Showing posts with label Two Sides. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Two Sides. Show all posts

Wednesday, 18 December 2013

Bank of England redefines recycling!

As regular readers of this blog will know, from time to time I write about issues which are of more general interest than just paper and print.  This article concerns paper, print and money....

Today the Bank of England announced that after public consultation it would introduce polymer (plastic) banknotes in 2016.

However it looks like the bank has been involved in some rather dodgy "greenwashing". Don't take my word for it, judge for yourself...

It was only on reading my November issue of Private Eye (No 1353) this weekend, that I actually heard about the introduction of these notes and the Bank of England consultation. Given that I keep my eyes and ears open with regards to paper and print news, it has occurred to me that this hasn't exactly been promoted very widely!
Anyway, you can read the Private Eye article here:
http://www.private-eye.co.uk/sections.php?section_link=in_the_back&issue=1353

Personally I would prefer to keep the existing paper notes as I think they serve us pretty well. Paper is a natural product and so, in general, I would always prefer paper over a synthetic, oil based, product. However, I'm not a complete luddite and so was interested to quickly read the published research.
Chris Salmon

A press release which was the forward of the consultation quotes Chris Salmon, the Bank’s Executive Director, Banking Services and Chief Cashier: “The forthcoming consultations demonstrate the Bank’s commitment to transparency in relation to banknote issues, and are aimed at enhancing awareness and understanding of polymer so that the public can feed into the Bank’s decision in an informed way. I am looking forward to participating in a number of consultation events over the next two months.”

I was looking forward to the transparency, understanding and awareness that the report would shed and approached it with an open mind.

Unfortunately there is one paragraph in the environmental impact document which made my blood boil!

"At the end of their life, current Bank of England banknotes are shredded, compacted and then used with other organic materials in the manufacture of agricultural compost. The Bank will recycle polymer banknotes. There are a number of viable options and we are considering these in more detail. For the purposes of the study we assumed that polymer banknotes would be recycled by creating energy directly from waste in a specially designed plant....."

Yes, you might want to read that underlined sentences again...
Yes, you are correct. Burning the plastic notes (to make energy) has been called RECYCLING!

Some people might look at this as a case of semantics, others (definitely me included) think this is deliberately misleading. This report has been written by the Bank of England, by intelligent, well paid, highly educated, literate people, yet this is the most cynical piece of "greenwash" writing I've ever read! You can read the full report here:
http://www.bankofengland.co.uk/banknotes/polymer/Documents/environmentalimpact.pdf

Now don't get me wrong, I do understand that burning plastics in an efficient and controlled way using the latest combined heat and power (CHP) technology is considered a very environmentally friendly way of disposing of waste, however, burning something surely, CANNOT BE DESCRIBED AS RECYCLING. Even if, in the world of the large eco-cost/benefit analysis companies (which lets face it, is big business these days) they describe burning as recycling, it certainly is NOT what the general public understands by the use of the word.

The problem is that using this potentially misleading sentence in a report makes one doubt the veracity of the rest of the report. This sentence alone, surely overshadows any genuinely positive points about the polymer notes.

Something that is further concerning me is that the Polymer notes are being supported by Two Sides, which is the print and paper industry initiative. They appear to have regurgitated the BofE press release and swallowed the lot! In the Two Sides article on their site they state "polymer banknotes are more environmentally friendly..." sounds like they're stating a fact to me!
http://www.twosides.info/UK/Bank-of-England-Press-Release-On-Polymer-Banknotes
http://files.twosides.info:8080/content/newsPDF_1671.pdf

...as do the BPIF (British Printing Industries Federation
http://www.britishprint.com/page.asp?node=43&action=view_news&tid=8807&sec=hi&page=1

In conclusion: I don't know if the proposed polymer notes are a good idea or not - there are bound to be pros and cons. However I object to the fact that burning plastic is called "Recycling" and no one apart from me seem to be disputing it!

I shall be writing to the Governor of the Bank of England. If you would like to do the same please do.

Further reading:
http://www.innoviasecurity.com/Resources/Guardian-Basics/Guardian-facts-and-figures.aspx
http://www.bankofengland.co.uk/banknotes/polymer/Documents/publicconsultation.pdf
http://www.twosides.info/UK/Bank-of-England-Press-Release-On-Polymer-Banknotes
http://www.chpa.co.uk/what-is-chp_15.html
http://files.twosides.info:8080/content/newsPDF_1671.pdf
http://www.britishprint.com/page.asp?node=43&action=view_news&tid=8807&sec=hi&page=1
Posted by Justin Hobson 18.12.2014

Monday, 28 October 2013

Write to your MP

Now you might or might not be interested in this but basically this article is about choice.

Businesses are increasingly restricting access to paper bills and switching customers to e-billing. This issue affects everyone, and particularly the vulnerable in our society.

My attention was drawn to this by the Two Sides campaign, which is an initiative by companies in the Graphic Communications Supply Chain including forestry, pulp, paper, inks, publishing and printing -the common goal is to promote the responsible production and use of print and paper. www.twosides.info

Two sides are supporting the Keep Me Posted Campaign which is trying to persuade government and large organisations to ensure they are giving customers the right to choose how they receive important information. Here's a video:
If you would like to support this campaign, please visit the site and use the letter template to send to your local MP. 
 
http://www.twosides.info/UK/Keep-Me-Posted-Campaign?n=&m=1042
www.twosides.info
Posted by Justin Hobson 28.10.2013

Thursday, 24 January 2013

...from paper to data!

Below is a picture of a paper mill or rather, it's a picture of what was once a paper mill.
In what seems like a strange twist of fate with a healthy dollop of irony, Google acquired Stora Enso’s Summa paper mill in Hamina, Finland, in 2009. The paper mill which used to produce 350,000 tonnes of newsprint and magazine paper, had suffered persistent losses and with a downturn in demand, the  long-term profitability prospects were poor.
Using the pre-existing infrastructure of the mill, Google bought the site to estabish a state of the art data center. The large site sits on the beautiful Baltic Sea and is able to use untreated sea water, piped through a pre-existing tunnel, to cool the servers naturally. This natural cooling, together with large volumes of cheap electricity and green energy sources makes this former paper mill an ideal place to convert into a server farm.
With the paper machines removed, rows upon rows of servers - data is the product now.
Last summer, Google announced Phase II with a further €150 million investment. This will involve the restoration and conversion of an Alvar Aalto-designed machine hall. Interestingly, Alvar Aalto (1898-1976) is the Finish born architect and designer who ranks alongside Le Corbusier, Mies van der Rohe and Frank Lloyd Wright in the modernist movement, so an important piece of Architectural history is also being preserved.

So what can we make of this? Well one thing it highlights is that just because something appears on the internet, it doesn't mean that there is no cost and no impact on the environment.

Ironically Google have just launched a "Go Paperless" campaign in 2013: http://www.paperless2013.org/
and perhaps unsurprisingly, there's been a bit of an anti Google backlash:
http://www.twosides.info/UK/Verdigris-urges-print-and-paper-industries-to-Go-Google-less

So if you have a client that says "Oh, I'll put it on my website because it saves paper and that's better for the environment" maybe get them to think again and look at these articles.

http://www.google.co.uk/about/datacenters/locations/hamina/
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alvar_Aalto
http://www.storaenso.com/
http://www.twosides.info/
Posted by Justin Hobson 24.01.2013