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Correct Building
Products® Takes Governor’s
Carbon Challenge
Company Furthers Commitment to
Reduce Greenhouse Gases
BIDDEFORD, Maine. (April 22, 2007)
– Correct Building Products,
LLC announced today that they will
participate in the State of Maine’s
Governor’s Carbon Challenge
(see editors’ notes). Maine-based
Correct Building Products, maker of
CorrectDeck composite building products,
joins with over 50 groups in a statewide
effort to reduce greenhouse gas emissions
and to manufacture sustainable, recyclable
building products for residential
and light commercial use.
Energy usage at the
Biddeford manufacturing plant is down
20 percent due to a light fixture
replacement project, even with one
additional line running. Water usage
is down 30 percent with the change
to a central vacuum system. The plant’s
boiler is fueled by natural gas, a
notably efficient fuel. Waste disposal
is down from five to two times a week
due to the in-house recycling program.
“In addition
to the changes at our plant, we’re
doing our best to alter our in-house
processes, too, said Martin Grohman,
president of Correct Building Products.
”We’re working hard to
promote recycling and to reduce the
usage of unsustainably-harvested tropical
hardwoods,” To aid in future
recycling, all CorrectDeck products
are printed with their resource content.
The products are also all free of
polyvinyl chloride and can be safely
incinerated.
In addition to recycling
and reprocessing all manufacturing
scrap at the factory, Correct Building
Products has implemented a pilot program
to collect jobsite scrap, which can
also be made into new decking. “Composite
decking is quite recyclable –
it contains no thermosetting materials
and is rot-resistant,” added
Grohman. “In fact, recycling
of composites is routinely done.”
Correct Building Products, LLC has
won awards from and is affiliated
with other organizations committed
to preserving and protecting the environment:
• Two-time winner of Maine’s
Governor’s Waste Reduction
Award
• Member: Maine Made &
Green Program
• Member: Corporate Conservation
Council of Maine
• Supporter: USGBC & LEED
programs
• Supporter: The Nature Conservancy
Editors’
Notes:
In 2001, the New England Governors
and Eastern Canadian Premiers signed
an agreement to reduce greenhouse
gas emissions to 1990 levels by 2010
and to 10% below those levels by 2020,
with the goal of an overall 75% to
80% decrease from 2003 levels. In
2003, Maine became the first state
to enact these goals into statute,
directing the state’s Department
of Environmental Protection to develop
agreements with businesses and non-profit
organizations to accomplish these
goals.
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