Is Less the New More? Companies Eliminate to Provide Bigger Green Effort

January 21st, 2011


Will tube-less toilet paper make a difference?The following is an excerpt from the environmental themed advice column EarthTalk®, E/The Environmental Magazine that appeared in Creative Loafing.

In August 2009, Kimberly-Clark, the paper giant behind the Kleenex, Cottonelle and Scott brands and the largest manufacturer of tissue products in the world, gave in to pressure from Greenpeace and other environmental groups to clean up its act in regard to how it sources its wood fiber and how much recycled content it includes in its products. After various forms of public haranguing from Greenpeace, the company committed to sourcing 40 percent of its North American tissue fiber—some 600,000 tons yearly—from recycled sources or from forests certified as sustainable by the nonprofit Forest Stewardship Council (FSC). Also, by the end of 2011 Kimberly-Clark will stop buying non-FSC-certified wood fiber from Canada’s vast but fast-shrinking boreal forest—the largest old growth forest on the continent.

One outgrowth of this landmark agreement is Kimberly-Clark’s launch of Scott Naturals Tube-Free toilet paper which, to reduce waste is wound in such a way that it doesn’t need cardboard tubes. The company estimates that the 17 billion toilet paper tubes produced yearly in the U.S. account for some 160 million pounds of trash—most of us discard instead of recycle them. By eliminating the tubes, the company hopes to both save cardboard and allow customers to use every last piece of toilet paper, since the last one won’t have any glue on it to stick to the roll. The tube-free TP is being sold initially at Walmart and Sam’s Club stores in the Northeastern U.S. and will be launched nationally and beyond if it catches on with consumers.

Kimberly-Clark’s green awakening will no doubt benefit the tree farms and forests of the Southeast—the locus of logging operations in the U.S. these days—and it will also benefit Canada’s boreal forest, from which the company still sources a large amount of its wood fiber. North America’s largest ancient forest by far, the Canadian boreal forest provides habitat for more than a billion birds as well as many a threatened species, including woodland caribou, bald eagles, golden eagles and wolverines. It is also the world’s largest storehouse of terrestrial carbon—all those miles of trees, moss, soil and peat soak up an estimated 186 billions tons of carbon that would otherwise contribute to global warming. Despite its value to the environment, some 60 percent of Canada’s boreal forest has already been allocated to forestry companies for development and less than 10 percent of it is formally protected in any way. Clear-cut logging by Kimberly-Clark and its competitors has claimed half a million acres of boreal forest annually in Canada’s Ontario and Alberta provinces alone in recent years.

“Because of Kimberly-Clark’s place in the paper products market, the company’s new policy will send a strong signal to its competitors, Procter & Gamble, SCA and Georgia Pacific, that creating a policy that protects ancient forests is a key element of sustainable business,” reports Greenpeace. Of course, there are plenty of other brands of tissue paper that already make use of primarily recycled and/or sustainably harvested fiber—check out Greenpeace’s Recycled Tissue and Toilet Paper Guide to find out which ones—but they are not easily found at mainstream grocers and big box stores. The more shoppers go for greener options, the more the paper industry will take notice and modify their offerings accordingly.

Is this a good eco-innovation or a few more paper sheets of green marketing?

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ACS Webinar-How Chemical Policy Reform Can Spur Green Chemistry

November 8th, 2010

As part of American Chemical Society ACS Webinars: Green Chemistry & Sustainability Series Richard Denison, Senior Scientist at Environmental Defense Fund will give a presentation entitled “How Chemical Policy Reform Can Spur Green Chemistry” followed by a Q&A period.

November 18th from 2-3 eastern time

Please note that this Webinar is open to everyone and not only to ACS Members.

In the wake of the largest Gulf oil disaster or public concern over the chemicals in a baby bottle, how will changing legislation affect chemical professionals? Public policy has the potential to transform the chemical industries and set a new course for the next decade. Join our speaker, Richard Denison, and learn about the latest Green Chemistry policy developments (Safe Chemicals Act/TSCA reform) and how they may affect chemical professionals, chemical industries, and the future of green chemistry.

What You Will Learn
- The policy context for advancing Green Chemistry essentials you need to know
- How U.S. and international policy changes can support the development and use of greener chemicals
- How current policy is informing future legislation – Safe Chemicals Act/TSCA reform
- And much more

To register and find more details:

Meet Your Expert
Richard A. Denison is a senior scientist at the Environmental Defense Fund. Dr. Denison has 25 years of experience in the environmental arena, specializing in chemicals policy and hazard, exposure, risk assessment and management for industrial chemicals and nanomaterials. He has published extensively and has testified before Congress many times regarding these issues.  Dr. Denison currently serves on the National Research Council’s Board on Environmental Studies and Toxicology and on the Green Ribbon Science Panel for California’s Green Chemistry Initiative. He was a member of the National Pollution Prevention and Toxics Advisory Committee, which advised EPA’s toxics office.  Previously, Dr. Denison was an analyst and assistant project director in the Oceans and Environment Program, Office of Technology Assessment, United States Congress. Dr. Denison received his Ph.D. in Molecular Biophysics and Biochemistry from Yale University.

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Top Eco Conferences and Why you Shouldn’t Miss Them

October 12th, 2010

Jan 31 – Feb 2, 2011
The Energy and Environment Conference (EUEC) is taking place at the Phoenix Convention Center in Phoenix, Arizona. This is the largest energy and environmental conference and expo and will be the 14th year held in Phoenix. This conference is expecting to have over 3,000 attendees, 200 exhibitors and 650 speakers. The goal will be to find strategies and solutions for energy independence as well as reducing carbon emission.

Feb 27 – March 3, 2011
The WM Symposia is holding a premier international conference for the management of radioactive material and related topics. It will be held at the Phoenix Convention Center, West building, in Phoenix, Arizona and has been held for 37 years. They are expecting 2,000 attendees from over 35 countries and will dedicated this conference to education and opportunities in waste management.

March 22-24, 2011
Friends of the Greenbelt Foundation
At this conference, held in Toronto, Canada at the Radisson Hotel Admiral, the Friends of the Greenbelt Foundation will be exchanging ideas with leading voices from Greenbelts far and wide. You will also learn first-hand the global challenges near urban farming and rural areas and ecosystem protection along with other vital areas that should be solved with fresh ways.

November 6th-7th 2010
Green Festival is the largest sustainability event in the world. Their mission is to inspire and inform as many people as possible about sustainability and how to help make our world a better place to live. You’ll learn about the most recent developments in green technology and renewable energy, how to make your community and home greener and why to avoid products that are made in sweatshops. This festival also strives to be a zero-waste event while using Recourse Recovery Stations instead of trashcans, biodegradable service items and compact florescent lights when needed. Many organizations and business will be there to promote their products and programs that help restore the planet.

Upcoming festivals will take place in Washington D.C., San Francisco, New York, Los Angeles, Seattle and Chicago. These festivals are organized by two nonprofit organizations.

Do you know of an event that we should post? Please share.

Top eco conferences and why you shouldn’t miss them

Jan 31 – Feb 2, 2011

www.EUEC.com

The Energy and Environment Conference is taking place at the Phoenix Convention Center in Phoenix, Arizona. This is the largest energy and environmental conference and expo and will be the 14th year held in Phoenix. This conference is expecting to have over 3,000 attendees, 200 exhibitors and 650 speakers. The goal will be to find strategies and solutions for energy independence as well as reducing carbon emission.

Feb 27 – March 3, 2011

http://www.wmsym.org/

The WM Symposia is holding a premier international conference for the management of radioactive material and related topics. It will be held at the Phoenix Convention Center, West building, in Phoenix, Arizona and has been held for 37 years. They are expecting 2,000 attendees from over 35 countries and will dedicated this conference to education and opportunities in waste management.

March 22-24, 2011

Friends of the Greenbelt Foundation

http://www.globalgreenbeltsconference.ca/

At this conference, held in Toronto, Canada at the Radisson Hotel Admiral, the Friends of the Greenbelt Foundation will be exchanging ideas with leading voices from Greenbelts far and wide. You will also learn first-hand the global challenges near urban farming and rural areas and ecosystem protection along with other vital areas that should be solved with fresh ways.

November 6th-7th 2010, San Francisco

Green Festival

A project of Green America and Global Exchange

For more information visit: http://www.greenfestivals.org/

Green Festival is the largest sustainability event in the world. Their mission is to inspire and inform as many people as possible about sustainability and how to help make our world a better place to live. You’ll learn about the most recent developments in green technology and renewable energy, how to make your community and home greener and why to avoid products that are made in sweatshops. This festival also strives to be a zero-waste event while using Recourse Recovery Stations instead of trashcans, biodegradable service items and compact florescent lights when needed. Many organizations and business will be there to promote their products and programs that help restore the planet.

Upcoming festivals will take place in New York, Los Angeles, Seattle and Chicago.

These festivals are organized by two nonprofit organizations.

Do you know of an event that we should post? Please share.

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