During the last ten years, a gradual conversion from mineral oil based hydraulic fluids to environmentally adapted lubricants (EALs), has taken place in the forest industry in Sweden. The current market share of the EALs is ca. 80 percent of the mobile hydraulic fluids utilised. The original driving force of this change can be traced to end‐user demands, especially paper and pulp consumers in Germany. The Swedish standard SS 15 54 34 was in 1997 supplemented with environmental criteria derived from the “Ren Smörja” (“Clean Lubrication”) environmental project in the city of Göteborg. The reliable third‐party validation offered by SP (Swedish National Testing and Research Institute), the present stewards of the “Clean Lubrication” list, has proven to be another important factor. By comparison to the German Blue Angel Eco‐labelling scheme, the Swedish SP‐list approval is somewhat easier to attain, and has provided a flexible base for the development of new products.
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1 June 2000
Technical Paper|
June 01 2000
Environmentally adapted lubricants in Swedish forest industry – a critical review and case study Available to Purchase
Publisher: Emerald Publishing
Online ISSN: 1758-5775
Print ISSN: 0036-8792
© MCB UP Limited
2000
Industrial Lubrication and Tribology (2000) 52 (3): 116–125.
Citation
Norrby T, Kopp M (2000), "Environmentally adapted lubricants in Swedish forest industry – a critical review and case study". Industrial Lubrication and Tribology, Vol. 52 No. 3 pp. 116–125, doi: https://doi.org/10.1108/00368790010326438
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