Green America Suggests that We “Get with the [Recycling] Program”

Category : Environmental Issues, Recycling, Weekly Feature

Frank Lacontore of Green America commented on my recycling stories in April… see here and here. His retort was condescending, but I always appreciate hearing from readers, even when they have an attitude.

His comment follows, in its entirety. When you reach the end, I will take my turn.

This is an important discussion and I thank Verlefor raising the issue. As one of those “distrustful” NGOs, it would probably be helpful to provide my perspective. My points are the paper industry and NGOs are working together, and that decisions should be based on relevant comparisons.

In full disclosure, I am employed by the non profit, Green America and I direct our Better Paper Project assisting magazines’ efforts to use environmentally responsible paper. As one of the founding members of the Environmental Paper Network (EPN), I also collaborate with some of those other “frightening” and “distrustful” NGOs like ForestEthics, Dogwood Alliance, and National Wildlife Federation (NWF).

With the AF&PA, the EPN co-hosted a Paper Summitin AF&PA’s DC offices on 4/8 to talk about recovering more paper from the waste stream. You ask, “How will we recover more paper?” Guess what? We decided to collaborate; yes, NGOsand industry, and EPA, and academic institutions, and waste haulers would collaborate to boost recovery to 75% up from the current 63% recovery rate. A couple of the decisions we made that day were to develop a cohesive and comprehensive communication strategy to help educate people about recycling particularly children in K-12; and, we’d build more support from office building owners and managers to collect their paper.

As for using relevant comparisons, the argument that P&W consumers using recycled paper are harming the environment is just way off the mark. A magazine publisher’s (overly simplified) paper decision is will I print on virgin fiber paper or recycled paper? They are not deciding whether or not to print their magazine on recycled P&W vs. recycled newsprint or paperboard. If a magazine decides to use recycled paper, they will need, on average, 1.4 tons of recovered paper to make 1 ton of recycled paper – a 71.4% fiber efficiency. {We’ve learned from your recent post about your conversation with FutureMark CEO Steve Silver, that they have a much higher fiber efficiency than the average.] But, here’s the key comparison: That 71.4% fiber efficiency must be compared to the magazine’s other choices CGW or CFS, not newsprint or egg cartons. If a magazine publisher chooses CGW it requires 2.2 tons of fresh wood to make 1 ton of virgin fiber paper – a 45% fiber efficiency. If the publisher chooses CFS, they are choosing to consume 4.4 tons of fresh trees to make 1 ton of paper – a 23% fiber efficiency.

I havenot seen any research that demonstrates pulping 2.2 or 4.4 tons of trees is less energy intensive, uses less water, emits fewer greenhouse gases, or diverts more paper from the waste stream than the process of deinking 1.4 tons of paper.

Yes, there is conflict between NGOs and industry, and, just as in with democracy, a respectful debate around conflicting ideas can be healthy and drive towards lasting solutions. But, being fearful and distrustful is not just unhelpful, it’s so 2002. The last ten years has ushered in a new era of collaboration and activism. Let’s get with the program and work together to solve the problems.

Point 1 – Mr. Lacontore put “distrustful” and “dangerous” in quotes, as if it were bizarre to accuse such altruistic organizations of deceit and self-interest.  Later he suggested that “being fearful and distrustful is not just unhelpful, it’s so 2002”.

That “holier than ‘for profit’” nonsense doesn’t fly here. Fund raising and philosophy drive NGOs, and that makes them more dangerous than “for profit” businesses that are primarily motivated by financial success. 

Oh, and I can’t believe he really made that “it’s so 2002″ comment. Admittedly, I am not a very good writer, but I could never have come up with a phrase so reflective of eastern, liberal, elitism. Wow, that is perfect.

“Virtue is more to be feared than vice, because its excesses are not subject to the regulation of conscience.” — Adam Smith

Mr. Lacontore writes that we should not be fearful, but he had to be smiling and winking at the time. The entire environmental movement is based on fear. These organizations sell fear like a commodity. They warn us that we will not have enough clean water, clean air, trees, waste disposal sites, and most crucial of all, climate is out-of-control. “Act now, before it is too late.”  Over and over we hear these emotional pleas. Remember, if there is no fear, then there is no money coming in. (For more on “fear” and NGOs, see pages 2 and 3 from Conventional Wisdom and the Modern Environmental Movement, part one). 

Then, of course, fear is the strategy these organizations use to coerce corporations into agreeing to this program or that. ForestEthics and Greenpeace blatantly admit to blackmailing corporations. They are proud of these “campaigns” – which, by the way, are great fund raisers. I see on the Green America web site that this NGO tells us where to shop and where not to shop, where to invest, and what companies to boycott. Obviously, Mr. Lacontore wants his NGO to be feared, and it is disingenuous to pretend otherwise.

I am afraid of these organizations. Not because they can harm me personally, but because of the impact of their policies. Pressure from environmental organizations resulted in changed laws that led to the deaths of tens of millions of the poor. See here, and here, and here. Many other programs, particularly those related to climate change will, if adopted, wreak economic havoc, and result in more pronounced world poverty.

Point 2 – In his third paragraph, Lacontore misquotes me. I did not ask “How will we recover more paper?”, but that is the question he answers. He goes on to describe initiatives that his NGO and others are involved in that will assist in recovering more paper. That is wonderful. I have been encouraging NGOs to become more involved in paper recovery for many years. By the way, while working on this issue, I hope they are also addressing the contamination problems being created by growth in the single stream collection method.

Point 3 – Lacontore suggests that my “argument that P&W [printing and writing] consumers using recycled paper are harming the environment is just way off the mark”. He then goes on to compare the fiber recovery rate of 71.4% (when converting waste paper into P&W grades) with his estimates of fiber efficiency rates when using virgin fiber.

(These fiber efficiency rates of 45% for coated groundwood and 23% for coated free sheet have little meaning, for a number of reasons. We will just mention a few items, and then move back to the main issue. First, harvesting trees is not a bad thing and preferable to allowing trees to die of disease, old age, and fire. Second, virgin fiber is needed to produce lumber and paper, etc because we can not recycle more than 100% of all waste paper recovered. There is no more waste paper to recycle. Third, the majority of fiber used to produce paper in North America is residual fiber which is a lumber mill by-product.)

Lacontore  frames his argument as a choice between using recycled fiber to produce P&W grades and using virgin fiber to produce these same grades. But that is not the issue. The issue is that there is more demand for recycled fiber than there is supply. We can not increase the use of recycled fiber in P&W grades without reducing the use of recycled fiber in other grades. The choice is simply where to use the limited supply of recycled fiber at our disposal.

In order to be clear, a summary of our position on paper recovery and recycling follows.

1. Recovering waste paper and recycling it is a net positive for the environment.

2. Since more fiber is recycled when utilizing waste paper for production of packaging, and the lower quality paper grades (as well as insulation and other industrial applications) these low-end applications generally havea relative environmental benefit over P&W grades. (Steve Silver of FutureMark taught us that this is not always the case. His company’s coated groundwood mill does not fit the pattern and utilizes recycled fiber even more efficiently than newsprint recycled machines.)

3. For at least the last decade, probably the last 15 years, and maybe the last 20 years, all recovered paper has been recycled. Recovered paper does not go to landfill! A possible exception to this blanket statement might be a short period of time in late 2008 or early 2009 after the financial crisis.

4. So in summary, if we choose to use the limited amount of recovered paper we have access to in the production of higher quality grades (with the FutureMark exception), then the amount of fiber recycled would be reduced due to lower efficiency. Therefore, promoting recycled fiber in new value-added applications (copy paper, magazines, direct mail, Sunday inserts, etc) results in less paper fiber being recycled.

Let’s not exaggerate; the amount of fiber lost or gained from using recycled fiber to produce one grade rather than another is not enormous. It has only a very small environmental impact. Nevertheless, the point is that NGO and government pressures to increase recycled content are not only unneeded, but disruptive to the free market system (drive some of the most efficient paper recyclers out of business), and are even negative for the environment.

What Steps Can We Take to Recycle More Paper

The actual question I had asked (see point 2 above) was, “How do we increase the amount of paper being recycled?” In the past I suggested that there was only one way to increase the amount of paper being recycled, but I have modified that stance a bit. There is one primary step we can take to recycle more paper, and that is to recover more waste paper. Growth in the use of recycled fiber is not constrained by too little demand, but by too little supply.

Although  increasing paper recovery rates is the primary answer, there are at least two other ways we can recycle more paper fiber. The single stream collection method is contaminating and destroying up to 20% of all the paper recovered. It is extremely important, therefore, to take steps to clean up this means of paper recovery. If the single stream method can not be fixed, then other methods for collecting paper should be developed.

Lastly, utilizing recovered paper in the most efficient manner increases the amount of fiber being recycled.

Increasing Demand is not the Answer

Creating additional demand for recycled fiber does not result in more paper being recycled! That would only be the case if additional demand saved recovered paper from going into landfill – and it doesn’t.

Just as an aside, it could be argued that high demand for waste paper is actually resulting in reduced supply. If municipal waste collection companies had to work hard to find buyers for their waste paper, then they would do a better job of figuring out how to reduce paper contamination. As it is, with recovered paper in short supply, waste paper buyers are forced to buy whatever is collected, regardless of the poor quality. Waste companies have no incentive to reduce contamination. In fact, throwing a little garbage into each bale of paper increases the weight, and therefore the price, of that bale of “paper”. I am not suggesting that this happens intentionally, but it is clear that waste companies have inadequate financial incentive to improve the cleanliness of the process.

How About the Future?

Even if paper consumption was still growing in North America (so that the supply of recovered paper was increasing), and even if there had been no great surge of demand from China, the free enterprise system would have been able to efficiently recycle all the waste paper recovered in the years ahead. However, I will acknowledge that if North American paper demand was still growing, and China was not a major source of demand for recovered paper, then the NGOs could make a counter argument (weak though it would be) that demand for recycled paper should be encouraged because that demand would be needed in the future.

But that is obviously not the case. There is absolutely no reason to believe that there will be an excess of recovered paper in the future that will have to be landfilled. It is highly probable that P&W paper demand in the US will continue to decline (cyclically) – we just hope it is a slow decline. As the graph below demonstrates, supply of recovered paper probably won’t increase at all, even if our recovery rates jump much higher. By the way, keep in mind that growth in paper recovery rates in recent years is primarily due to the greater adoption of single stream collection methods. If we don’t clean up the single stream process then much, maybe all, of the additional paper recovered will be lost to contamination.

Meanwhile Chinese demand for U.S. waste paper continues to climb. The only thing that tends to slow Chinese purchases is extremely high prices. When recovered paper prices run up sharply, the Chinese back off. But they will always return. Many of the machines in China require recycled fiber to operate. We expect the Chinese to continue buying higher volumes of recovered paper from the U.S. in the years ahead – as long as U.S. trade regulations allow this to happen.

Summary

Our government and NGOsshould be held accountable for false claims. The facts are clear. This is not a subjective issue. What we hear from Green America, Greenpeace, ForestEthics, etc is  dead wrong. Furthermore, these NGOs know that they are not being truthful when they claim that additional demand for recycled paper is needed and helpful.

The absolute truth is that there are only two reasons for government entities and NGOs to promote increased demand for paper containing recycled fiber – ignorance or opportunism.

Comments (14)

Well, admittedly I am biased. But I’d have to say the debate clearly goes to Frank Locantore on this occasion, who comes across as the more reasonable, cooperative, and focused writer. (Not to mention a much better speller…. Its a little disrespectful in fact (and perhaps deliberate?) to mispell his name through the whole article, in fact I think an apology is in order.)

The ENGO community has been already and is looking forward to more of working constructively with AF&PA (despite many other policy differences) on increasing paper recovery. Its a top movement priority. Secondly, NGOs will continue to work with companies that want to think calmly, rationally, and carefully about responsible sourcing in their paper fiber supply chains to keep controversial fiber from controversial sources out.

Joshua,

You have got me on the spelling. I am such a bad speller that I didn’t know I mispelled Mr. Lacantore’s name. Sorry, there was no spell check for his name. Also, I have not figured out how to use spell check for comments so this could be bad too.

As for your comment, I don’t mean to be offensive again, but your response had nothing to do with the debate. There is a basic truth that I have claimed in my report. This is not a beauty contest. It is not about cooperation, or writing style. It is about reason; and very clear objective facts. Is all recovered paper being recycled or not? That is the question I would expect a thoughtful person to respond to. If all recovered paper is being recycled and will be in the future, then all governmental and environmental programs encouraging the use of recycled fiber are not only unneeded, but harmful. I may be a jerk, and you may not like me, but that has nothing to do with issue under discussion. The truth is not what you want it to be, it is what it is. So prove to me that I am wrong, not that I am a bad speller.

verle

One issue which is not being addressed is the export of waste paper, most of which lands in China.

Also, when increasing the recovery rate, it tends to increase cost per ton and mills have complained about decreased quality (fiber+cleanliness).

Does it make sense to promote more recycling just to export it to China? Should the USA be responsible for their fiber requirements? With all the emissions for domestic freight, sorting, freight to the port, ocean freight to china, this needs to be addressed if you are a true enviromentalist.

Also, paper is very biodegradable, I don’t think it needs to be addressed as such a landfill issue. Focus on all the plastic packaging if you really want to focus on bad landfill waste.

Wood and pulp is a renewable resource. If you want more, just plant them.

Hey “Look at exports”,

Great comment! I am a big believer in free trade, but I have always been concerned about allowing so much waste paper to move to China. It is definitely is less environmentally friendly than using the fiber domestically and we need it here . As you mentioned, demand from China raises waste paper costs in NA and that is driving paper machines out of business. In regard to waste paper, perhaps we need to consider export quotas of some kind.

Thanks for taking the time to comment.

verle

you know that paper recycling is especially important to reducing climate change, because it reduces the need to cut down carbon dioxide-absorbing trees to make more paper.

Good Afternoon,

Thanks for your comment, but what is your point as it relates this post? I am in favor of recycling. All paper is being recycled. So government entities and environmental groups should stop misleading the public and creating harmful market and environmental inefficiencies.

verle

Verle, I suspect if there is an “absolute truth” that it lies somewhere in the middle or in some combination of our perspectives. I look forward to meeting in person someday so we can discuss these questions more constructively and achieve what I know is everyone’s goal here: an economically and environmentally sustainable pulp and paper industry to enhance the world’s quality of life and do no harm.

Joshua,

Thanks Joshua, and I will look forward to a meeting some day as well. And yes to pulp and paper industry sustainability and environmental responsibility.

But there is no middle ground on the issue at hand and I won’t back up on it just to seem cooperative. Recovered paper is not going to landfill due to a lack of demand. This has been the case for many years in the past and will be for many, many years in the future. That is the absoulte truth.

Thanks again,

verle

Joshua, Verle is right. When was the last time you talked face-to-face with the people who deal in the wastepaper business? They will tell you that they can move as much tonnage as they can buy. The demand is there but the supply is not. Get it?

Hammering big publishers to expand the use of paper with a high content of recycled fiber doesn’t increase the amount of paper the U.S. recovers. Our government and NGO’s should be strong-arming and putting fear into the general public about stepping up efforts to recycle the paper products they buy.

But you know what? The general public is the audience the NGOs play hero for. Can you imagine if the NGOs started to really nag society about its collective lack of effort put forth when it comes to recycling? They would be slapping all the hands that write the donation checks … and that would be a disaster of global warming proportions.

Thanks for taking the time to comment John.

Agreed. Let’s teach and encourage individual people to do more, to do their part. Let’s talk more as NGOs/haulers/producers/AF&PA, and really kick up the effort to collect more waste paper, all of us ASAP and working together. And let’s figure out how to make it possible to build new capacity and create jobs, using efficient recycling technology here in North America for using all that fiber we are going to both collect and reduce export of. Let’s do all these three things at once, the marketplace is clearly showing us the way. Folks can contact us directly if they want to talk about or collaborate constructively on these goals.

I just wonder why nobody seems to be bothered by these numbers:

“CGW it requires 2.2 tons of fresh wood to make 1 ton of virgin fiber paper – a 45% fiber efficiency. If the publisher chooses CFS, they are choosing to consume 4.4 tons of fresh trees to make 1 ton of paper – a 23% fiber efficiency”

When making groundwood you basically just take a tree, remove the bark and put the logs into a grinder. So you only lose the bark, some shives and maybe a couple of percent due to bleaching. Overall you’ll certainly get a yield that is bigger than 90%. So it doesn’t require “2.2 tons of fresh wood to make 1 ton of virgin fiber paper”. It requires even less than 1 ton – due to the filler content of the paper and the coat.

Hi Paul,

Thanks, great comment. Anyone want to confirm or challenge?

verle

Hi Joe,

I am not sure I understand the question so if I have misunderstood, let me know.

There are some government laws that require the use of recycled fiber in newsprint, but I don’t believe that there are legal requirements to add recycled fiber in value-added grades. The government and other buyers often give preference and specify the use of recycled fiber in value-added grades, but that is different.

However, if you are suggesting that “If the government mandated recycled fiber, then this must a good thing”, that is not an accurate assumption. Most of what the governemnt mandates has negative repercussions.

Thanks for the comment.

verle

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