GreenScreen List Translator

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

The GreenScreen List Translator is a procedure for assessing

Proposition 65
.

Analysis procedure

The List Translator procedure is defined in the GreenScreen for Safer Chemicals, a transparent, open standard for chemical hazard assessment that supports alternatives assessment for toxics use reduction through identifying chemicals of concern and safer alternatives. The GreenScreen protocol is published in a Guidance document that is reviewed and updated regularly. This description of the List Translator is based upon the Hazard Assessment Guidance Version 1.4[1]

The List Translator identifies the hazard endpoints for which a substance has been listed on each of a defined set of published hazard lists and the level of hazard. It prioritizes for avoidance those substances listed with a high hazard of any of the following endpoints:

This parallels the prioritization schemes underlying various international governmental regulatory programs such as the

REACH Regulation of the European Union
.

The central tools of the List Translator are the GreenScreen Specified Lists and the GreenScreen List Translator Map.

List Translator scores

Scoring a substance is a three part procedure:

  • Search the Specified Lists: Each of the Specified Lists is searched to determine if the substance being scored is listed on any of the lists. It may be identified specifically by CASRN or it may be a member of a listed compound group - a group of substances with a similar chemical structure.
  • Compare the endpoints and hazard levels: The Map is consulted for each list on which the substance is identified to determine a hazard level for each endpoint. If there is more than one listing, the highest hazard level from the most authoritative list is used.
  • Calculate List Translator score: The assigned hazard levels and endpoints are compared to the criteria for GreenScreen’s highest concern category of Benchmark 1:
    • LT-1 (List Translator Likely Benchmark 1) - The substance is on at least one Authoritative A list that meets Benchmark 1 criteria. That is, it meets the criteria for a high hazard carcinogen, mutagen, reproductive toxicant or developmental toxicant or endocrine disruptor or as a persistent bioaccumulative and toxic substance (PBT). The PBT criteria can be met by a combination of lists.
    • LT-P1 (List Translator Possible Benchmark 1) - On a list that overlaps Benchmark 1 criteria and/or is a lower confidence Authoritative B or Screening list.
    • LT-UNK (List Translator Benchmark Unknown) - Listed only on a list that does not meet or overlap Benchmark 1 criteria.
    • NoGSLT (No GreenScreen List Translator information) - Not listed on any of the GreenScreen Specified lists
    • NoGS (No GreenScreen information) - Not on any of the GreenScreen Specified lists and there is no public Greenscreen full assessment.

An LT-Unk, No GSLT or NoGS score is not an indication of low hazard or safety for a substance, only that the substance has not been listed for the priority health endpoints. A full GreenScreen Assessment must be undertaken to determine if the substance qualifies as an affirmatively safer substance.

Automation

Any person can use the GreenScreen List Translator protocol to score a substance. The research required to look up the substance in each of the hazard lists is, however, substantial. Several Licensed GreenScreen List Translator™ Automators aggregate the lists and provide free online lookup services for determining List Translator scores.

Applications

The GreenScreen List Translator is the first step in a GreenScreen Assessment. It is also used as a stand alone screening protocol by health and sustainability screening and certification programs. It is widely referenced in standards and certifications related to green building products, including the

LEED program.[4]

References

  1. ^ GreenScreen for Safer Chemicals Hazard Assessment Guidance for Chemicals, Polymers and Products (Version 1.4 ed.). Clean Production Action. January 2018. Retrieved 17 January 2018.
  2. ^ "HPD Open Standard". HPDC. Health Product Declaration Collaborative. Retrieved 6 June 2018.
  3. ^ "Help Center: How are products scored?". Portico. Healthy Building Network. Retrieved 3 October 2018.
  4. ^ "Building product disclosure and optimization - material ingredients". EED BD+C: New Construction v4 - LEED v4 - Materials & Resources. US Green Building Council. Retrieved 3 October 2018.

External links