Synopses & Reviews
The products we purchase and use are assembled from a wide range of naturally occurring and manufactured materials. But too often we create hazards for the ecosystem and human health as we mine, process, distribute, use, and dispose of these materials. Until recently, most research has focused on the waste end of material cycles. This book argues that the safest and least costly point at which to avoid environmental damage is when materials are first designed and selected for use in industrial production.Materials Matter presents convincing evidence that we can use fewer materials and eliminate the use of many toxic chemicals by focusing directly on material (chemical) use when products are designed. It also shows how manufacturers can save money by increasing the effectiveness of material use and reducing the use of toxic chemicals. It advocates new directions for the material sciences and government policies on materials. And it argues that manufacturers, suppliers, and customers need to set more socially responsible policies for products and services to achieve higher environmental and health goals.
Review
"This book should be required reading for industrial designers, materials scientists, chemical engineers and environmental policy-makers everywhere."
— Tim Jackson, Nature
Review
I congratulate Ken Geiser. I personally found this to be an interesting and a useful book. He has done a thorough job, particularly on the history of materials, creation of synthetic materials, and dissipation of toxics. The MIT Press
Review
"Geiser effectively makes the case that materials matter in a virtual age. He provides a guide to developing a sustainable materials policy for citizen leaders, innovators in government, and scientists and engineers with a public policy bent." --Francis Irwin, World Resources Institute The MIT Press
Review
In this timely and insightful major contribution to the sustainable development literature, Professor Ken Geiser urges a policy shift from assessing the environmental consequences of an industrial economy increasingly dependent on chemicals and metals to a double-pronged strategy of dematerialization and detoxification.
Review
"A unique and comprehensive synthesis and compendium of heretofore disparate writings on and critiques of the precautionary principle, incorporating both European and American legal, political, and cultural traditions and perspectives. Theoretically sound and practically oriented, this book will be a must-read for policy analysts and policymakers, environmentalists, enlightened industrialists, citizens and activists, and students of government and regulation."--Nicholas A. Ashford, Professor of Technology and Policy, MIT, and coauthor of *Environmental Law, Policy, and Economics: Reclaiming the Environmental Agenda* The MIT Press
Review
Geiser effectively makes the case that materials matter in a virtual age. He provides a guide to developing a sustainable materials policy for citizen leaders, innovators in government, and scientists and engineers with a public policy bent. David Berry, Chair, Federal Interagency Working Group on Industrial Ecology, Materials and Energy Flows
Synopsis
An argument that the safest and least costly point at which to avoid environmental damage is when materials are first designed and selected for use in industrial production.
Synopsis
The products we purchase and use are assembled from a wide range of naturally occurring and manufactured materials. But too often we create hazards for the ecosystem and human health as we mine, process, distribute, use, and dispose of these materials. Until recently, most research has focused on the waste end of material cycles. This book argues that the safest and least costly point at which to avoid environmental damage is when materials are first designed and selected for use in industrial production.
About the Author
Ken Geiser is Professor Emeritus of Work Environment at the University of Massachusetts Lowell, Founder and past Codirector of the Lowell Center for Sustainable Production, and the author of Materials Matter: Toward a Sustainable Materials Policy. One of the authors of the Massachusetts Toxics Use Reduction Act, he was Director of the Massachusetts Toxics Use Reduction Institute for thirteen years.