Without current EPDs to meet building code legislations, the use of tropical timbers is becoming increasingly difficult.
It is difficult to find Environmental Product Declarations (EPD) for tropical timber species. A recent study by JCH Industrial Ecology Limited found no available EPDs for tropical hardwood species and very little publicly available Life Cycle Analysis (LCA) data for any of these species.
A 2020 report by Rupert Oliver of Forest Intelligence Ltd. for IDH-Sustainable Trade Initiative backed this finding with the following statements:
‘The reality is that calculating an accurate carbon footprint for certified timber is near impossible—there simply isn’t enough data. Certification frameworks don’t currently collect the data needed to facilitate carbon accounting, and there is a great deal of uncertainty involved in scaling existing one-off carbon assessments of timber operations to a global scale.’
The most recent IDEMAT dataset by Delft University of Technology contains information regarding different tropical timbers, but the reliability of this data is uncertain.
This graph shows the GWP-GHG and embodied energy (CED) data as reported in the 2023 IDEMAT database.
What does this mean for construction, in a world where LCAs and embodied carbon will be measured and accounted for? As more and more building codes requires these measurements to be declared, with EPD reports being the most commonly accepted form of data.
This will make the use of tropical hardwoods rife with uncertainty and points to sustainably sourced products as a safer choice for specifiers. Abodo’s current EPD report is shared with all users and the public online, to ensure accurate and up-to-date data is readily available.
For further reading about the impact of tropical timbers, please see these publications and websites: