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EQ CREDIT

Low-Emitting Materials (Up to 3 Points)

  • Goal: Reduce harmful chemicals (VOCs) inside buildings
  • Focus: Materials used during construction

👉 Memory shortcut:

“Choose materials that don’t pollute indoor air”

🔹 2. WHY THIS MATTERS

  • VOCs → cause:
    • Asthma
    • Irritation
    • Long-term health issues
  • Materials = major source of indoor pollution

🔹 3. KEY CONCEPTS (SUPER IMPORTANT)

🧪 Emissions vs Content

Type

What it Means

Easy Way to Remember

Emissions

What comes OUT of product

“What you breathe”

Content

What’s INSIDE product

“What it’s made of”

👉 Exam Tip:

  • Both are required (especially for wet-applied products)

🔹 4. CREDIT STRUCTURE

📊 Two Options

Option

Approach

Complexity

Option 1

Product Category Thresholds

Easier

Option 2

Budget Calculation

Flexible but complex

🔹 5. OPTION 1 – PRODUCT CATEGORY METHOD

🎯 Concept

Meet requirements across product categories

📊 Product Categories

Category

Threshold

Key Requirement

Interior paints & coatings

≥ 90% (emissions) + 100% VOC content

Must meet emissions + VOC limits (wet-applied rule)

Interior adhesives & sealants

≥ 90% (emissions) + 100% VOC content

Same wet-applied rule applies

Flooring

100% compliant

Must meet emissions standards

Composite wood

100% compliant (if not covered elsewhere)

Must meet composite wood evaluation

Ceilings, walls, insulation

100% compliant

General emissions evaluation

Furniture

≥ 90% by cost

Furniture emissions evaluation

Exterior applied products (Healthcare/Schools only)

≥ 90% by volume

Applies only to specific project types

💧 Wet-Applied Products (VERY IMPORTANT)

👉 Includes:

  • Paints
  • Coatings
  • Adhesives
  • Sealants

Requirements:

Category Type

Threshold Logic

Wet-applied products (paints, adhesives)

90% emissions + 100% VOC

Most other categories

100% compliance

Furniture

90% by cost

Requirement

Threshold

Emissions

≥ 90% compliant

VOC content

100% compliant

👉 Classic exam question

🔹 6. OPTION 2 – BUDGET METHOD

🎯 Concept

Allows trade-offs across assemblies

👉 If some products don’t comply → others compensate

📊 Assemblies Used

Assembly

Flooring

Ceilings

Walls

Insulation

Furniture

Exterior (schools/healthcare only)

🧠 Key Rule (VERY IMPORTANT)

Scenario

What to Do

All layers compliant

Count full area

Some layers NOT compliant

Use weighted average

👉 High-value exam concept

🔹 7. IMPLEMENTATION STRATEGIES

Strategy

Description

Non-emitting materials

Stone, glass, metal, concrete

Manufacturer declaration

Self-reported compliance

Third-party certification

BEST approach (CDPH, etc.)

👉 Exam Tip:
Third-party certification = easiest + safest

🔹 8. IMPORTANT DEFINITIONS

Term

Meaning

Interior

Inside waterproofing membrane

Exterior

Outside weather barrier

Furniture

Counts if installed at occupancy

🔹 9. COMMON EXAM TRAPS 🚨

❗ Trap 1: Wet-Applied Products

  • 90% emissions + 100% VOC content
  • BOTH required

❗ Trap 2: Furniture

  • Included if installed at occupancy
  • Even if NOT specified by design team

❗ Trap 3: This is a Construction Credit

  • Based on installed materials
  • NOT just design intent

❗ Trap 4: Budget Method

  • Uses assemblies
  • Uses weighted averages

Official FAQs

What is the primary goal of the Low-Emitting Materials credit?
A. Reduce energy consumption
B. Reduce water usage
C. Reduce indoor air pollutants
D. Improve daylight
✅ Answer: C
For wet-applied products, what percentage must meet VOC content requirements?
A. 50%
B. 75%
C. 90%
D. 100%
✅ Answer: D
Which of the following is considered a non-emitting material?
A. Paint
B. Adhesive
C. Concrete
D. Sealant
✅ Answer: C
A project has 85% of paints meeting emissions criteria. Does it comply?
A. Yes
B. No
✅ Answer: B
Explanation:
Minimum = 90%
A project installs furniture at occupancy. Should it be included in calculations?
A. No
B. Only if specified by architect
C. Yes
D. Only for healthcare projects
✅ Answer: C
A flooring system has compliant finish but non-compliant adhesive. Under Option 2, how is this handled?
A. Entire area counts
B. Excluded entirely
C. Weighted average calculation
D. Automatically fails
✅ Answer: C
A project cannot meet requirements in one product category. What is the best approach?
A. Drop the credit
B. Use Option 2 (budget method)
C. Ignore category
D. Substitute materials randomly
✅ Answer: B
Which approach BEST ensures compliance with this credit?
A. Using cheapest materials
B. Using third-party certified products
C. Increasing ventilation
D. Using more insulation
✅ Answer: B
Which statement BEST describes the difference between emissions and content standards?
A. Both measure cost
B. Emissions = ingredients, Content = performance
C. Emissions = what is released, Content = what is inside
D. No difference
✅ Answer: C
Why is this considered a construction credit?
Why is this considered a construction credit?
A. It uses ASHRAE standards
B. It depends on installed materials
C. It requires commissioning
D. It involves energy modeling
✅ Answer: B

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