Timber iQ October - November 2019 // Issue:46 | Page 23
ASSOCIATIONS
As with every aspect of building, timber roof trusses must
be manufactured and erected in line with the National
Building Regulations and SANS 10400, which provide for
fire safety. Building regulations, set in place by bodies
such as the South African Bureau of Standards (SABS)
after extensive research and consultation with industry
experts, consider all aspects of a given building
material’s composition and properties to ensure that it
meets the same safety and performance standard as any
other building material in the same application.
Dr Wessels notes that the misconception of
wood being a fire hazard is a complex issue
with roots in the informal housing
market and our use of wood as fuel for
fires. Used in small dimensions, not
built to code and surrounded by
and containing other potential fire
hazards, such as is the case with
many informal houses, this type
of structure should of course be
considered a hazard to human life
and unfit for habitation. “But
formal housing structures and
even multi-storey wood structures
can perform as well as any other
material would under fire
conditions,” says Dr Wessels. In some
cases, such as wood beams with large
dimensions, wood will even outperform
competing materials, like steel, due to its slow
charring rate in fires.
increasing need to engage with it responsibly and
critically. Likewise, industry has a duty to share
information in a responsible and ethical manner,
not only to protect their reputation, but to safeguard
the consumer.
“Unfortunately, consumers are often on the
receiving end of dubious information from
organisations with commercial interests in products,
and it is becoming more important that
independent bodies, like universities,
standards organisations and research
organisations verify claims,
especially those pertaining to
the environment,” Dr Wessels
notes. “Methodologies such
as Life Cycle Assessments
have developed to a point
where very
comprehensive
comparisons can be
made between materials,
products and processes
to verify their
environmental impact.
Consumers need to be wary
of claims made by anyone
with commercial interest in
products unless these claims can
be supported by independent
evaluations; it is the consumer’s right
to request this evidence, especially when
they are using this information to inform big
investments, like new builds, retrofits and
renovations,” he adds.
“While common misconceptions about timber
construction play a role in preventing both the
consumer and the trade from harnessing its manifold
benefits in the construction arena, there are positive
signs that the general public and the trade are
showing increasing confidence in the material,” says
Obbes, concluding, “Members of the general public
and the trade are encouraged to call on the ITC-SA, a
non-gain organisation (NGO) and South Africa
Qualifications Authority (SAQA) accredited
Professional Body for the engineered timber
construction sector, for information, advice and
support in their quest for a better built environment,”
she concludes.
"There is a distinct
difference between
harvesting timber from
sustainable and well-managed
plantations and the deforestation
and degradation of natural
forests that should be
protected."
SETTING THE RECORD STRAIGHT A
MATTER OF URGENCY
Rising carbon emissions, our newly ‘upgraded’ climate
emergency, environmentally savvier consumers and
governments looking to make better-informed decisions
about the environment form part of a collective global
call for materials and methodologies that will respond
with agility to an environmentally conscious future.
According to Werner Slabbert, Director of Eco Log
Homes, “Local government is facing unprecedented
pressure to make important climate change-related
decisions. According to a recent report by the World
Meteorological Organisation4, the past four years were
the warmest on record, and extreme weather impacted
lives and sustainable development on every continent.
Formulating ways to develop cities and communities in
an environmentally responsible way that also integrates
adaptation for climate change is now of the highest
importance,” he says.
“Timber frame construction, with the research to back
it, responds exceptionally well to these pain points in our
environmental and political climate,” says Dr Wessels.
“Leveraging the environmental benefits of wood,
including carbon sequestration, oxygen production,
lower transportation emissions, faster construction time
and a much-reduced HVAC burden, is becoming
increasingly crucial in the light of accelerated climate
change, making it imperative to lay to rest these common
misconceptions about timber construction,” he adds.
KNOWLEDGE IS POWER
Consumers today have more information available to
them than ever before, but with it comes an ever-
www.timberiq.co.za
REFERENCES:
1. Carrington, D. ‘Tree Planting has ‘mind-blowing potential’
to tackle climate crisis’. The Guardian. https://www.
theguardian.com/environment/2019/jul/04/planting-
billions-trees-best-tackle-climate-crisis-scientists-
canopy-emissions. Posted: 4 July 2019.
2. Crafford et al. 2017. The potential of South African timber
products to reduce the environmental impact of buildings.
http://itc-sa.org/study-potential-south-african-timber-
products-reduce-environmental-impact-buildings. Posted:
9 October 2017.
3. Institute for Timber Construction. Specifying Timber for
Construction. http://itc-sa.org/specifying-timber-
construction. Posted: 20 April 2017.
4. World Meteorological Organisation. WMO Statement on
the State of the Global Climate in 2018. https://library.
wmo.int/doc_num.php?explnum_id=5789
// OCTOBER / NOVEMBER 2019
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