Monday, March 25, 2013

Understanding Wooden Windows, Plastic Windows And How They Can Affect The Environment

By Giles Perry


Environmentalists and also regular people concerned about the ways in which humans interact with the world around them, there has been a question of growing concern: Wooden windows or plastic windows which one is better for the environment? The reason this is so is because housing needs have been intensifying as populations around the globe continue to grow. More housing is needed, of course, meaning more of everything related to housing, including plastics and woods, is also needed.

Anybody considering going with one type of window (frame, usually, because the glass used in either is pretty much the same) over another should consider how each window is made, first of all. Wooden window frames, depending on the kind of wood and their design, can be fairly simple and eco-friendly, as long as certain chemicals aren't used in the manufacturing process.

Plastics of all types, whether used in window frames or the casings that go around modern-day flat panel LCD TVs, is made using a number of potentially-harmful chemical processes. It also tends not to be biodegradable in any appreciable fashion. Once made, they just don't break down over any amount of time that can be appreciated by humans. Sometimes, they can take thousands of years before they begin to degrade, in fact.

Wooden windows, on the other hand -- especially when they're made from organically-grown and then processed wood -- can be significantly less burdensome to the environment. The cost of making a wooden window in an eco-friendly manner can be higher when compared to the cost of manufacturing a plastic window, but the benefit to the environment can be quite significant. The use of natural lacquers and preservative shellacs also helps to make wood attractive.

Given all of the considerations that need to be looked at when it comes to wood versus plastic when it comes to just which would be better for the environment, the issue of how easy each is to recycle is probably the most important issue to examine. When disposed of properly, plastic can be recycled as easily as wood, but it isn't biodegradable and the chemicals used to make it are toxic to the environment. Wood degrades, and if it's made organically, it isn't dangerous to the environment, either.

It would seem, then, that the question (wooden windows or plastic windows which one is better for the environment?) involving the global ecology and how plastic and wood interact with it, is easier to answer than first thought. Given that plastic brings with it a huge amount of potentially-toxic chemicals and that it also doesn't tend to break down and degrade in a landfill, it's most likely the case that wood will win the day in terms of eco-friendliness.




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