Fiber Glass and Slag Wool Insulation: a Life-Cycle Approach
Recycled content is the most immediately noticeable,
environmentally beneficial feature of a product.
Preference for a design, product or service based solely on
this one attribute, however, can be misleading. The
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and other
environmental experts recommend that a comparison of the
environmental properties of competing products employ a
life-cycle analysis.
A life-cycle analysis is an appraisal of the environmental
impacts connected with a product or service through an
examination environmental traits of the product during the
following stages: pre-manufacturing; manufacturing;
distribution/packaging; use, reuse, maintenance; and waste
management. In other words, life-cycle is a “cradle-to-
grave” assessment.
Responding to the recommendation of environmental experts,
the North American Insulation Manufacturers Association
(NAIMA) has developed this brochure outlining the various
life-cycle characteristics that specifiers should consider
in determining the most relevant attributes of an
environmentally preferable insulation product.
PRE-MANUFACTURING STAGE
An analysis of the pre-manufacturing stage should reflect
environmental effects associated with all pre-manufacturing
activities including raw material acquisition and
intermediate processing. For example:
Fiber Glass Insulation Is Made From Sand or Recycled Glass
- Sand is a “rapidly renewable resource,” one that will
always be in plentiful supply. Thus, the use of sand as
a raw material does not impose any impact on a non-
renewable natural resource.
- Recycled plate and bottle glass is considered a
secondary raw material. When used as a raw material,
recycled glass is transformed into a product that saves
energy and reduces pollution.
Slag Wool Insulation Is Made from Blast Furnace Slag
- Slag wool insulation uses raw materials derived from a
secondary source – blast furnace slag – and does not
deplete any natural resources.
Caution: Some Secondary Materials May Indirectly Deplete
Natural Resources
When a secondary raw material is used, consideration
should be given to whether its use may indirectly
accelerate the depletion of a natural resource. For
example, by using recycled newsprint for insulation, the
manufacturers of cellulose insulation have removed
newsprint from the recycling stream and forced printers to
rely upon virgin, rather than recycled, newsprint. This
translates into a further loss of renewable raw timber
resources.
MANUFACTURING STAGE
Energy Consumption vs. Energy Saved
While the production of fiber glass and slag wool
insulation is energy-intensive, manufacturers have improved
energy efficiency substantially over the last decade by
using increasingly more sophisticated technology. It is
important to note that the energy used in production is
immediately replenished through the use of the final
product.
An evaluation of the manufacturing process should measure
inputs (such as energy consumption) and outputs (such as
air and water effluents).
Inputs
- Nearly 33 trillion Btu of energy are consumed by fiber
glass and slag wool producers annually to manufacture
insulation products; however, insulation produced each
year saves about 400 trillion Btu annually.
- All insulation products installed in U.S. buildings save
consumers about 12 quadrillion Btu annually or about 42
percent of the energy that would have been consumed with
no insulation in place. Twelve quadrillion Btu is
almost 15 percent of the total national energy used; it
is enough energy to supply the total energy requirements
of Florida for 4 years.
- A typical pound of insulation saves 12 times as much
energy in its first year in place as the energy used to
produce it.
Outputs
Most fiber glass and slag wool manufacturing facilities
utilize a closed-loop water recycling system making waste
water effluent discharges nonexistent. While manufacturing
facilities emit certain air pollutants, both the fiber
glass and slag wool industries will soon adopt maximum
achievable control technology (MACT) to help limit the
amount of air pollutants emitted into the atmosphere.
These new controls will supplement existing controls that
already substantially reduce potential air emissions from
the manufacturing process.
lutants emitted into the atmosphere.
PACKAGING AND TRANSPORTATION
Total Product Volume
A life-cycle analysis should consider the total product
volume it takes to accomplish an assigned task. For
example:
- To insulate a typical 2,500 sq. ft. two-story home with
an R-value of R-30 in the attic, and an R-13 in the
exterior walls, requires 2,695 pounds of cellulose
insulation, which is three times more material per house
than fiber glass.
- Because fiber glass insulation products are more compact
than other insulation products, the packaging for fiber
glass products requires significantly less material.
For example, to insulate a typical 2,500 sq. ft. house
requires 30 packages of fiber glass compared with 109
cellulose insulation packages.
RECYCLABLE PACKAGING
Fiber glass and slag wool manufacturers now use recyclable
plastic packaging as a way to conserve resources.
Packaging is often coded for material identification, and
can be recycled in areas where facilities exist.
LESS ENERGY USED TO TRANSPORT MATERIALS
Due to the compact nature of fiber glass and slag wool
insulation, combined with compression packaging, the actual
amount of packaging material has been reduced and the
result is less scrap at the job site and in the waste
stream. Since fiber glass and slag wool insulation
products are so highly compressed, more insulation can be
shipped in each truck and the result is a reduction in the
energy required for transportation.
PRODUCT CHARACTERISTICS
Judging a Product’s Ability to Perform Its Intended
Function
Due to the compact nature of fiber glass and slag wool
insulation, combined with compression packaging, the actual
amount of packaging material has been reduced and the
result is less scrap at the job site and in the waste
stream. Since fiber glass and slag wool insulation
products are so highly compressed, more insulation can be
shipped in each truck and the result is a reduction in the
energy required for transportation.
R-Value
R-value is resistance to heat flow — the higher the R-
value, the greater the insulating power. Thickness of
insulation is only one factor that determines its R-value.
In fact, insulation should always be specified by R-value,
not thickness.
Fiber glass and slag wool insulations are high
performance products that yield a high R-value per inch,
which varies depending on density. The overall R-value
installed in the building is the measurement to look for,
not the R-value per inch.
Settling
A product’s R-value should not deteriorate over time. If
an insulation product settles, the installed thermal
performance is directly impacted. Therefore, specifiers
should consider a product’s ability to resist settling and
maintain its thermal performance for the life of the
building.
Water Absorption
In general, insulation will lose R-value when wet. Some
insulation is made of material that does not wick up and
hold water, but other insulations will absorb water and may
mat down causing permanent reduction in the thermal
performance.
Corrosion and Flame Resistance
Certain chemicals routinely applied as a fire retardant to
most cellulose insulations can cause the corrosion of pipes
and wires under some conditions. Flame resistance is
another performance feature that should be weighted in
selecting an insulation material.
- Fiber glass and slag wool insulations are naturally non-
combustible and remain so for the life of the product.
Fiber glass and slag wool require no additional fire
retardant chemical treatments.
- Cellulose insulation is made of ground-up or shredded
newspaper, and wood-based products are naturally
combustible. To protect against fire hazards, cellulose
insulation is heavily treated with fire retardant
chemicals prior to installation. Typically, 540 pounds
of fire retardant chemicals are added to cellulose
insulation used to insulate a 2,500 square foot home.
The Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) mandates
that cellulose packages carry a fire hazard warning for
consumers and users.
USE, REUSE AND MAINTENANCE
Fiber Glass and Slag Wool Insulations are Reusable
Most modern buildings are subject to expansion, remodeling, or
some other type of renovation during their lifetime. Because of
this, the reusable nature of a product is a key factor in the
life-cycle analysis. For example:
- Fiber glass and stag wool batt insulation can be removed
easily and actually put back in place. In other words,
they are reusable. This is not true of all insulation
materials. Certain foams or aerated concrete require
extensive chiseling to remove the insulation. Such an
operation can result in loss of building materials that are
damaged in the removal process and loss of the insulation
itself.
- Fiber glass and slag wool insulation require no
maintenance. This eliminates the expenditure of energy or
natural resources associated with maintenance operations.
- In addition, fiber glass and slag wool insulation last for
the life of the building if undisturbed. A long life
expectancy saves money on replacements and retrofits, and
also ensures that no additional material is entering the
waste stream.
RECYCLED CONTENT
High Recycled Content
Not only do fiber glass and slag wool insulation products save
energy, they use a high percentage of recycled material which
further helps the environment. In addition to reducing demand
on virgin resources, using recycled materials saves landfill
space by diverting materials from the solid waste stream, and
reduces the energy used, and pollution emitted, during the
manufacturing process. Recent surveys on the amount of recycled
content in fiber glass and slag wool insulations include the
following facts:
Fiber Glass
- The amount of recycled glass used by fiber glass insulation
manufacturers in 1996 was over one billion pounds.
- The use of recycled glass resulted in a savings of over 27
million cu. ft. of landfill space at a density of 37
lbs./cu. ft. (semi-crushed glass).
- Many fiber glass insulation products now contain up to 40
percent recycled materials, depending on the plant in which
they are produced.
- Fiber glass insulation manufacturers recycle more material
by weight than any other type of insulation used the
building and construction sector.
- According to the Glass Packaging Institute, fiber glass
insulation is the largest secondary market for recycled
glass containers.
Slag Wool
- The amount of recycled blast furnace slag used by slag wool
insulation manufacturers in 1996 was more than one billion
pounds.
- The use of recycled blast furnace slag resulted in a
savings of over 16 million cu. ft. of landfill space.
- The slag wool industry consumes a significant portion —
approximately 6 percent — of the blast furnace slag
produced in the United States that might otherwise end up
in a landfill.
- The industry estimates that over 90 percent of their slag
acquisition is new slag purchased directly from
manufacturers. The remaining 10 percent is mined from
waste disposal sites.
HEALTH ISSUES
Tested vs. Untested Products
An important feature of a life-cycle analysis is whether a
product or service poses human health risks. The EPA has listed
carcinogenicity and irritancy as attributes that justify
labeling a product as a human health risk. Consumer products of
all kinds currently carry these labels. Just because one
product has been thoroughly tested for carcinogenicity and
irritancy (e.g., fiber glass and slag wool insulations) and
another has not (e.g., cellulose insulation) should not imply
environmental preference for the non-tested product. Indeed,
the failure of a manufacturer adequately to test its product
should be a critical factor in determining that a product is not
environmentally preferable.
When evaluating alleged health hazards of a product, specifiers
should distinguish: a) between products that impose potential
risks in the manufacturing process, but not in use of the final
product, and b) between those products which pose risks in both
the manufacturing process and the final use of the product.
Fiber Glass and Slag Wool Are Safe to Manufacture, Install and
Use
Fiber glass and slag wool manufacturers have funded over 50
million dollars of research at leading independent laboratories
and universities in the United States and abroad. In the past
ten years, there have been a number of comprehensive reviews of
research on the health aspects of fiber glass and slag wool by
U.S. and international organizations. These reviews have
concluded that fiber glass and slag wool have not been shown to
cause cancer or nonmalignant diseases in humans. Indeed, the
weight of scientific evidence demonstrates that fiber glass and
slag wool insulations are safe to manufacture, install and use
when practical recommended work practices are followed.
WASTE MANAGEMENT
Recyclable
Another factor of importance in a life-cycle analysis is whether
the product is recyclable. As mentioned previously, fiber glass
and slag wool insulations are reusable after the initial
installation and, therefore, are recyclable. Fiber glass also
has the capacity to be reclaimed from demolition debris and
recycled into new products. In fact, fiber glass trimming at
manufacturing facilities is routinely placed back into the mix
and converted into usable products. Not all insulation products
possess such a characteristic.
mmended work practices are followed.
SAFEGUARDING THE ENVIRONMENT
Fiber glass and slag wool insulation products make buildings
more energy efficient, reducing the amount of fossil fuel
combustion needed to heat and cool homes, businesses, and
factories, which, in turn, decreases the amount of sulfur
dioxide and carbon dioxide emitted into the atmosphere.
Because carbon dioxide is one of the principal “greenhouse
gases” contributing to global warming, and sulfur dioxide is the
major component of acid rain, insulation plays a significant
role in protecting the environment. For example, insulation
currently in place in U.S. buildings reduces the amount of
carbon dioxide emissions by 780 million tons each year.
The fiber glass and slag wool industries are also
safeguarding the integrity of the ecological balance by
manufacturing products whose components may be recovered and
reused at the end useful life of the product. Fiber glass and
slag wool insulations sustain the energy life-cycle by
transforming what might otherwise be waste products into
insulation material that can be used over and over again.
Indeed, from a life-cycle perspective, fiber glass and slag
wool insulation offer tremendous benefits to the environment and
complement policies which promote environmentally preferred
products.