I've just learned of a company that remediates contaminated soil and aggregate and then sells the material (for cheaper than virgin material). I'm told their process is certified to meet the most stringent standards.
It seems to me that this material meets the intention, if not the definition, of a "recycled material". By using this material, a project would be supporting environmental remediation, avoid groundwater contamination resulting from contaminated soil stockpiles, and minimize the ecological footprint of the project by reducing the demand for mining virgin material. Correct me if I am wrong, but I believe this is 'upcycling'.
So, what do you think is the best way to capture the use of recycled soil/aggregate in LEED? I can see a few possibilities:
- include the material (and all materials in Section 31 20 00. Earth Moving) in the calculations for MRc4, with a narrative describing why this section was included (should this be an ACP?)
- attempt an ACP for SSc3, since using remediated soils creates a demand for contaminated soils which may further incentivize brownfield redevelopment (similar to how purchasing recycled materials incentivizes landfill diversion)
- Use this strategy for an ID credit. Along with one other strategy that addresses one of the environmental benefits of this material (habitat preservation, water pollution prevention)