"Green" paper

Updated: 03 Feb 2010
10feb-green-paper-hero

Introduction

How do you tell whether your printer paper is from a kosher source and not from an endangered rainforest?

We’re consuming more paper than ever before – a hefty 212kg each. Consumption has risen nearly 30 percent in just the last 15 years.

Some of this paper mountain is likely to be sourced from threatened Asian rainforests. Importers don’t have to prove their paper products come from a bona fide source. So you could be sold products of uncertain origins.

Illegal logging

 
Indonesian rainforest

Indonesian rainforest

A sizeable chunk of our paper comes from Asia. In the year to June 2009, we imported 30,000 tonnes of paper and paperboard from China. Another 25,000 tonnes came from Indonesia. Both these countries are heavily implicated in illegal logging and paper mills figure high on the list of suspects.

In Indonesia alone, it's estimated that up to 70 percent of timber is illegally logged. Much of what's being lost is virgin forest, which provides habitat for species such as the Sumatran orangutan – classified by the International Union for Conservation of Nature as critically endangered.

For consumers, it's almost impossible to tell whether paper from these countries is from a kosher source.

Take Impact Budget Copy Paper. The packaging says this paper’s made in Indonesia but doesn’t tell you anything about the source of the wood fibre used in the product.

Prostat paper, made in China and on sale at The Warehouse, also gives no information about what it’s made from.

Other products make claims that you can’t put much store by. Campap paper, made in Malaysia, claims to be manufactured from “100% plantation fibre”. But there's no independent certification on the packaging to back this up.