American Hardwoods: Nature's 'Greenest' Choice

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(ARA) - When it comes to "greening" a new or existing home, many consumers simply do not have the facts about American hardwood as an environmentally-friendly building material choice. Wood misconceptions abound.

And with so much inaccurate information being circulated, the American Hardwood Information Center (www.HardwoodInfo.com) would like to set the record straight about American hardwoods. The absolute bottom line is this. Because hardwoods are renewing and so abundant, they are nature's choice for eco-effective design and building. The sustainable material!

So, what does "sustainable" really mean? The federal government's definition, as stated in Executive Order 13423, says that "sustainable means to create and maintain conditions, under which humans and nature can exist in productive harmony, that permit fulfilling the social, economic and other requirements of present and future generations of Americans." How does this relate to the hardwood industry and the environmental questions and concerns surrounding it? Here are the facts.

Grown in America -- Responsibly Harvested -- Naturally Abundant

Hardwoods are the botanical group of trees that have broad leaves, produce a fruit or nut, and generally go dormant in the winter. Requiring a temperate climate, most hardwood forestland is in the eastern half of the U.S.

In American hardwood forestry, the predominant harvesting method is single-tree selection. By carefully removing individual trees, openings in the forest canopy are created so that more precipitation, sunlight and nutrients reach the forest floor. A trained forester individually selects trees for harvesting and a crew removes the trees with the least disruption to the forest floor. This responsible forest management takes into consideration long-term timber production, while also addressing water quality, wildlife habitat, biodiversity, forest aesthetics and recreational opportunities.

The trees reproduce naturally and prolifically. Nearly twice as much hardwood grows each year as is harvested and in the past 50 years, the volume of hardwood in American forests has nearly doubled. Foresters work with the timeline that nature dictates: sustained supply and ongoing replenishment are the result.

Environmentally Friendly -- Sustainable Manufacturing

Healthy forests are net producers of oxygen, thanks to photosynthesis. Growing trees take carbon dioxide from the atmosphere and separate the carbon and oxygen atoms. Trees use the carbon to grow roots, trunk, branches and leaves (a tree uses 1.47 pounds of carbon dioxide to grown a pound of wood) then return the oxygen to the air (giving off 1.07 pounds of oxygen.) This process reduces greenhouse gases in the atmosphere.

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