There is a great deal of misrepresentation on the web about the environmental and climate-related benefits of mass timber use for high-rise buildings. This backgrounder helps to set the record straight. Many of these articles fail to address serious risk factors associated with such structures or misrepresent their true impacts on the environment.
They often extoll the supposed virtues of tall timber buildings noting that structures built using cross-laminated timber are an “environmentally sustainable alternative to concrete and steel, which generate large quantities of greenhouse gases in their production.”
For those unfamiliar with the term, cross-laminated timber is a form of engineered wood where pieces of wood are glued together to create a panel that is stronger than an ordinary wooden beam. This is a relatively new building product, but it is gaining popularity in North America in large part due to intense lobbying efforts by proponents in the architectural community and in the wood products sector.
The use of mass timber for tall buildings is touted for its power to mitigate climate change because they remove carbon from the atmosphere, an assertion that is fundamentally false.