We can save 100 million Trees this year!!!


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 Do you like fresh air, do you like the environment, do you care? Considering the data about junk mail may make you feel green in a whole new way.  Read it and weep and then pick up your phone and cancel all those Pottery Barn and Frontgate catalogs you get weekly in your mail box. Do you really need those catalogs?  Do you even want them?  You are probably getting catalogs and junk mail from companies that you have never even heard of.  The truth about the volume may shock you into action.  Read it and then contact one of the links below.  Breath deeply…now grasp the facts…

More than 100 million trees’ worth of bulk mail arrive in American mail boxes each year – that’s the equivalent of deforesting the entire Rocky Mountain National Park every four months. (New American Dream calculation from Conservatree and U.S. Forest Service statistics)

In 2005, 5.8 million tons of catalogs and other direct mailings ended up in the U.S. municipal solid waste stream – enough to fill over 450,000 garbage trucks. Parked bumper to bumper these garbage trucks would extend from Atlanta to Albuquerque. Less than 36% of this ad mail was recycled. (U.S. Environmental Protection Agency)

Americans pay $370 million annually to dispose of junk mail that does not get recycled.

The production and disposal of direct mail consumes more energy than 3 million cars. (New American Dream calculation from U.S. Department of Energy and the Paper Task Force statistics)

On average, Americans spend 8 months opening junk mail in the course of their lives.

250,000 homes could be heated with one day’s supply of junk mail.

There are several easy and painless (read the Lazy Environmentalist) ways to reduce your junk mail burden.  Do yourself a favor and take advantage of one or more of the free (or slightly cheap) services listed below:

http://www.41pounds.com

http://www.proquo.com/

http://www.greendimes.com/

http://www.stopthejunkmail.com/

http://www.junkbusters.com/

http://www.squidoo.com/

http://www.catalogchoice.org/

…and the Coup De Grace, goes to an organization founded by a college student from Missouri who was perplexed by the unsolicited yellow and white pages delivered to his doorstep and the daunting task of recycling all of them.  He founded http://www.yellowpagesgoesgreen.org/

Why?

Over 500 million of these directories are printed every year. That is nearly two books for every person in the country! These directories produce a staggering amount of waste, not only in terms of misused natural resources but also in filling of valuable landfill space. 

To produce 500 million books:

  • 19 million trees need to be harvested
  • 1.6 billion pounds of paper are wasted
  • 7.2 million barrels of oil are misspent in their processing (not including the wasted gas used for their delivery to your doorstep)
  • 268,000 cubic yards of landfill are taken up
  • 3.2 billion kilowatt hours of electricity are squandered

Ever heard of www.Google.com?  Who needs a 20 lb. hard copy of www.yellowpages.com?

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Comments



1
Author:  kenc | Date:  July 17, 2008 | Time:  6:31 am

some of your facts are totally inaccurate. While you may think, and some sites haver erroneously reported, the reality is the Yellow Pages industry doesn’t knock down any trees for its paper!!! Let me repeat that – they don’t need to cut any trees for their paper supply. Currently, on average, most publishers are using about 40% recycled material (from the newspapers and magazines you are recycling curbside), and the other 60% comes from wood chips and waste products of the lumber industry. If you take a round tree and make square or rectangular lumber from it, you get plenty of chips and other waste. Those by-products make up the other 60% of the raw material needed. Note that these waste products created in lumber milling would normally end up in landfills. Not only that, as wood chips decompose, they emit methane, a greenhouse gas closely associated with global warming. Paper manufacturing thus puts these chips to good use. Many paper providers will also use 5% or less of recycled directories in their paper creation.

As a result, the EPA, not me, not the Yellow Pages industry, but the Environmental Protection Agency’s own numbers show that only 0.3% of the municipal solid waste stream comes from print Yellow Pages. Standard mail and newspapers account for 2.4% and 4.9% of that waste stream.



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