th comments
Kylie Wrath said: "Whether or not leather is a product or by-product is irrelevant: there are tons of people who buy it regardless. I think the fact that this company..." [read]

thespyofcharles said: "hmm... perhaps i shall reconsider my excessive gift packaging gag i was planning... or maybe do it out of old boxes that would otherwise simply hav..." [read]

mike said: "I think it is humerous at the record losses posted at GM. They really had the jump on technoligy with the EV1 but decided to put all their effort i..." [read]

Louise White said: "I have a 2002 Prius with 143,000 miles on it. Recently I started checking on my trade in value for a new Prius. Every sales person told me that I..." [read]

Lori said: "Regardless of whether or not this "soup" exists, the fact is that we need to all be aware and responsible for how we treat this planet. We have to..." [read]

World's Richest Self-Made Woman: A Paper Recycling Entrepreneur

by John Laumer, Philadelphia on 10.11.06
Design & Architecture (recycled)

paper.jpgObservant of the trend for Europeans to show keen interest in all things green, Financial Times has just introduced us to a world-scale female Tree Hugging entrepreneur, Ms. Zhang Yin, who is described in the article as "worth an estimated $3.4bn." Remarkably, Ms Zhang, after starting up Nine Dragons Paper just a few years ago, has become "the world's richest self-made woman, surpassing US talk show host Oprah Winfrey and J.K. Rowling, the Harry Potter author". Now here's the "kicker" as we say in the US. "Ms Zhang's listed company, of which she owns 72 per cent, buys scrap paper from the US and processes it in China for sale". Incredible in so many ways. North-American pulp producers clear cut Boreal and Piedmont forests to produce virgin fiber for paper making, hitting, at best, a recycled content in the 10 to 20 percent range in final products. A good part of your paper recycle bin contents, then, goes to China, where the Boreal gets "hugged" into products we might buy back. The other possible market scenario (we don't know which market view is correct) is that China, having devastated native forests and failed to create a sustainable forestry program, has forced its paper industry to scavange what they can, pulliing North America into a scrap cellulose depletion mode to serve non-American markets. Hold your temper now. The "real" scenario, whichever that might be, is driven by other less visible forces that you, our readers, are partly responsible for.

US hardcopy magazine and newspaper subscriptions are way down from historical per-capita rates, and dropping. The mere fact that you are reading about this on TreeHugger instead of in the Financial Times is evidence enough of that 'future driver'. Increased reliance on e-mail has lessened demand for paper as well. As the US population ages, subscription budgets are squeezed, leaving 'boomers' in the library periodicals room, or on-line. Consequently, the return on capital employed (ROCE) offered by investment in paper making in general and recycling in particular is considered low. Thus, it is left to the Ms Zhangs' of the world to make US scrap paper into food for print,... or boxes for Wal-Mart. Will increased computer access in China help preserve American Boreal Forests? Or will it just drive the waste to the next highest bidder? What happens when Bill Clinton's Tree Hugger friends out-bid Nine Dragons for the waste paper, planning to use it as feedstock to make ethanol for fuel? These, and so many other questions, hang unanswered. The possibilities make my head hurt.

Photo Credit: The Standard

Comments (6)

This is so cool! Digg it please!

jump to top Anonymous says:

But no one has said anything about the processes her company uses to create the recycled-content packaging. I've heard it may not be as pretty as it first seems...(but at least it is not e-waste, which would carry a whole host of other problems!)

jump to top Anonymous says:

I have heard that recycling paper in a very polluting process and that the rules are less strict than her in the U.S. which is probably why all that fossil fuel is used, shipping our paper to China ugh

jump to top gorgeouslygreen says:

Unfortuantely, the US has ruined the paper industry and now the mills's cannot consume all the paper generated here. They have to ship into China or the price would TANK

jump to top Tiptop says:

waste is absolutely an issue of mindset. she is doing a great job and must be commended.

jump to top ogah stephen says:

"planning to use it as feedstock to make ethanol for fuel?" Give us a break, please. The problem with ethanol production is not feedstock, it is what to burn to distill the alcohol out of the water, while the water hangs on to the alcohol. Brazil knows how, they grow sugar cane, and use the cane residu to distill the alcohol. We use 28 cubic feet of natural gas per gallon here in our ignorance. You could burn the feedstock, but it is more energy efficient to recycle it back into paper products. Very Respectfully, Michael @ http://RecoveryByDiscovery.com.

Post a comment

(If you haven't left a comment here before, you may need to be approved by the site owner before your comment will appear. Until then, it won't appear on the entry. Thanks for waiting.)

th ads
th top picks
th ads