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"Paper Cuts: Recovering the Paper Landscape," by
Janet Abramovitz and Ashley Mattoon. This paper shows how global consumption of
wood fiber for papermaking could be cut by more than 50 percent through a
combination of trimming paper consumption in industrial countries, improving
papermaking efficiency, and expanding the use of recycled and nonwood
materials.
Cutting the Costs of Paper: Saving Forests, Water, Energy
... and Money
Global consumption of wood fiber for papermaking could be
cut by more than 50 percent, reports a new study by the Worldwatch Institute.
This reduction can be achieved through a combination of trimming paper
consumption in industrial countries, improving papermaking efficiency, and
expanding the use of recycled and nonwood materials, according to Janet
Abramovitz and Ashley Mattoon, co-authors of Paper Cuts: Recovering the Paper
Landscape.
"We have the tools at hand to dramatically lessen the impact
of paper on the world's forests, as well as to reduce energy use, air and water
pollution, and solid waste," said the authors. "And as businesses like Bank of
America, United Parcel Service, and Proctor and Gamble have discovered, saving
paper saves money too."
Global paper use has grown more than six-fold since 1950.
One fifth of all wood harvested in the world ends up in paper. It takes 2 to
3.5 tons of trees to make one ton of paper. Pulp and paper is the 5th largest
industrial consumer of energy in the world, using as much power to produce a
ton of product as the iron and steel industry. In some countries, including the
United States, paper accounts for nearly 40 percent of all municipal solid
waste.
"Making paper uses more water per ton than any other product
in the world," said Abramovitz. "It also produces high levels of air and water
pollution-all to make a product that is usually used once and thrown away."
Papermakers can adopt proven and profitable methods of
production that slash energy use and pollution. Eliminating chlorine bleaching,
which is deadly to the environment and dangerous for workers, is an essential
step towards producing cleaner paper and improving profitability. Scandinavia
has cut chlorine from most of its production and has seen deadly dioxin levels
fall significantly. In the last 25 years, many industrial countries have
trimmed the amount of energy used to make a ton of paper by 20 to 50 percent
(U.S. 22 percent, Japan 50 percent), and water use by even more.
"Papermakers can also incorporate more nonwood fibers,
making use of a portion of the agricultural wastes that are currently burned in
many places, while reducing chemical use in pulping and driving down demand for
wood fiber," said Mattoon. The authors propose doubling nonwood products like
wheat straw as a fiber source, and increasing the share of recycled paper for
fiber from today's 38 percent to 60 percent.
Expanding the recycling of used paper has enormous potential
to bring environmental and economic benefits. Despite a tripling in the volume
of paper recycled since 1975, some 57 percent of used paper is still not
recycled. Because of soaring consumption, increases in the overall volume of
paper waste have outpaced the growth in recycling. Each year the United States
sends more paper to the landfill than is consumed by all of China (the world's
second largest paper consumer). Beyond saving trees, making new paper from old
takes a fraction of the energy and chemicals used in virgin paper
production.
"Recycling makes use of the 'urban forest'-the huge supply
of waste paper in cities, and eases pressures on landfills and incinerators,"
said the authors. "Recycling and better product design can also help companies
save money."
Consumer products giant Proctor and Gamble shaved the amount
of paper packaging per product by 24 percent in a short time. Since nearly half
of all the world's paper goes to packaging, such savings are significant.
Shipping companies such as Airborne, UPS, FedEx, and the U.S. Postal Service
are now using 50 to 100 percent post-consumer wastepaper for envelopes and
boxes and are eliminating bleached paper. UPS, the largest such company, ships
over 3 billion packages per year.
Computers, fax machines, and high speed printers and copiers
make it possible to churn out vast quantities of paper. In the United States,
the average office worker uses some 12,000 sheets of paper per year. Of the
major grades of paper, printing and writing paper is both the most polluting
and the fastest growing worldwide.
"While the paperless office predicted at the dawn of the
computer age in the 1970s hasn't materialized, there are clearly ways to make a
less-paper office," said Abramovitz. Bank of America, the largest bank in the
country, reduced its paper consumption by 25 percent in just two years with
online reports and forms, email, double-sided copying, and lighter-weight
papers. It also recycles 61 percent of its paper, saving about half a million
dollars a year in waste hauling fees. Companies that use the Internet instead
of paper for purchase orders, invoices, etc., can save $1 to $5 per page by
eliminating paper and reducing labor costs and time.
There are gross inequities in access to paper. The United
States, with less than 5 percent of the world's population, consumes 30 percent
of the world's paper. Each year industrial countries use an average of 164
kilograms per person, while developing countries use just 18 kilograms per
person (United States 335 kg/person/year, Japan 249, Germany 192, Brazil 39,
China 27, India 4). However, usage is growing rapidly in some developing
countries: between 1980 and 1997, consumption in Indonesia rose more than
seven-fold, in China more than five-fold, and more than four-fold in South
Korea and Thailand.
Some 80 percent of the world's people consume less than 30
to 40 kilograms per person per year, the amount that a United Nations
Environment Program report suggests is essential to meeting basic literacy and
communication needs. (One kilogram of paper is roughly equal to two daily New
York Times.)
"If industrial countries trimmed their paper use by 30
percent, an amount largely possible through good housekeeping alone, global
consumption would fall, and developing-country consumption could rise to meet
basic needs without adding to the serious global environmental burden of
paper," said the authors.
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