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Credit language
© Copyright U.S. Green Building Council, Inc. All rights reserved.
Intent
To reduce construction and demolition waste disposed of in landfills and incineration facilities through waste prevention and by reusing, recovering, and recycling materials, and conserving resources for future generations. To delay the need for new landfill facilities that are often located in frontline communities and create green jobs and materials markets for building construction services.
Requirements
Develop and implement a construction and demolition waste management plan and achieve points through waste prevention and/or diversion.
Waste Management Plan and Report:
All projects must develop and implement a construction and demolition waste management plan:
- Identify strategies to reduce the generation of waste during project design and construction.
- Establish waste diversion goals for the project by identifying the materials (both structural and nonstructural) targeted for diversion.
- Describe the diversion strategies planned for the project. Describe where materials will be taken including expected diversion rates for each material.
Provide a final waste management report detailing all waste generated, including disposal and diversion rates for the project. Calculations can be by weight or volume but must be consistent throughout. Exclude excavated soil and land-clearing debris from calculations. Include materials destined for alternative daily cover (ADC) in the calculations as waste (not diversion). Any materials sent to a commingled recycling facility for processing must take the facility average recycling rate and must include any ADC as waste (not diversion).
Option 1. Diversion (1 point)
Follow the Waste Management Plan and divert at least 50% of the total construction and demolition materials from landfills and incineration facilities.AND/OR
Option 2. Waste Prevention (2 points)
Follow the Waste Management Plan and prevent waste through reuse and source reduction design strategies. Salvage or recycle at least 50% of demolition debris and utilize waste minimizing design strategies and construction techniques for new construction elements. Track all demolition debris generated by the project from start of construction through project completion. Also trach all new construction waste materials generated from start of construction through project completion to determine the project's total waste generation from new construction activities. Exclude hazardous materials and land-clearing debris from calculations.
Points are awarded as follows:
Divert at least 50% of all demolition waste, if any. Generate less than 10 lbs./ft2 (50 kg/m2) of waste materials from all new construction activities. (2 points)
See all forum discussions about this credit »What does it cost?
Cost estimates for this credit
On each BD+C v4 credit, LEEDuser offers the wisdom of a team of architects, engineers, cost estimators, and LEED experts with hundreds of LEED projects between then. They analyzed the sustainable design strategies associated with each LEED credit, but also to assign actual costs to those strategies.
Our tab contains overall cost guidance, notes on what “soft costs” to expect, and a strategy-by-strategy breakdown of what to consider and what it might cost, in percentage premiums, actual costs, or both.
This information is also available in a full PDF download in The Cost of LEED v4 report.
Learn more about The Cost of LEED v4 »Frequently asked questions
See all forum discussions about this credit »Addenda
"Follow the Waste Management Plan and prevent waste through reuse and source reduction design strategies. Salvage or recycle at least 50% of renovation and demolition debris and utilize waste minimizing design strategies and construction techniques for new construction elements. Track all renovation and demolition debris generated by the project from start of construction through project completion. Also track all new construction waste materials generated from start of construction through project completion to determine the project’s total waste generation from new construction activities. Exclude hazardous materials and land-clearing debris from calculations. Points are awarded as follows:
Divert at least 50% of all renovation and demolition waste, if any. Generate less than 10 lbs./ft2 (50 kg/m2) of waste materials from all new construction activities (2 points)"
"(also known as “commingled” or “mixed materials” recycling rates),"
Add the following as the first bullet under Construction Waste Management Plan:
"Tracking: develop a method for tracking the amount of all waste and recyclable materials generated during demolition activities (if any), including demolition of existing buildings, other structures on the site, or components demolished as part of building renovation work. Separately, keep track of waste and recyclable materials generated during new construction activities."
In the third paragraph under Step 1, add the following as the last sentence:
"See the Exemplary Performance section for minimum criteria for eligible third-party verified recycling rate programs."
In Step 3, add the following as the last sentence:
" Develop a method for tracking the amount of all demolition materials generated on the project (if any). Separately, keep track of waste materials generated during new construction activities."
Delete the Waste Prevention section.
Add the following as a new section:
Option 2. Waste Prevention
Follow step-by-step instructions from the v4 Reference Guide with the following modifications:
Step 2: Calculate Total Waste Reduction
Projects can document waste prevention techniques undertaken on the project to earn 2 points. To calculate the project’s total waste, include all materials generated from the project construction and demolition activities and sent offsite for recycling, diversion, landfill, incineration, or any other uses. Exclude hazardous materials, land-clearing debris, and on-site reused materials from the generation numbers. A narrative, provided in the LEED form, must describe strategies in design and construction that were implemented to reduce waste from being generated on the jobsite (See LEED v4 reference guide, Further Explanation, Source Reduction for more guidance on source reduction strategies).
Tracking: To calculate waste prevention, project teams must track the amount of waste generated during demolition work and—separately—during new construction activities. For projects with demolition activities, including demolition of existing buildings, other structures on the site, or components demolished as part of building renovation work, develop a method for tracking the amount of all waste generated from demolition. To be eligible for Option 2, the project must demonstrate that at least 50% of the demolition waste was diverted (note: ADC does not count as diversion). Separately, keep track of waste generated during new construction activities. The amount of new construction-phase waste will be used to quantify the amount of waste generated (per ft2 or m2) for Option 2 credit compliance.
Reducing waste by thoughtful design results in the reduction of waste on the jobsite. Stopping waste before it is created is always higher priority than managing waste after construction. Successful projects have implemented the following strategies to prevent construction and demolition waste in LEED:
• Reuse buildings or building components. Materials that are reused onsite are excluded from the waste generation calculations. Sending materials offsite to salvage, donation or recycling, such as through a documented manufacturer take-back program, does not count as waste prevention but can count towards project diversion.
• Source reduction strategies should be incorporated into the design of the project and outlined in the Waste Management Plan. These strategies include reusing existing materials and components, designing for modular construction sizes and techniques, specifying reduced packaging from vendors, designing for industry-standard measurements, eliminating unnecessary finishes, and off-site prefabrication of components or assemblies.
• Work with subcontractors and/or finish material suppliers to eliminate or minimize packaging waste and reduce overall materials rather than send them for disposal or recycling. "
Revise the Exemplary Performance section to read as:
"Achieve Option 1 and Option 2."
MRp Storage and Collection of Recyclables
"To reduce the disproportionate burden of landfills and incinerators that is generated by building occupants’ waste hauled to and disposed of in landfills and incinerators through reduction, reuse and recycling service and education, and to conserve natural resources for future generations."
MRc Construction and Demolition Waste Management
"To reduce construction and demolition waste disposed of in landfills and incineration facilities through waste prevention and by reusing, recovering, and recycling materials, and conserving resources for future generations. To delay the need for new landfill facilities that are often located in frontline communities and create green jobs and materials markets for building construction services."
2. Removed number of material streams diverted
3. Minor alignments with v4.1 November addenda
2. Under Requirements, delete existing description ("Recycle and/or salvage..303 standards" and replace with new description as follows:
Develop and implement a construction and demolition waste management plan and achieve points through waste prevention and/or diversion.
Waste Management Plan and Report:
All projects must develop and implement a construction and demolition waste management plan:
• Identify strategies to reduce the generation of waste during project design and construction.
• Establish waste diversion goals for the project by identifying the materials (both structural and nonstructural) targeted for diversion.
• Describe the diversion strategies planned for the project. Describe where materials will be taken including expected diversion rates for each material.
Provide a final waste management report detailing all waste generated, including disposal and diversion rates for the project. Calculations can be by weight or volume but must be consistent throughout. Exclude excavated soil and land-clearing debris from calculations. Include materials destined for alternative daily cover (ADC) in the calculations as waste (not diversion). Any materials sent to a comingled recycling facility for processing must take the facility average recycling rate and must include any ADC as waste (not diversion).
3. Remove Paths 1 through 4 under Option 1 and re-title Option 2 as Waste Prevention (1-2 points) . Add the following below Option 1:
Follow the Waste Management Plan and divert at least 50% of the total construction and demolition materials from landfills and incineration facilities.
AND/OR
4. Remove description under Option 2 including Table 1: Thresholds and replace with following:
Option 2. Waste Prevention (1-2 points)
Prevent waste through reuse and source reduction design strategies. Salvage or recycle renovation and demolition debris and utilize waste minimizing design strategies for new construction elements. Track all materials generated by the project from start of construction through project completion to determine the project’s total waste generation. Include all waste and diverted materials in the calculation of total project waste. Exclude hazardous materials and land-clearing debris from calculations.
Path 1. Generate less than 15 lbs./ft2 (75 kg/m2) (1 point)
Path 2. Generate less than 10 lbs./ft2 (50 kg/m2) (2 points)
The requirement for diversion via multiple material streams in LEED has been removed. Project teams now have more flexible ways to prevent and divert waste in order to earn points. This new structure rewards the hierarchy of first reduce, reuse, and then recycle.
Additional updates clarify when waste-to-energy can count as diversion for international projects. The changes also incorporate and modify the popular Pilot Credit 87 for Verified Construction & Demolition Recycling Rates into the credit (via Exemplary Performance) and define the minimum requirements for a commingled facility certified recycling rate. Finally, the total waste generation pathway has been revised to favor project types that source reduce and generate less waste overall.
Delete existing guidance under Step-by-Step guidance and replace with following sections for CWM planning, certified recycling facilities, waste prevention and diversion as follows:
Refer to LEED v4 Construction and Waste Management Plan prerequisite reference guide with the following modifications:
All recycling facilities must be regulated by a local or state authority. Note that regulatory authorities often do not regulate recycling rates of facilities. To determine the mixed waste processing facility recycling rate, projects must use an average diversion rate for the facility that corresponds to the time materials were generated on the project and sent to the facility. The average recycling rate for the facility must exclude ADC.
Construction Waste Management Plan
Step 1: Develop and implement a CWM plan during the project design phase and prior to construction.
All projects must develop a Construction Waste Management Plan per the LEED v4 Reference guide with modifications made in the credit requirements. The Waste Management Plan should include goals for waste prevention, waste diversion, identification of recycling haulers and recycling facilities, and data collection and reporting procedures.
Waste prevention: Include strategies targeted to reduce the total amount of waste generated during construction, renovation or demolition activities. Identify design strategies to dematerialize or otherwise prevent unused or waste materials. Deconstruct and salvage renovation materials for reuse to the greatest extent possible.
Diversion: locate recyclers or organizations that provide recycling options for the materials targeted for diversion. Confirm each facility can accept the types of materials the project plans to send for recycling. Obtain a diversion rate for the facility/organization receiving materials, including ADC amounts for commingled recycling processors. Indicate if any commingled facilities have third party verification of recycling rates. Projects must take the facility average recycling rate and be reported in weight or volume (must be consistent). Volume to weight conversions are acceptable if conversion factors are developed by reputable local agency or organizations.
o If no local values are available, project can refer to the most recent EPA Volume-to-Weight Conversion Factors for Solid Waste: www.epa.gov/smm/volume-weight-conversion-factors-solid-waste
Certified Recycling Facilities
Indicate in the Construction Waste Management Plan whether or not the selected recycling facilities that process commingled (mixed) materials have third party verification of their recycling rates. These facilities support accurate reporting and nationally consistent metrics for recycling rates. Qualified third-party organizations who certify facility average recycling rates include these minimum program requirements:
Requirements for Certified Recycling Facilities:
Projects must utilize a recycling facility that processes and recycles commingled (mixed) construction and demolition waste materials that has received independent third-party certification of their recycling rates. Qualified third-party organizations who certify facility average recycling rates include these minimum program requirements:
The certification organization follows guidelines for environmental claims and third-party oversight, including ISO/IEC 17065:2012 and relevant portions of the ISO 14000 family of standards.
The certification organization is an independent third party who continuously monitors "certified" facilities to ensure that the facilities are operating legally and meeting the minimum program requirements for facility certification and recycling rates.
Certification organizations shall certify to a protocol that was developed on a consensus basis for recycling facility diversion rates that is not in a draft or pilot program.
The methodology for calculating facility recycling rates must be:
o Developed with construction and demolition recycling industry stakeholders and be specific to the construction and demolition recycling industry;
o Must include a methodology that is applicable across broad regions (i.e. nationally); and,
o A published and publicly available standard.
Data submitted by the facilities to the certification organization in support of the recycling rate is audited. The audit includes, at a minimum: the evaluation of recyclable sales records, verification of facility sales into commodity markets, an assessment of downstream materials and how these materials are managed after they leave the site, monitoring off-site movement of materials, and a review of the facilities' customers weight tags information.
Facilities submit data to the certification organization that supports the recycling rate, such as a mass balance recycling rate (tons in/tons out) for a twelve month period, or quarterly sorts completed and verified by an independent third party entity.
Breakdown of materials (by type and by weight), including analysis of supporting data relating to amounts (in tons) and types of materials received and processed at the facility.
At a minimum, the third-party certifying organization conducts an on-site visit of the Facility for the first year certification, with subsequent site visits occurring at least once every two (2) years, unless additional visits are deemed necessary by the certification organization. The site visit will examine:
o How materials enter, are measured, deposited, processed/sorted and exit facility,
o Conduct interviews with key personnel, and discuss how materials are managed after they leave the site
o Confirm equipment types and capacity,
o Observe and verify load/materials sorting and accuracy,
o Verify use and accuracy of scales including calibration frequency.
Diversion rates shall adhere to these requirements:
o Measurements must be based on weight (not volume), using scales.
o Diversion Rates must be available on a website and viewable by the general public.
o Methodology for calculating diversion and recycling rates must be publicly available and applicable to national or country-level accounting standards for construction and demolition waste recycling facilities.
Facility recycling data submitted to certification program will be analyzed for recycling rates using a mass balance formula or quarterly sorts completed and verified by an independent third party entity.
Final recycling rate will include overall facility diversion rates with and without ADC/Beneficial Reuse, and will include separate recycling rates by material type as well as combined average including wood derived fuel/bio-fuel separate from other waste to energy or incineration end-markets.
Presently, the Recycling Certification Institute's Certification of Real Rates (CORR) protocol meets the above requirements. Find facilities at: www.recyclingcertification.org/certified-facilities
Step 2 – Implement Waste Management Plan: Follow the LEED v4 Reference Guide for step-by-step guidance (Step #1) in the Construction Waste Management Credit. Note that project-specific waste diversion percentages from waste sorting facilities are not allowed. Projects must use the facility’s average recycling rate.
Step 3 – Calculate Diversion Rate: Follow the LEED v4 Reference Guide for step-by-step guidance (Step #2) in the Construction Waste Management Credit. Note that the number of material streams are no longer required to be tracked.
Step 4 – Produce Waste Management Report: Follow the LEED v4 Reference Guide for step-by-step guidance (Step #3) in the Construction Waste Management Credit with modifications for the v4.1 changes herein.
Waste Prevention:
Follow step-by-step instructions from the v4 Reference Guide with the following modifications:
Step 2: Calculate Total Waste Reduction
Projects can document waste prevention techniques undertaken on the project to earn up to 2 points. To calculate the project’s total waste, include all materials generated from the project and sent offsite for recycling, diversion, landfill, incineration, or any other uses. Exclude hazardous materials, land-clearing debris, and on-site reused materials from the generation numbers. A narrative, provided in the LEED form, must describe strategies in design and construction to reduce waste from being generated on the jobsite (See LEED v4 reference guide, Further Explanation, Source Reduction for more guidance on source reduction strategies).
Reducing waste by thoughtful design results in the reduction of waste on the jobsite. Stopping waste before it is created is always higher priority than managing waste after construction. Successful projects have implemented the following strategies to prevent construction and demolition waste in LEED:
Reuse buildings or building components. Materials that are reused onsite are excluded from the waste generation calculations. Sending materials offsite to salvage, donation or recycling, such as through a documented manufacturer take-back program, does not count as waste prevention but can count towards project diversion.
Source reduction strategies should be incorporated into the design of the project and outlined in the Waste Management Plan. These strategies include reusing existing materials and components, designing for modular construction sizes and techniques, specifying reduced packaging from vendors, designing for industry-standard measurements, eliminating unnecessary finishes, and off-site prefabrication of components or assemblies.
Work with subcontractors and/or finish material suppliers to eliminate or minimize packaging waste and reduce overall materials rather than send them for disposal or recycling.
Diversion
After exploring source reduction and design strategies to prevent waste, determine strategies for on-site and off-site waste collection during construction and consider the infrastructure needed for implementation. Projects may use a combination of on-site separation and commingled collection to achieve the diversion goals, depending on what is appropriate for the project location, waste materials generated, and available facilities and haulers. Strategies for achieving high waste diversion include:
Stage collection bins onsite to correspond with construction phases and contractor schedules. If one trade is onsite for a defined period that has a recyclable waste stream, consider having a single bin for that type of waste instead of—or in addition to—a commingled bin (examples include a bin for concrete recycling during demolition, or separate bins for drywall, wood framing, or roofing waste during those phases).
Source separated materials taken to an individual recycler (such as a scrap metal recycler, sheetrock vendor, or biomass operator) will tend to have much higher diversion rates than a mixed-waste recycling processor.
Donate surplus or salvaged materials.
Participate in manufacturer take-back and recycling programs for removed products in salvageable condition, like ceiling tiles, furniture or flooring.
Incineration of some C&D materials (other than wood) may be considered diversion for international projects only if reuse and recycling methods are not readily available in the project’s location; this must be included in the Waste Management Plan. See Further Explanation for additional details on waste-to-energy.
Under Further Explanation add the following paragraph:
"The combustion of wood materials resulting from recycling processing (also known as “wood-derived fuel” or “biomass”) is classified as an acceptable means of diversion for projects both in the US and internationally and is not considered waste-to-energy for LEED project diversion reporting purposes."
Edit the first sentence of the second paragraph to read as: "Forms of waste-to-energy (other than wood) are not widely utilized for construction and demolition waste management in the United States ..."
Under International Tips, replace the first paragraph in the Alternative Compliance Path for International Projects section with:
"International projects that cannot meet diversion requirements via reuse and recycling methods may consider waste-to-energy as diversion if the European Commission Waste Framework Directive 2008/98/EC and Waste Incineration Directive 2000/76/EC are followed. Furthermore, waste-to-energy facilities must meet applicable European Committee for Standardization (CEN) EN 303 standards."
Revise the section under Required Documentation to read as follows:
A compliant Construction and Demolition Waste Management Plan.
A narrative for waste prevention/design strategies used on the project to achieve the waste threshold and calculation of total waste per area (if pursuing Waste Prevention points).
MR construction and demolition waste management calculator that demonstrates total and diverted waste amounts and documentation of recycling rates for commingled facilities.
International projects: justification narrative for use of WTE strategy for international teams and documentation of WTE facilities adhering to EN standards (if applicable)
Replace section under Exemplary Performance:
Generate less than 10 lbs./sf. (50 kg/m2) and divert 50% or more of waste
OR
Divert 50% or more of all waste and utilize certified recycling facilities for all commingled waste.
BD+C Only: Edit the second paragraph under Option 2 to read as: "Do not generate more than 7.5 pounds of construction waste per square foot (36.6 kilograms of waste per square meter) of the building’s floor area for all BD+C projects except Warehouses and Distribution Centers.
BD+C Only: Edit Table 1: Thresholds of compliance for reduction of total waste material to reflect the attached resource.
-Modify the first paragraph under Step-by-Step Guidance a follows:
Option 1, Path 2 and Path 4 now include additional diversion thresholds using certified commingled recycling facilities. Choose between Path 1 and Path 2 (for 1 point) or Path 3and Path 4(for 2 points) if the goal is waste diversion. Choose Option 2 (for 2 points also) if the goal is waste reduction via waste prevention strategies in the design phase followed by jobsite best practices to reduce waste during construction.
Add an Exemplary performance section under Required Documentation:
Exemplary Performance
Achieve Option 1 - Path 3 or Path 4:
- If following Option 1 Path 3: Divert 85% and Four Material Streams
- If following Option 1 Path 4: Divert 85% using Certified Commingled Recycling Facility and Two More Material Streams
OR
Achieve both Option 1 (Path 3 or 4) and Option 2.
BD+C Only: Edit the second paragraph under Option 2 to read as: "Do not generate more than 7.5 pounds of construction waste per square foot (36.6 kilograms of waste per square meter) of the building’s floor area for all BD+C projects except Warehouses and Distribution Centers.
BD+C Only: Edit Table 1: Thresholds of compliance for reduction of total waste material to reflect the attached resource.
-Modify the first paragraph under Step-by-Step Guidance a follows:
Option 1, Path 2 and Path 4 now include additional diversion thresholds using certified commingled recycling facilities. Choose between Path 1 and Path 2 (for 1 point) or Path 3and Path 4(for 2 points) if the goal is waste diversion. Choose Option 2 (for 2 points also) if the goal is waste reduction via waste prevention strategies in the design phase followed by jobsite best practices to reduce waste during construction.
Add an Exemplary performance section under Required Documentation:
Exemplary Performance
Achieve Option 1 - Path 3 or Path 4:
- If following Option 1 Path 3: Divert 85% and Four Material Streams
- If following Option 1 Path 4: Divert 85% using Certified Commingled Recycling Facility and Two More Material Streams
OR
Achieve both Option 1 (Path 3 or 4) and Option 2.
Path 1. Divert 50% and Two Material Streams (1 point)
Divert at least 50% of the total construction and demolition material; diverted materials must include at least two material streams.
OR
Path 2. Divert 50% using Certified Commingled Recycling Facility (1 Point)
Divert at least 50% of the total construction and demolition material. All commingled recycling must be sent to offsite sorting facility(ies) certified by the Recycling Certification Institute or approved equivalent.
OR
Path 3. Divert 75% and Three Material Streams (2 points)
Divert at least 75% of the total construction and demolition material; diverted materials must include at least three material streams.
OR
Path 4. Divert 75% using Certified Commingled Recycling Facility and One More Material Stream (2 points)
Divert at least 75% of the total construction and demolition material; diverted materials must include at least two material streams. All commingled recycling is required to be one of the streams and must be sent to offsite sorting facility(ies) certified by the Recycling Certification Institute or approved equivalent.
Change all instances of 1a to 1, 1b to 2, 2a to 3, and 2b to 4.
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© Copyright U.S. Green Building Council, Inc. All rights reserved.
Intent
To reduce construction and demolition waste disposed of in landfills and incineration facilities through waste prevention and by reusing, recovering, and recycling materials, and conserving resources for future generations. To delay the need for new landfill facilities that are often located in frontline communities and create green jobs and materials markets for building construction services.
Requirements
Develop and implement a construction and demolition waste management plan and achieve points through waste prevention and/or diversion.
Waste Management Plan and Report:
All projects must develop and implement a construction and demolition waste management plan:
- Identify strategies to reduce the generation of waste during project design and construction.
- Establish waste diversion goals for the project by identifying the materials (both structural and nonstructural) targeted for diversion.
- Describe the diversion strategies planned for the project. Describe where materials will be taken including expected diversion rates for each material.
Provide a final waste management report detailing all waste generated, including disposal and diversion rates for the project. Calculations can be by weight or volume but must be consistent throughout. Exclude excavated soil and land-clearing debris from calculations. Include materials destined for alternative daily cover (ADC) in the calculations as waste (not diversion). Any materials sent to a commingled recycling facility for processing must take the facility average recycling rate and must include any ADC as waste (not diversion).
Option 1. Diversion (1 point)
Follow the Waste Management Plan and divert at least 50% of the total construction and demolition materials from landfills and incineration facilities.AND/OR
Option 2. Waste Prevention (2 points)
Follow the Waste Management Plan and prevent waste through reuse and source reduction design strategies. Salvage or recycle at least 50% of demolition debris and utilize waste minimizing design strategies and construction techniques for new construction elements. Track all demolition debris generated by the project from start of construction through project completion. Also trach all new construction waste materials generated from start of construction through project completion to determine the project's total waste generation from new construction activities. Exclude hazardous materials and land-clearing debris from calculations.
Points are awarded as follows:
Divert at least 50% of all demolition waste, if any. Generate less than 10 lbs./ft2 (50 kg/m2) of waste materials from all new construction activities. (2 points)