When we make a mess in the kitchen, many of us reach for paper towels without sparing a thought for where those crisp white sheets originated.
If you’re in North America, some of the fiber in your paper towels (and other tissue products like toilet paper) probably started off as a tree in the boreal forest of northern Canada, one of the last big, intact forests in the world. Boreal forests stretch across Canada, Alaska, Siberia and Northern Europe, and, together, they form a giant reservoir that stores carbon dioxide. That’s important, because that carbon would otherwise be released into the atmosphere and contribute to global warming. Collectively, boreal forests lock away about 703 gigatons of carbon in woody fibers and soil. Tropical forests, by comparison, store about 375 gigatons of carbon.
These are tough times for forests, though. Because of climate change, they’re highly susceptible to wildfires, like the ones in Australia, and pest infestations. So, anything we can do to keep them intact is good.
Trevor Hesselink, director of policy and research at the Wildlands League, a Canadian conservation organization, said it’s important to weigh the value of paper products against the value of intact forests. “If you are thinking through a carbon lens, those single-use products are very short-lived,” he said.
Canada is generally seen as being good at forest management. In logged areas of the boreal forest, trees are replanted and allowed to regenerate, and the country boasts a very low official deforestation rate of just 0.02 percent (though that has been disputed by some environmental groups).
The bad news is, even if actual deforestation is low, planting a young tree to replace a mature one is not the one-for-one carbon scenario many people imagine, Mr. Hesselink said.
For a long time, scientists believed older trees stopped absorbing carbon as they aged. But recently, researchers have that found older trees continue absorbing carbon dioxide for decades or even centuries longer than originally thought, said William Moomaw, a physical chemist and lead author on five Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change reports.
Leaving existing forests to grow will be more effective at mitigating climate change over the next 80 years than reforestation or planting new forests, Dr. Moomaw and his colleagues have said. A tree planted this year won’t make much of a difference in terms of carbon sequestration over the next decade, a period many scientists say is critical for climate action. “They just don’t absorb enough carbon dioxide,” Dr. Moomaw said. “They aren’t big enough.”
Furthermore, boreal forests support a diverse array of plant and animal species. They’re also central to life for hundreds of indigenous groups.
There is some debate over the degree to which pulp and paper products, like the disposable towels in your kitchen, drive logging activity in the boreal forest.
Tony Lemprière, senior manager of climate change policy in the Canadian Forest Service, pointed out that industry can use waste from timber production to make paper products. But the Natural Resources Defense Council estimates that 44 percent of the pulp produced in Ontario comes from whole trees rather than byproduct.
Regardless, it’s easy to reduce the amount of single-use paper products you buy.
Reusable cloth towels are a great alternative, said Shelley Vinyard, who heads the boreal forest program at the Natural Resources Defense Council. For those moments when you really do need a paper towel, she recommends one made of recycled content. The council’s consumer guide has recommendations for paper towels, toilet paper and facial tissues.
We really need to be thinking about forests in a different way at this “critical junction,” Mr. Hesselink said. Instead of soaking up spilled milk, those trees can help us tackle a much larger mess.
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ReplyDeleteThis article has allowed me to think about where the daily products that we use everyday truly come from. While reading this article I couldn’t help but think about all the different things that I use everyday that I could change, products such as paper towels and napkins, aren’t things that I need to use in my everyday life. And after hearing about where these products really come from I view some of these simple products as more then just what they are. So the biggest thing that I got out of this article, was the way that I view the simple things that we as humans take for granted, and what these products really take to produce.
ReplyDeleteAs I said for Morgan, reading this article, I noticed how many paper towels I was using. And it seems relatively easy to avoid using paper towels, and paper napkins. I learned that paper towels come from the boreal forest, which is very important to CO2 absorption. Although it does seem like Canada is doing a pretty good job maintaining their forests, if we keep cutting down trees, the replacements take a while to be as effective as the cut tree. So it seems like reducing paper towel use would be an easy and effective way to help the environment.
DeleteIt makes sense to me that the boreal forests take in the most CO2 because not a lot of people live in Canada and Russia, so there should be less deforestation. It does seem like Canada is making a concerted effort to try to keep their forests strong, which makes me wonder if they make paper towels from whole trees consciously, or they run out of excess pulp. It does seem like cloths are good alternatives, particularly currently, when paper supplies are limited. While dealing with the coronavirus, we are buying and using paper products more quickly, but there are many good alternatives to most paper products, particularly paper towels. Sometimes using paper is inevitable, but now seems like a particularly good time to practice using alternate materials. I do think that cloths are not as ideal for drying as a paper towel, but they are a good enough. And it does seem like paper towels made from recycled materials can be good paper towels; are they more expensive?
ReplyDeleteI too agree with lily when she mentioned that cloths are a good alternative too paper towels, and even though they may not be ideal, they are still a good alternative to paper towels.
DeleteThis article really caused me to think about just how many paper towels not only I, but my whole family, use paper towels everyday. We do not even think about it, but just rip one off the roll and clean up whatever mess we have just made. It makes me want to never use a paper towel again knowing that is damaging some of the last healthy boreal forests we have left in this environmentally declining world. I cannot help but feel guilt, as I take the climate change and the state of our environment very seriously. One thing I was very surprised to read was that planting new trees is not as beneficial as we think. Younger trees do not absorb nearly as much carbon dioxide as older, aging trees. The absorption of carbon dioxide is extremely vital to our environment, because otherwise, it would be released into the atmosphere, only furthering climate change. Learning this new information and thinking about the impact I am having just using paper towels, it is hard not to walk away reading this article feeling depressed. But, it also motivates me to be better, and use less single use products like paper towels. It may be a small step, but to me, any step is going to help the environmental crisis we are facing.
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DeleteI, too, did not quite realize how many paper towels I was using. Paper towels have so many uses with both drying hands, and wiping up messes, both of which happen quite frequently in one person’s day. So everyone using them at that rate would create quite a large demand for paper towels. But paper towels in particular are quite replaceable, which makes the rate we go through them astonishing. Using an alternative would be an easy way to help the environment.
DeleteI also noticed after reading this article, how many paper towels, and paper products my family uses everyday. so I too agree with Morgan that this article caused me to realize how many products my family and I use.
DeleteI agree because it is scary to think about how we are hurting the health of whatever boreal forest we have left on the earth and that needs to change so we don’t keep hurting the health of the forest
DeleteReading this made me realize how much damage using a roll of papers towels can be because of what it’s made of and it really sucks knowing that rein-forestation isn’t gonna help all that much and that people who log don’t care about the fact that there causing more global warming by cutting trees down because it releases the carbons dioxide into the air which cause temperatures to rise slowly
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