Amount of biodegradable materials used in the organization’s products (including packaging) during the reporting period.
Amount of biodegradable materials used in the organization’s products (including packaging) during the reporting period.
Organizations should footnote all assumptions used.
This metric is intended to capture the quantity of biodegradable material—material that is capable of decomposing under natural conditions—used in the organization’s products during the reporting period.
In some contexts, this metric can serve as an indicator of whether the outcome being sought by an investor or organization is occurring (the WHAT dimension of impact). For more on the alignment of IRIS metrics to the five dimensions of impact, see IRIS+ and the Five Dimensions of Impact (https://iris.thegiin.org/document/iris-and-the-five-dimensions/). No single metric is sufficient to understand an impact; rather, metrics are selected as a set across all dimensions of impact. When possible, the selection of metrics to measure and describe the five dimensions should be based on best practice and evidence.
Metrics identified as "cross-category" are those that are relevant to any IRIS+ Impact Category or Impact Theme (i.e., these metrics are not specific to any particular industry/category or theme).
June 2022 - IRIS v5.3 Released (current version)
Immaterial change. Minor revision to usage guidance for clarity.
January 2020 - IRIS v5.1 Released
No change.
May 2019 - IRIS v5.0 Released
No change.
March 2016 - IRIS v4.0 Released
No change.
March 2014 - IRIS v3.0 Released
No change.
November 2011 - IRIS v2.2 Released
No change.
February 2011 - IRIS v2.1 Released
No change.
September 2010 - IRIS v2.0 Released
Material change. Recycled Materials (OI4328), Biodegradable Materials (OI5101)and Toxic Materials (OI5942) replaced Material Usage (OEN44). Metric trifurcated to better differentiate between materials used.
September 2009 - IRIS v1.0 Released
New metric. Material Usage (OEN44) was developed via the Original IRIS Working Group.