News | 13th August 2024 | 3 mins read
While the purpose of cleanroom technology is to prevent noxious gasses from being leached into the environment, it doesn’t mean this equipment doesn’t contribute any carbon emissions.
The laboratories typically used by pharmaceutical companies and hospitals, for example, will contain a broad range of equipment – including isolators, fume cupboards, downflow booths and extraction systems. These all require energy in order to operate. If you consider the full lifecycle of the product, they also need to be manufactured in a factory, transported and will require disposal at some point.
At every stage of this lifecycle, cleanroom equipment is having an impact on the environment. Any company designing or developing cleanroom laboratories will need to consider these implications before an investment is made.
This is a subject that now comes up repeatedly in conversations we have with potential customers. It’s as high on their priority list as factors such as overall cost, quality, lead times and return on investment.
This is partly driven by ethical considerations. But there are also strong commercial and financial motivations, with pressure coming from consumers, investors and other stakeholders, including employees. This is in addition to growing scrutiny from environmental groups and watchdogs.
This article was published in the August 2024 edition of Cleanroom Technology – click here to view
Regulatory requirements
Governments across the globe are in the process of rolling out legislation that encourages regulators to take action against any company failing to reduce their emissions. This includes the EU’s Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive (CSRD) and the UK’s Sustainability Disclosure Requirements (SDR).
These regulations will increase the environmental, social and governance (ESG) reporting requirements placed on large enterprises from next year – and this doesn’t just cover their own operations, it covers their supply chains too. So, being a supplier to many large multinational organisations, the environmental impact of Envair Technology and the products we make is currently at the forefront of our minds.
We are looking at our own sourcing practices, and reviewing the raw materials we use and the design of the components we fit into all of our cleanroom technology. We are also looking at ways to reduce energy usage while this equipment is operational.
This is something that has encouraged us to increase our own investment into research and development in recent years. It’s essential that any changes we introduce only enhance the performance of our clean air equipment. The safety of the immediate user has to remain the utmost priority.
We have found there are steps that can be taken to improve our environmental impact, some small, some larger.







