How Much Cardboard Does Online Shipping Use? - podcast episode cover

How Much Cardboard Does Online Shipping Use?

Dec 26, 20175 min
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Episode description

Online shipping is highly convenient, and it’s changing the way we use cardboard — but not necessarily for the worse. Learn why in this episode of BrainStuff.

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Transcript

Speaker 1

Welcome to brain Stuff. From how Stuff Works. Hey there, brain Stuff, Lauren vocal bomb here. From groceries to gadgets. The home delivery of goods is depositing cardboard boxes on doorsteps across America, and we've collectively fallen in love with the convenience of it all. But what about the consequences

of all that packing material. The number of e commerce transactions increased by more than fifteen percent in twenty six according to the U S Census Bureau, and the e commerce industry has doubled in the last five years to

be worth three hundred and fifty billion dollars annually. It's a trend that predicts deliveries from online purchases will continue to rise, and at least for now, you'd think this probably means the use of more cardboard, but the amount of cardboard shipped by US companies has actually decreased since according to the Fiber Box Association or FBA, which is the trade group for the cardboard industry or the corrugated knockdown box material industry if you want to get fancy.

FBA member businesses are responsible for of wholesale industrial shipments of new or recycled cardboard made in the United States. It's important to note that imported cardboard comprises only about three percent of the cardboard used in the US. How can cardboard production possibly be decreasing In the midst of this e commerce shipping boom, Manufacturers, including e commerce retailers,

are reducing packaging in an effort to reduce costs. Some forgo cardboard for shrink rep like bottled water bound by

plastic film instead of cardboard. When cardboard is used, fewer shippers are using the Russian dollar method of product transit, in which a series of smaller boxes are inside of a larger box, And because more items are being shipped directly to consumers, fewer items are being boxed and shipped to retail stores inside of larger boxes, which may help explain the FBA stance that cardboard consumption is down or

at least holding steady as e commerce is up. The steady and potentially increasing use of cardboard is a boon for the cardboard manufacturing industry, but leaves many of us grappling with the long term effects of an increasingly e commerce driven economy. FBA president Dennis Coley old The New York Times in twenty sixteen that the use of e commerce boxes was growing faster than most other market segments in the paper industry. This translates into more than thirty

five million tons. That's about thirty two million metric tons of container board produced in the US each year. And while some boxes are reused by the recipients, others are destined for the waistbin. But wait, don't the majority of

boxes get recycled? Well, yes, but of the cardboard that is discarded each year, ten percent ends up discarded in the trash, and experts predict that number may continue to grow because cardboard recycling has hit a plateau for nearly three decades, the percentage of boxes that Americans recycle has increased. For example, in only about fifty five percent of cardboard in the US made its way into the recycling bin.

By even that number had risen to but it had fallen to eight nine, a rate that held steady and, as the Pew Research Center reports, has continued to remain flat. This means that more than ten percent of consumer cardboard is thrown away each year in the units dates to the tune of about three hundred and fifty thousand tons, which is about three hundred and eighteen thousand metric tons of boxes in landfills. Making cardboard products with recycled materials

uses less energy and creates fewer greenhouse gas emissions. According to the e p A inteen, the most recent year for which data is available, eighty nine million tons or about eighty one million metric tons of materials from cardboard to plastics were recycled or composted. Doing so reduced greenhouse gas emissions and a move equivalent to eliminating the annual emissions of thirty eight million passenger cars. Unfortunately, cardboard can't

be recycled indefinitely. Every time it's remade, the fibers get shorter. After five to seven recycling loops, the fibers become too short to bond together into cardboard by adding new pulp during the recycling process, any remaining usable fibers can still be incorporated into a new product, paper, for instance. In this way, a portion of every cardboard box lives on.

Even so, some experts say recycling alone won't be enough to keep considerable amounts of cardboard out of the waste stream and ultimately US landfills, and with economy increasingly fueled by the immediacy of home delivery, we may have some difficult decisions to make about consumerism. And then again, study compared to the environmental impact of individual consumers who make eco friendly choices with those of consumers who don't, and

found no meaningful difference between the two. Recycling cardboard still requires resources, but markedly fewer than making new cardboard. It takes less energy to make recycled cardboard than it does to create new Today's episode was written by Laurie L. Dove and produced by Tristan McNeil. For more on this and lots of other environmental topics, visit our home planet, how stuff works dot com

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