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Subject:Re. Paper from hemp? From:Geoff Hart <geoff-h -at- MTL -dot- FERIC -dot- CA> Date:Thu, 1 Jun 1995 11:14:26 LCL
John Hedtke raised interesting points about alternative sources of
paper. In particular, he proposed using hemp as a paper substitute.
(BTW, John, you're right that this _is_ an issue for this forum... as
major paper consumers, we should understand the consequences of our
choices.)
To defend my position, I'll reiterate what I said in a longer earlier
posting. The difference between paper made from conifers and that made
from poplars is fiber length: poplars produce short fibers, thus
low-strength paper. Hemp is in the same category (I've asked an expert
to confirm this... stay tuned!). Hemp would thus be fine for office
papers, but not for newsprint or packaging. I read something about
seaweed with long fibers, which is a better alternative, particularly
since it extracts pollutants from the endangered oceans and is less
environmentally damaging to harvest. Stay tuned for this one too!
Please note that hemp is an agricultural crop that grows on a short
rotation (annually). Thus, you need constant injections of fertilizers
and pesticides to grow it economically. (Hemp grows well if left on
its own, but not in what farmers consider economical quantities.) Is
this an improvement on harvesting forests? You be the judge. Forests
grow back; pesticide- and fertilizer-killed streams don't. Moreover,
you can't build furniture, houses and boats out of hemp. We still need
conifers for some things, as I said earlier. Now if you want to say
that we need to harvest them more appropriately... no argument there.
That's what I do every day... help our researchers explain to the
industry how to do so.
--Geoff Hart #8^{)}
geoff-h -at- mtl -dot- feric -dot- ca
Disclaimer: These comments are my own and don't represent the opinions
of the Forest Engineering Research Institute of Canada.