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Why Recycle Paper?

Recycling paper into products like 100% recycled paperboard creates significant environmental and economic benefits for our nation.

Environmental Benefits of Paper Recycling

Rigorous scientific research has demonstrated that manufacturing paper with recycled content is good for the environment.

  • Producing recycled paper requires less energy than producing paper from trees.

  • By recycling paper, we prevent it from being landfilled where it degrades, producing methane, a greenhouse gas. According to the U.S. EPA, landfills are the single largest U.S. source of methane emissions to the atmosphere and degrading paper is a primary cause.

  • Manufacturing with recovered paperboard cuts down on air pollutants such as nitrogen oxides that contribute to smog and particulate emissions that cause respiratory problems.

  • Producing recycled paperboard also requires less water and energy.

  • Members of the Paper Recycling Coalition use approximately 5 million tons of recovered paper annually.

  • You can see for yourself how paper recycling protects the environment by using the Office of the Federal Environmental Executive’s “Paper Calculator,” which covers five major grades of paper and paperboard.


Economic Benefits of Paper Recycling

The recycled paper industry is a major contributor to the U.S. economy.
  • During the 1990s alone, U.S. papermakers invested an estimated $10 billion in new recycling capacity.

  • Recycled paper, paperboard, and deinked market pulp mills employ nearly 140,000 people directly and influence another 615,000 jobs, for a total of nearly 755,000 jobs nationwide.

  • The annual payroll of recycled paper, paperboard, and deinked market pulp mills is $6.9 billion.

  • Through taxes and other receipts, recycled paper, paperboard, and deinked market pulp mills contribute $9.6 billion to federal, state, and local government revenues.

  • Members of the Paper Recycling Coalition have approximately 500 mills in almost 300 different cities, spread throughout 36 states.