Junk mail's carbon footprint equals nine million cars

US lobby group claims its time to junk the junk mail

By Danny Bradbury

12 Aug 2008

Comments: 1

Mail sorting drum

Senders of junk mail in the US are causing carbon emissions equal to nine million cars, according to a forest preservation group.

Pressure group ForestEthics released the report, Climate Change Enclosed: Junk Mail's Effect on Global Warming, last week to support its new campaign for a "do not mail" registry. The study, which is based on figures from the Environmental Defense Fund, the Environmental Paper Network, and industry data, found that half the carbon expenditure relating from junk mail comes from the removal of forest wood, while another 20 per cent comes from the emissions created at paper plants during production.

The only upside is the return of one per cent of the carbon lost when paper products are burned to create energy, creating a cleaner alternative to conventional fossil fuel-based energy, the report said.

"In 2005, junk mail surpassed what we call first-class mail as the majority of what the USPS [US Postal Service] was delivering," said ForestEthics spokesman William Craven. "In the last two years, 19 bills have been introduced in state legislatures in the US. None of them have yet passed. What it shows is that there is significant popular demand for a solution to junk mail, and enough so that some politicians felt that they had a stable foundation on which to introduce legislation. But there is also signficant opposition and well financed opposition to a do-not-mail registry."

The UK Government already enables people to opt out of receiving addressed mail, and is working with the Direct Marketing Association (DMA) to create an opt-out scheme for unaddressed mail.The DMA is also supporting a BSI standard, PAS 2020, for minimising the environmental impact of junk mail.

WHAT DO YOU THINK? Add your comment

  

LATEST STORIES ABOUT LEGISLATION

YOU MAY ALSO LIKE

LATEST JOBS

TODAY'S TOP STORIES

HIGHLIGHT

chrishuhne

Huhne quits as energy secretary to fight criminal charges

Employment minister Ed Davey widely tipped to take over from Huhne, whose resignation is an 'unwelcome distraction for green business'

Ed Davey has replaced Chris Huhne as the Energy and Climate Change Secretary. Do you think the new minister will offer a boost the low carbon economy?

31%

59%

10%

Submit your email address and we'll send a link to a personal newsletter control panel


Engineer

04 Feb 2012

Civil job in South Wales

APC

Guidelines for specification of data centre power density

The science and practical application of an improved method for the specification of power and cooling infrastructure for data centres

Diskeeper

Increasing efficiency in the IT environment

Getting the most out of data storage investments