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What is recycled paper? Recycled paper can have
several meanings, but the most consistent definition is derived from our
federal government's guidelines. Almost all state and local government and
business procurement specifications now reference the Environmental
Protection Agency's guidelines on recycled paper. The EPA guidelines
require a minimum of 30% post-consumer content for uncoated printing and
writing paper, and a minimum of 10% post-consumer content for coated
papers. Other forms of paper, such as newsprint, corrugated packaging,
tissue, and others, also require post-consumer content. The EPA doesn't
consider mill broke, the unprinted trimming and converting scrap from
paper mills themselves, recycled content.
What is pre-consumer waste? Pre-consumer materials are those
that have not met their intended end-use by a consumer and include
allowable waste left over from manufacturing, converting, and printing
processes. Examples: mill-converting scraps, pre-consumer deinking
material, pulp substitutes. Magazines and newspapers that were never
bought also are termed pre-consumer.
What is deinked pre-consumer waste? This paper has been
printed but not used by consumers, such as waste from printers and unsold
magazines and publications. It is processed like post-consumer waste and
is deinked for reuse.
What is post-consumer waste? This is paper that has already
been used and returned through a recycling program, thereby diverting it
from a landfill or incinerator. It is usually deinked and then processed
to make new paper. Office paper waste makes up the majority of
post-consumer waste content that is used to make recycled copy and
printing papers.
How is recycled paper made? Recycled paper, either pre or
post-consumer materials needs to be washed and is often deinked prior to
being pulped. The pulp goes through a bleaching process to make it whiter.
There are many bleaching processes; New Leaf Paper chooses a processed
chlorine free process. Once the pulp is bleached, it enters a series of
phases including the following: the paper forming section; the press
section where water is removed by pressing the wet paper between rolls and
felts; and the drying section where the moisture content is reduced to the
desired level; and the calendering section where the paper is compacted
and smoothed progressively as it travels down a stack of steel rolls. Once
completed the paper is stored in either rolls or cut into sheets.
What is deinking? The deinking process removes applied inks,
finishes, glues, and other contaminants from wastepaper in order to
extract the cellulose fiber. Typically this requires extensive processing
through a variety of pulping, screening, cleaning, washing, and/or
floatation equipment.
What does processed chlorine free mean? Processed chlorine
free refers to recycled paper in which the recycled content is unbleached
or bleached without chlorine or chlorine derivatives. Dioxins and other
toxins and pollutants created by chlorine and its derivatives are often
referred to as chlorinated organic compounds. The dioxins have been
associated with adverse affects on the immune and reproductive systems of
human as well as those of fish and wildlife species. New Leaf 's papers
are processed chlorine free.
What is elemental chlorine free? Elemental chlorine fee
applies to paper processed without elemental chlorine but with a chlorine
derivative such as chlorine dioxide. Although less harmful than using
chlorine, it is still considerably worse than totally chlorine free.
What is totally chlorine free? Totally chlorine free applies
to virgin fiber papers that are unbleached or processed with a sequence
that includes no chlorine or chlorine derivatives.
What is virgin fiber? Virgin fiber is fiber that has never
been used before in the manufacture of paper or other products.
What is agricultural byproduct? Agricultural byproducts are
fibrous byproducts of agriculture, such as cereal straws and corn stalks,
which have previously been treated as a waste stream. These materials are
routinely burned or flooded from fields, wasting hundreds of thousands of
pounds of a valuable resource and damaging the environment.
What is sustainably harvested virgin fiber? No matter how
well we recycle, the paper industry will always require some virgin fiber.
Both trees and non-wood fibers can be cultivated as sustainable sources of
virgin fiber, reducing the need to destroy old growth forests for paper.
Additionally, the per-acre fiber yield from some non-wood virgin fibers
appears to be higher than that from tree farms.
What is the Forest Stewardship Council? Recently, some United
States commercial forests have undergone a sustainable harvest
certification process overseen by the Forest Stewardship Council (FSC), a
non-profit organization set up to encourage the use of sustainable
practices in forestry worldwide.
© 1998
New Leaf Paper
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