30 - Infotile
Transcription
30 - Infotile
INTERVIEW tile ADVANCED CERAMICS SPECIFICATION PROJECT STANDARDS Thousands of ecolabelled tiles are available to local buyers We examine the existing Good Environmental Choice Australia (GECA) Hard Surface Standard and its acceptance by the Green Building Council of Australia (GBCA). We also consider why few local importers of tiles that have been granted an EU Ecolabel make a concerted effort to promote the benefits associated with the use of more than 6000 products, which are available from leading European manufacturers that export to Australia. Finally, we review some of the amazing new developments in relation to the use of solid wastes as low-cost alternative raw materials for use in ceramic tile production. The ANZ Bank Docklands, Melbourne is a 6-Star, Green Star rated project. Large amounts of imported bluestone were used because the required points could be earned in other areas. If floor and wall finishes were a critical component of the Green Star point calculation, alternative surface finishes would have been specified. 30 | TILE TODAY #83 | www.infotile.com/publications F ollowing prolonged consultation with GECA the Australian Tile Council (ATC) and the Australian Stone Advisory Association (ASAA) established Hard Surfacing Standard #40 which covers tile and stone. The GBCA recognises the GECA standard and will award maximum Green building points to tile and stone products which GECA has certified. Surprisingly, not one producer or importer has attempted to gain a GECA ecolabel for any of the products they supply. The reasons for this are complex. Many tile and stone suppliers appear to think that specifiers have no real alternatives when it comes to selecting hard wearing, easy to clean surface finishes for use in public spaces and wet areas. Put simply, architects will specify tile in wet areas because they have few alternatives. In some instances the hard surface finishes do not play a key part in achieving the required Green Star rating for a particular development. The points are accumulated by specification of other products, including big ticket items. A case in point is the highly acclaimed ANZ Bank development in Docklands, Melbourne, which boasts one of the most sustainable fit-outs in Australia. The premises achieved 6-star Green Star (office interiors) V1.1 certification in July 2012. Copious amounts of imported bluestone were supplied and installed by Baron Forge because the required Green Star rating was obtained by designing maximum efficiencies in water and energy consumption. If the hard surface finishes were a critical component of Green Star calculations, the architects and developers may have been forced to use an alternative finish like one of the 6000 ecolabelled Italian tiles – many of which imitate stone – that are available from a variety of leading Italian manufacturers that export to Australia. Of course, the availability of a locally quarried bluestone which had achieved an ecolabel would have resolved that problem, but since there are none, the developers would look overseas in search of a sustainable bluestone. Our research indicates that they would have been disappointed because it appears that there is no European or internationally produced bluestone products that have appropriate environmental credentials. In fact, if one visits the huge European Union (EU) ecolabel website and conducts a search for ecolabelled natural stone in the ‘hard surfaces’ flooring section, the ensuing results illustrate that more than 6000 Italian ceramic tiles have gained an ecolabel. In all probability, Australian bluestone was not used at the ANZ project because none of our producers have earned an ecolabel for their product, and when the search was extended overseas, cheaper alternatives were discovered. Ecolabelled tiles Visitors to www.ecolabel.eu can search through listings of ecolabelled products and services under multiple headings like Beauty Care, Cleaning Up, Clothing, DIY, Furniture and Floor Coverings. The latter includes a section on Hard Floor Coverings which is searchable. A search for ecolabelled Italian tile yields over 6000 results. The following list reads like a ‘Who’s Who’ of Italian manufacturers: Atlas Concorde (their entire product portfolio) Caesar Ceramica Castelvetro Ceramica Magica Cotto D’Este FAP Florim Italgraniti Keope Marazzi Marco Corona Mirage Novabell Panaria Polis Sant‘Agostino Supergres As stated all of these companies export to Australia, yet to my knowledge none of the importers have approached GECA to use the manufacturers’ existing EU certification to gain a local ecolabel. In some instances, architects use the service of another company to procure information about ecolabelled tiles which are available in Australia. These products may not earn points because they do not have local accreditation but they at least tick the right box in terms of having appropriate environmental credentials. There is obviously a cost attached to obtaining an ecolabel, and this may prevent some companies from going down that path, but gaining GECA accreditation for a product that already has an EU ecolabel is obviously less expensive than starting from the ground up to get a locally manufactured tile or stone product ecolabelled. Are specifiers seeking ecolabelled tiles? According to the GBCA, 7.2 million square metres of Green Star certified space has been developed around Australia, and an additional 8 million square metres is on the drawing board. Clearly, vast quantities of wall and floor surface finishes have been specified, and even more will be specified for future use. Presumably architects, designers and developers are seeking surface finishes which have an ecolabel. A good indicator of this activity can be found in the internet service provider logs for traffic on Infotile.com during the month of March. Two years ago, Infotile launched an ecolabel section which includes numerous tiles and allied products that have an EU Ecolabel or alternative international accreditation. Unlike the EU All of Atlas Concorde’s (Italy) tile ranges have received an EU Ecolabel. Leading wholesalers like DW Tiles (Sydney) import these materials. www.infotile.com/publications | TILE TODAY #83 | 31 ARCHITILE website, the Infotile listings provide details of local suppliers of the products in question. A glance at Table 1 reveals that the ecolabel segment attracted 3642 views during March, the fourth most visited page out of 5020 different pages. Importantly, over 720 visitors came straight to the ecolabel page and exited the site from it, thus indicating that their visit related to ecolabelled products entirely. Significantly, the Product Profiles segment of Infotile, which houses images and information pertaining to several hundred tiles, stone and allied products, attracted 7043 views during March. The site is heavily promoted to specifiers via ATP’s monthly Tile and Stone e-news and evidently many of them are seeking information on ecolabelled tile and stone products. I wonder just how many of the companies that import ecolabelled tiles from the listed Italian manufacturers actively promote the fact that these products have valuable environmental credentials. How many realise that the acquisition of a local ecolabel could lead to valuable sales? Damian Turco of Cerdomus Tile Studio, Richmond was probably the first Australian importer to go through the process of gaining an ecolabel for an imported ceramic product when he invested in gaining accreditation for Kalebodur’s (Turkey) Sinterflex slim porcelain panels. An architect engaged in a specific product wanted to use the material, providing it had a local ecolabel. Damian stepped into the breach and the product was specified and successfully installed. Damian confirmed, “A small number of additional specifications have occurred because we invested in obtaining an ecolabel.” The EU Ecolabel distinguishes products and services that meet high environmental and performance standards. Every accredited tile passes rigorous tests with results verified by an independent body. The EU label stands for ‘lower environmental impacts throughout a product’s life cycle – from the use of materials to make them, to final disposal’. There is no telling how many orders are being lost, but if one considers that virtually every significant manufacturer of alternative hard and resilient surface materials active in Australia has earned a local ecolabel, the figure is probably high. Hospital and supermarket floors are awash with sheet vinyl products that will not last as long as tile, but they have appropriate accreditation. Alternative solid wastes While a degree of apathy exists in the local industry in relation to the green attributes of tile, overseas-based manufacturers are striving to find solid wastes that can be used instead of the virgin raw materials that are used in the relatively complex production of ceramic tiles. Professor Salma M. Naga recently reported the following activities in an intriguing article entitled, ‘Recycling of Fish Bone Ash in the Preparation of Stoneware Tiles’, which appeared in the February-March edition of Interceram magazine. a)Waste-derived and recycled glass was used to completely replace ordinary feldspar flux in the preparation of ‘glassbased’ stoneware tiles. b) Soda-line, soda-line-silica, calcium-alumina-silica and cathode ray tube glasses were used for partial or total replacement of the natural fluxes in ceramic manufacturing. c) The use of waste materials provides an environmental safeguard by saving natural resources and reducing energy consumption and CO2 emissions d) Glaze sludge and glassceramic frits were used to replace from 10 to 100 per cent of the non-plastic raw materials in stoneware tile manufacturing. The Internet Service Provider logs for Infotile.com reveal significant interest in searches for ecolabelled tile and stone products. 32 | TILE TODAY #83 | www.infotile.com/publications e)Ornamental rock-cutting wastes, mainly composed of K-feldspar, Na-feldspar, quartz, mica, calcite and hematite, were also used to replace natural fluxes in stoneware tile production. f) Waste from granite rock cutting and polishing was used by Torres et al and Hojamberdiev et al to prepare ceramic tiles. They showed that tiles containing granite waste are mechanically stronger, less porous and more resistant to pyroplastic deformation than commercial tiles. g)Acchar et al evaluated the fluxing effect of coffee husk ash added to clay-based ceramic formulations. They showed that coffee husk ash can replace feldspar in the production of porcelain floor tiles over a content range from 25 up to 40 mass-per cent of clay-based ceramic formulas. Apparently any calcium-containing raw materials are potentially suitable fluxing additives in the production of ceramic bodies. Professor Salma M. Naga is currently Professor of Ceramics Chemistry and Technology at the National Research Centre in Cairo, Egypt. She was ideally placed to participate in an extensive study which concluded that fish bone ash ‘could be useful as a biologically and environmentally compatible raw material media in the ceramic industry’. Between 18 million and 30 million tons of fish waste is discarded worldwide annually. The highest current reuse of fish skeletons occurs in Egypt in the animal feed industry. The overall objective of the study was to evaluate the consequences of partial replacement of traditional feldspar by fish bone ash in the production of stoneware tiles, and to measure changes in the tile’s densification and mechanical properties. The study concluded that it ‘is feasible to replace potash feldspar with fish bone ash in recipes for stoneware tile’. These studies illustrate the amazing efforts which are undertaken to manufacture sustainable tiles with a low environmental footprint. Many of the aforementioned tiles made in Italy acquired an EU Ecolabel because of the high percentage of recycled materials used in production processes. Hopefully, more Australian importers and retailers will make an effort to promote the growing number of high quality, environmentally-friendly products that lie at our disposal.