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According to the World Green Building Council’s Global Status Report 2017, the building industry accounts for 39% of the world’s carbon emissions. One way to reduce these emissions is to install sustainable doors and hardware. In this episode, Tad and Julianna sit down with Amy Musanti Director of Sustainability for ASSA ABLOY, to discuss ASSA ABLOY’s sustainability journey, how ASSA ABLOY is optimizing their products to be more sustainable, the sustainability compass they use in their new product development process, their 150+ GreenCircle certifications, and what’s next for the building industry.
how you are making your products more sustainable?
On the energy efficiency side, we're not the obvious product when we think about contributors to a better building envelope or a better building operational footprint overall, right? So we bring products to market and then have to think really creatively about how we're teaching our customers to integrate these products into their building.
So there are two buckets when it comes to energy efficiency. One is taking a look at the exterior envelope, and then the other is taking a look at products that are electrified. So with the exterior envelope we have spent a lot of time and resources, developing products that contribute to a much more sealed up exterior envelope.
When you're in a building you look around the opening and if you can see gaps around that opening and you can see the outside from the inside, that means that there's some energy loss going on there. You’re also losing some money as well. So we take a look at designing and testing exterior envelope products that work together as a system.
It's not just one piece of the puzzle or another. It's the door, the frame, the gasketing, the thermally broken threshold, and the door operator that helps to ensure that the product or that the opening stays open just as long as it needs to, and then closes again so that we don't have this gap where we're losing more when it comes to that transmission of heat and cold. We're seeing much more demand as far as net zero and passive house. So there's a great focus on that and just kind of sealing up that exterior envelope.
But then as far as the rest of the building with electrified products, that's important to think about as well. And again, it's a new way of thinking, right? We work with a lot of really intelligent and experienced people who think about lighting, HVAC, and windows in terms of energy and money loss. Then the little door hardware geeks over here are like, ‘Hey, don't forget, these products are electrified, and they're also pulling power from the grid and you're paying for that. So let's think about ways that we can do things differently.’
One of those ways is to utilize the existing infrastructure in the building to power these access control products. Many of these solutions will utilize the types of cabling that are already in the building. You can also use those to power your locking products and that's something that's really innovative. It gets people thinking differently about the types of products that contribute to an energy efficient built environment. It also gets us thinking about how we don't have to sacrifice one for the other, right.
These products were developed to bring security and access control solutions to the building, but at the same time, they're also helping to reduce the amount of energy used. They're reducing the amount of product, footprint, labor, and infrastructure at the same time. So it's basically a win-win.
can you tell us more about the Sustainability Compass you are using to optimize your products?
The sustainability compass is kind of our homegrown tool, but I assume that other manufacturers might be using something similar. We have a very advanced innovation team in our group center in Stockholm and around the world. They, in part with Tad and his team, helped to develop this sustainability compass, which is first and foremost, an awareness tool for sustainability.
We're sustainability people here on this call, we wake up every morning thinking about sustainability, but our product engineers, our design team, our supply chain team, and factory and manufacturing team don't think about that right away. So the compass was foremost designed to be an awareness tool.
It looks very much like a pie with different portions and each section represents a way that we're measuring the product’s impact. We want some portions of the compass to be greater. For example, we want the product to have greater recyclability attributes or higher recycled content. Then other areas of the compass, we want to be lower or reduced. For example, a lower cost, lower product footprint, or less packaging.
We use the compass in the design phase to basically input data around the products and kind of work with it to see what the levels are and see if we can work with suppliers and design teams to output a better and more responsible product.
The goal is to have a more optimized product that goes to market first, instead of launching a product and then going back and saying, ‘okay, maybe we can add or incorporate some sustainability attributes to it now, too.’ So all ASSA ABLOY customers around the world can know that any product that they come into contact with has been through the sustainability compass. We've taken a look at all phases of it. We've put it under the microscope, we've measured its footprint and its impact, and we've taken some steps to make it better using the compass.
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ABOUT Amy musanti
Amy Musanti is the Director of Sustainability for ASSA ABLOY in New Haven, Connecticut. Amy joined ASSA ABLOY in 2007 and has held a variety of positions across numerous divisions in customer service, marketing, sales, and sustainability. She is responsible for ’greening’ the group’s products and processes, by supporting business opportunities for ASSA ABLOY solutions that contribute to energy efficiency and wellness in the commercial and institutional construction industry.
Amy has a Bachelor of Arts in Communication with a minor in Information Technology from Monmouth University in NJ and a Master of Science in Organizational Leadership from Quinnipiac University in CT.