Custom Direct • Marketing Communications

Thinking Green

July 3, 2008 · Leave a Comment

Hello,

Kristen here, first blog, hopefully the first of many…

Recycled paper: do you understand what you are buying?

Recently I have been involved with researching the many facets of recycled papers to assist our clients in understanding what icons are associated with recycled paper and what each icon means. With just a little research, I was astounded to find out the range of products that are on the market and that in some cases “recycled paper” didn’t mean what I thought it meant.

With so much talk about being “Green” these days, many companies are turning towards recycled papers as one way to help the environment and possibly their bottom line. The question is, do the companies really know what they are buying? When you decide to start buying and printing on recycled papers, you really need to do some research or you might not be getting what you think.

Part of the issue is that “recycled” is a very loose term. The Federal Trade Commission (FTC) controls the standards on what is and isn’t considered recycled. But the standards are so broad that a paper with a recycled logo can literally mean that a paper is being made from paper scraps left over from the paper making process. So ultimately you are buying paper with no post-consumer waste that offers little relief to the environment.

If recycled papers is your route, a better option is to look for post-consumer waste recycled or PCW labels, the higher the percentage of PCW the better. 100% PCW means that the paper pulp is derived from all post-consumer waste, no virgin forests are logged for this paper. Another option is to consider the way the paper is whitened. According to The Green Guide, processed chlorine-free or PCF is a better choice than totally chlorine-free or TCF. PCF is required to use at least 30% PCW and is a safer process than TCF. TCF can be used on virgin forest pulp and therefore is not as good of an option.

Another route altogether is to use tree-free papers, which come from agricultural refuse, bamboo, hemp, kenaf and non-tree fibers. The tree-free papers use an alternate source of pulp, rather than logging virgin forests, therefore they don’t reuse post-consumer waste. So they are a good alternative from non-recycled papers.

When you do a little research you start to see all of the options that are available. There is FSC Certified paper that follows a “chain-of custody” from a FSC-certified forest, to the paper manufacturer, merchant and finally the printer and Green Seal certification which is a third party that certifies environmentally friendly products. I think the ultimate goal is to reuse as much post-consumer waste as possible to save our landfills AND to use as little as possible of virgin forest to save the environment. Think about this the next time you look for recycled paper. 

Categories: Catalog design · Printing
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