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  • Starting at the bottom

    By Mike O'Connor From: The Courier-Mail June 23, 2010

    THE first roll of toilet paper that Damien Scarf produced was so industrial that if you had used it you would have, he admits, "hurt yourself". 

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  • Flushing Forests

    by Noelle Robbins

    Over the ages human beings have employed various methods of personal cleansing following urination and defecation, including leaves, rags, seaweed, straw, grass, snow, sand, corncobs, coconut shells, newspapers, and catalog pages.

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  • Is Your iPad Making Toilet Paper Scratchier?

    By Kiera Butler |Thu Apr. 22, 2010 1:55 PM PDT

    Last year, the New York Times reported on the staggering environmental impact of making super-soft toilet paper from virgin forests.

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  • Toilet Paper Problem: Good Raw Material Being Wiped Out

    By LiveScience Staff posted: 21 April 2010 02:52 pm ET

    A shortage of high-quality paper for recycling could mean scratchy toilet tissue.

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  • Toll of toilet paper could be wiped out 

    By Paul Hanley, The StarPhoenixApril 21, 2010 2:07 AM 
    Estimates are that some 270,000 trees are cut and pulped every day for various kinds of tissues and sanitary products that get flushed or thrown out after a single use.
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  • Flushing Our Forests Down the Toilet

    by Julia Tier on April 15, 2010

    Washington, D.C.-Worldwide, the equivalent of almost 270,000 trees is either flushed or dumped in landfills every day and roughly 10 percent of that total is attributable to toilet paper.

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  • Date : 17/11/2009 : Round Rock, Texas

    Dell Adds Renewable Bamboo to its Packaging Portfolio

    Dell is First in the PC Industry to Introduce Packaging Made from Bamboo; Bamboo is Sustainable Alternative to Paper, Foams and Corrugate Packaging.

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Flushing Our Forests Down the Toilet

by Julia Tier on April 15, 2010

Washington, D.C.-Worldwide, the equivalent of almost 270,000 trees is either flushed or dumped in landfills every day and roughly 10 percent of that total is attributable to toilet paper.

"Steadily increasing demand for toilet paper in developing countries is a critical factor in the impact that toilet paper manufacturer have on forests around the world," says author Noelle Robbins. "And with the increasing pressure to reduce and discontinue the use of old growth forests, the move is on to tree plantations."

But according to Robbins, this cure could be worse than the disease. While the paper industry often touts plantations as the solution to creating an ongoing supply of virgin pulp and fiber, these monocultures often displace indigenous plant and animal life, require tremendous amounts of chemical pesticides and fertilizers, and soak up large quantities of water.

While some toilet paper manufacturers rely on forests, others turn to trash cans for their raw materials. Advocates of recycled toilet paper point out that converting virgin pulp to toilet paper requires more water than recycled paper and makes use of the tons of already used paper that fills landfills. Various estimates place the quantity of waste paper tossed into U.S. dumps and landfills at 35-40 percent of total landfilled mass.

"Toilet tissue, whether manufactured from virgin pulp or recycled paper, will continue to be an important part of daily life in Western countries and in developing countries emphasizing improved sanitation to mitigate health concerns," says Robbins. "Education of consumers; improvements in quality, pricing, and marketing recycled products; and willingness to consider toilet paper alternatives such as water for cleansing must be pursued to meet the needs of a growing global population." 

source: http://www.worldwatch.org/node/6411 

 

 

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