The Paper Consumer's Guide to Climate Change
Experts to U.S. Managers: “Serious Climate Change Reduction is Literally at Your Fingertips”
Business managers at U.S. firms have more leverage to reduce climate change than they may realize because nearly every firm purchases vast amounts of paper products, according to a new guide co-authored by Metafore and The Gagliardi Group. Choosing which kinds of paper to buy can either raise or lower the emissions of greenhouse gases that lead to climate change.
“The Paper Consumer’s Guide to Climate Change,” describes the role that paper and its forest-based lifecycle play in the absorption and release of greenhouse gases, and shows how paper purchasers can take the initiative to tip the scales toward lower emissions.
“Even in this e-mail era, we still manufacture and use nearly 100 million tons of paper products a year in the United States,” says Carl Gagliardi, president of The Gagliardi Group. “Yet we tend to overlook the opportunity this consumption presents businesspeople, who are really the ones deciding which paper grades get purchased.”
The guide is designed to be a departure from the dense, sometimes contradictory guides that Metafore and The Gagliardi Group found frustrate many of their clients who recognize the carbon footprint of their paper and attempt to navigate complex subjects ranging from carbon accounting to the sometimes controversial and poorly understood carbon offsets.
“The Paper Consumer’s Guide to Climate Change” offers businesspeople a simpler, four-step process that their organizations can follow from start to finish. The guide explains the science and economics of climate change; shows how managers can cultivate their own “internal compass” to help them sift through the often conflicting expertise they hear; identifies the best tools to adopt to account for and lower their paper-based greenhouse gas emissions; and cuts through the clutter about carbon offsets.
“By developing a four-step guide, our aim is to show that a new, unique
take on a carbon footprint can be an intuitive process; a tried and
true method for companies to take measurable action,” said Metafore
Senior Analyst Sheldon Zakreski.
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