LIGHTENING THE LOAD
Chapter 8. Protecting Forest Products and Services
Lester R. Brown, Eco-Economy: Building an Economy for the Earth
(W.W. Norton & Co., NY: 2001).
There is enormous potential in all countries
to lessen the demand pressure that is shrinking the earth's forest
cover. In industrial nations the greatest opportunity lies in reducing
the amount of wood used to manufacture paper. In developing countries
it also depends on reducing that used as fuel.
An examination of paper recycling in the top 10 paper-producing
countries shows a wide variation. (See Table 8-4.) On the low end
are China, which recycles 27 percent of its paper, and Italy, at
31 percent. At the high end are Germany at 72 percent and South
Korea at 66 percent. The rate in Germany is high because the government
has consistently emphasized the recycling of paper in order to reduce
the flow to landfills. If every country recycled as much as Germany
does, nearly one third less wood would be needed worldwide to produce
paper.
The United States, the world's largest producer and consumer of
paper, is far behind Germany but making progress. Twenty years ago,
roughly one fourth of the paper used in the United States was recycled.
By 1997, the figure had reached 46 percent. Contributing to this
were the introduction of convenient curbside recycling, the banning
of paper in many landfills, and mandates imposed by both the federal
and state governments on recycled content in purchased paper, such
as the one adopted by the Clinton administration in 1993.31
Some countries not among the top 10 producers are also making impressive
progress. The Netherlands, for example, has set a goal of recycling
72 percent of all the paper used within its borders by 2001. This
goal, which will put it on a par with Germany, seems likely to be
reached.32
The use of paper, perhaps more than any other single product, still
reflects the throwaway mentality that evolved during the second
half of the last century. There are enormous possibilities for reducing
paper use, including replacing facial tissues, paper napkins, disposable
diapers, and paper shopping bags with cloth alternatives The Japanese
have a special problem since their wooden chopsticks are often discarded
after one use. As a result, some 25 billion chopsticks a year end
up in the garbage in Japan. In attempts to solve a comparable problem,
China is launching a program to reduce the use of throwaway chopsticks.33
In the electronic era, some uses of paper could be phased out almost
entirely. Among these is the use of paper telephone directories,
which can be replaced by online phone directories available on the
Internet. Not all residences have access to the Internet, but it
may now make sense to discontinue automatic distribution of phone
directories and give them out only on request. This could save millions
of tons of paper each year.
Newspapers devote most of their space to advertising. For example,
a typical city newspaper in the United States will carry two pages
of used car ads each day for 365 days a year. Although some people
never buy a car, much less a used one, they nonetheless automatically
get these pages with their daily newspaper. An online electronic
directory of used cars in each city could largely dispense with
this use of newsprint. Indeed, electronic directories for cars,
apartment rentals, and various services such as home repair and
plumbing will undoubtedly reduce newspaper ads and save paper.
The International Herald Tribune, published in Paris and
printed at several different locations around the world, is a model
of a paper-efficient newspaper. Owned jointly by the New York Times
and the Washington Post, it carries material from both newspapers.
It is trim and easy to read, with few ads. Within the United States,
USA Today also has an unusually high rate of news to advertising.
These newspapers are also available on the Internet.34
The largest single demand on our treesthe
need for fuelwoodaccounts
for just over half of all wood removed from forests. One way of
reducing the pressure of fuelwood demand is to use wood more efficiently.
While attention in the industrial world focuses on increasing the
fuel efficiency of automobiles, much less attention has been given
to the efficiency of cook stoves, the leading use of energy in many
developing countries. A number of international aid agencies, including
the U.S. Agency for International Development, have begun to sponsor
projects in this area, and with some success. One of its more promising
projects undertaken in Kenya has involved the distribution of new
cook stoves to 780,000 people. Investing public resources in replacing
outmoded cook stoves could earn handsome dividends in forest protection
and regeneration, including the restoration of forest services.35
Over the longer term, the key to reducing pressure on forests is
to develop alternative sources of energy for cooking in the Third
World. As the world shifts from an energy economy based on fossil
fuels to one based on wind, solar, or geothermal energy (see Chapter
5), it will be much easier for developing countries without fossil
fuels to develop indigenous sources of renewable energy. Although
we do not know exactly what form the substitution will take as the
world moves toward a hydrogen-based economy, we do know there is
an abundance of locally available renewable energy in the developing
world.
As the energy transition accelerates, the potential for replacing
fuelwood with other local energy sources will become more evident.
Whether countries replace firewood with electric hotplates fed by
wind-generated electricity, solar thermal cookers, or some other
source of energy, it will lighten the load on forests.
Table 8-4. Paper Recycling Rates, 10 Leadng
Paper-Producing Countries and World, 1997 |
Country |
Recycling
Rate
|
|
(percent)
|
Germany |
72
|
South Korea |
66
|
Sweden |
55
|
Japan |
53
|
Canada |
47
|
United States |
46
|
France |
41
|
Finland |
35
|
Italy |
31
|
China |
27
|
World |
43
|
|
Source: Janet N. Abramovitz,
"Paper Recycling Remains Strong," in Lester R. Brown
et al., Vital Signs 2000 (New York: W.W. Norton & Company,
2000), pp. 132-33. |
ENDNOTES:
31. Janet N. Abramovitz, "Paper Recycling Remains Strong," in Lester
R. Brown et al., Vital Signs 2000 (New York: W.W. Norton & Company,
2000), pp. 132-33; John Young, "The Sudden New Strength of Recycling,"
World Watch, July/August 1995, p. 24.
32. Abramovitz, op. cit. note 31, p. 132.
33. Japan and China from Philip P. Pan, "China's Chopsticks Crusade,"
Washington Post, 6 February 2001.
34. On-line addresses: International Herald Tribune, www.iht.com;
USA Today, www.usatoday.com.
35. Fuelwood as a proportion of total harvested wood from FAO, op.
cit. note 9; Daniel M. Kammen, "From Energy Efficiency to Social
Utility: Lessons from Cookstove Design, Dissemination, and Use,"
in Jos� Goldemberg and Thomas B. Johansson, Energy as an Instrument
for Socio-Economic Development (New York: United Nations Development
Programme, 1995).
Copyright
© 2001 Earth Policy Institute
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