their carbon footprint has been launched today (Monday) by the Environment Agency.

The spreadsheet-based tool, which from November 2007 will be mandatory to use during the planning stage on all major Environment Agency construction projects, is now being made available to other construction companies, government bodies and consultants.

Andrew Powell, Technical Advisor at the Environment Agency, said: “At the Environment Agency we are always looking to ways of reducing the environmental impact from our own construction projects. We spend around £200 million a year on construction projects, which accounts for about 3% of the construction civil engineering sector.

“With this in mind over the past year, together with Jacobs Consultants, we developed a new tool for calculating the carbon footprint from construction projects. We have been trialling the tool as part of environmental audits on the building of new flood defences schemes.”

Features of the new tools take into account:

estimating the CO2 in the raw materials used
direct emissions from personal travel by employees and transportation of raw materials
emissions from site activities such as earthworks and excavation
allows comparison of waste management options
The tool provides a way to find where significant carbon savings can be made during the planning and design process and can be also used to audit the carbon footprint of a completed project.

During the trial of the tool, the Environment Agency’s auditing of one of the flood defence schemes found that one tonne of ordinary Portland cement emits 970kg of CO2 when made in a wet kiln, whilst ash cement gives off 585kg and slag cement emits 280kg. With 1.5 million tonnes of cement used in flood defence work in 2005/6, this highlights how the choice of materials can help achieve a significant reduction in carbon output.

Andrew Powell added: “As an environmental regulator, our role is to lead by example and demonstrate what sustainable construction means in practice. Promoting resource efficiency and reducing carbon emissions from our construction projects is an important part of that.”

The Carbon Footprint Calculator can be viewed and download via the link under "See also..."

 
 

Source: Environment Agency – United Kingdom (http://www.environment-agency.gov.uk)
Press consultantship
All rights reserved

 
 
 
 

 

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