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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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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.

One major problem is offices are using less white paper—which is coveted by producers of recycled toilet paper because its long fibers make for a softer product. That means manufacturers are now using lower-quality recycled paper, so the fibers are shorter and produce a rougher product—and the more times paper gets recycled, the shorter those fibers become. The challenge, then, is for companies to figure out how to do more with less:

Chemical companies that supply papermakers with bleaching and processing aids are introducing new products to make those fibers go further. The best of them also reduce costs by helping paper mills recycle water and save energy.The pulp and paper industry is one of the largest consumers of chemicals in North America, according to the market research firm Frost & Sullivan. Every ton of paper and paperboard produced requires 600 lb of basic and specialty chemicals. Most paper chemicals firms offer a wide range of products, from commodities such as hydrogen peroxide to process chemicals including enzymes, biocides, and defoamers to functional aids such as sizing chemicals, coatings, and binders.

So either you destroy virgin forests to make a really soft non-recycled TP, or you pump a ton of chemicals into recycled paper to make the short-fibered stuff easier on our backsides. All of which has me wondering: Could we learn to live with a little scratchiness?

Via fellow MoJo staffer and sometimes Blue Marble contributor Stephanie Volkoff Green.

source: http://motherjones.com/blue-marble/2010/04/your-iphone-making-toilet-paper-scratchier

 

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