The ACT® (Accountability, Consistency, Transparency) Ecolabel evaluates the environmental impact of lab products across five major categories.

With the new ACT Ecolabel 2.0, My Green Lab® provides a 100-point based Environmental Performance Factor (EPF).

Here, we will provide you with a short explanation of what is assessed and discuss some nuances that you should know about:

Category Overview:

🔍 1. Audit of the Product

Content:

Use Phase:

Lifetime:


📦 2. Audit of the Packaging

Evaluation Criteria:


🏭 3. Audit of the Manufacturing Facility

Evaluation Criteria:


🌍 4. Company GHG Reductions

Evaluation Criteria:


🧮 5. Product Carbon Reporting

Evaluation Criteria:


♻️ 6. Improvements

Evaluates recent product improvements across ACT categories that significantly reduce environmental impact.


🌟 7. Innovation (Bonus Category)

To qualify, the product must meet at least one of the following:

If you want know in detail what each category covers and how many points can be achieved for each category, you can do so here.

Discussion:

Some Nuances You Should Note:

Why the ACT Eolabel Is Currently the Best Sustainability Standard in Science

Preempting Criticism – What the ACT Ecolabel Cannot Do

What Could Be Done Differently

These address similar aspects—GHG emissions from energy use—but under different lenses. While a facility may rightfully receive credit in more than one category, an alternative would be measuring GHG emissions directly from the outset, rather than through fragmented proxies.

What You Should Assess Beyond the ACT Ecolabel

Products that allow for smaller volumes of chemicals or reagents—whether through design, improved efficiency, or innovative protocols—can significantly reduce upstream environmental impact.

Lighter products require fewer raw materials to produce and generate lower transportation emissions.

Products designed for multiple uses instead of single use can dramatically reduce waste, especially in high-throughput laboratory settings – this is especially important e.g., for tubes or tips and their resistance to autoclavation.

Some suppliers reduce environmental impact not by changing the product itself, but through other innovations. Those could be streamlined logistics—for example, through bulk shipments, consolidated deliveries, or modular systems that reduce how often restocking is required.

In Essence

The ACT Ecolabel is currently the top choice for scientists to assess the environmental impact of lab items. Few other fields offer a multi-category label that transparently provides quantified impact data like the ACT Ecolabel does. This is an outstanding initiative, and thanks to its clarity and conciseness, it’s a tool you should definitely use for your next procurement decision.


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