LEED v4
Healthcare
Materials and Resources
PBT source reduction - mercury

Healthcare-v4 MRp3: PBT source reduction - mercury Required

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Credit language

USGBC logo

© Copyright U.S. Green Building Council, Inc. All rights reserved.

Requirements

As part of the project’s recycling collection system, identify the following:

  • types of mercury-containing products and devices to be collected;
  • criteria governing how they are to be handled by a recycling program; and
  • disposal methods for captured mercury.
Applicable mercury-containing products and devices include, but are not limited to, lamps (such as linear and circular fluorescents, integrally ballasted and nonintegrally ballasted compact fluorescents and HIDs) and dental wastes (such as scrap amalgam, chair side traps, and separator wastes). In facilities delivering dental care, specify and install amalgam separation devices that meet or exceed the ISO-11143 standard. Comply with the mercury elimination requirements outlined below, from the 2010 FGI Guidelines for Design and Construction of Health Care Facilities, Section A1.3- 4b, Mercury Elimination.
  • 4.2.1.1. New construction: healthcare facilities may not use mercury-containing equipment, including thermostats, switching devices, and other building system sources. Lamps are excluded.
  • 4.2.1.2. Renovation: healthcare facilities must develop a plan to phase out mercury-containing products and upgrade current mercury-containing lamps to high-efficiency, low-mercury, or mercury-free lamp technology.
Do not specify or install preheat, T-9, T-10, or T-12 fluorescents or mercury vapor high-intensity discharge (HID) lamps in the project. Do not specify probe-start metal halide HID lamps in any interior spaces. Specify and install illuminated exit signs that do not contain mercury and use less than 5 watts of electricity. Fluorescent and high-pressure sodium lamps must meet the criteria in Table 1.
Table 1. maximum mercury content of lamps

Lamp

Maximum content

T-8 fluorescent, eight-foot

10 mg mercury

T-8 fluorescent, four-foot

3.5 mg mercury

T-8 fluorescent- two foot and three foot

3.5 mg mercury

T-8 fluorescent, U-bent

6 mg mercury

T-5 fluorescent, linear

2.5 mg mercury

T-5 fluorescent, circular

9 mg mercury

Compact fluorescent, nonintegral ballast

3.5 mg mercury

Compact fluorescent, integral ballast

3.5 mg mercury, ENERGY STAR qualified

High-pressure sodium, up to 400 watts

10 mg mercury

High-pressure sodium, above 400 watts

32 mg mercury

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LEEDuser overview

Frank advice from LEED experts

LEED is changing all the time, and every project is unique. Even seasoned professionals can miss a critical detail and lose a credit or even a prerequisite at the last minute. Our expert advice guides our LEEDuser Premium members and saves you valuable time.

For full access, sign up now for LEEDuser Premium

Already a premium member? Log in now

Credit language

USGBC logo

© Copyright U.S. Green Building Council, Inc. All rights reserved.

Requirements

As part of the project’s recycling collection system, identify the following:

  • types of mercury-containing products and devices to be collected;
  • criteria governing how they are to be handled by a recycling program; and
  • disposal methods for captured mercury.
Applicable mercury-containing products and devices include, but are not limited to, lamps (such as linear and circular fluorescents, integrally ballasted and nonintegrally ballasted compact fluorescents and HIDs) and dental wastes (such as scrap amalgam, chair side traps, and separator wastes). In facilities delivering dental care, specify and install amalgam separation devices that meet or exceed the ISO-11143 standard. Comply with the mercury elimination requirements outlined below, from the 2010 FGI Guidelines for Design and Construction of Health Care Facilities, Section A1.3- 4b, Mercury Elimination.
  • 4.2.1.1. New construction: healthcare facilities may not use mercury-containing equipment, including thermostats, switching devices, and other building system sources. Lamps are excluded.
  • 4.2.1.2. Renovation: healthcare facilities must develop a plan to phase out mercury-containing products and upgrade current mercury-containing lamps to high-efficiency, low-mercury, or mercury-free lamp technology.
Do not specify or install preheat, T-9, T-10, or T-12 fluorescents or mercury vapor high-intensity discharge (HID) lamps in the project. Do not specify probe-start metal halide HID lamps in any interior spaces. Specify and install illuminated exit signs that do not contain mercury and use less than 5 watts of electricity. Fluorescent and high-pressure sodium lamps must meet the criteria in Table 1.
Table 1. maximum mercury content of lamps

Lamp

Maximum content

T-8 fluorescent, eight-foot

10 mg mercury

T-8 fluorescent, four-foot

3.5 mg mercury

T-8 fluorescent- two foot and three foot

3.5 mg mercury

T-8 fluorescent, U-bent

6 mg mercury

T-5 fluorescent, linear

2.5 mg mercury

T-5 fluorescent, circular

9 mg mercury

Compact fluorescent, nonintegral ballast

3.5 mg mercury

Compact fluorescent, integral ballast

3.5 mg mercury, ENERGY STAR qualified

High-pressure sodium, up to 400 watts

10 mg mercury

High-pressure sodium, above 400 watts

32 mg mercury

See all forum discussions about this credit »