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Science & Technology
Toilet Paper Shortage: Good Raw Material Being Wiped Out
2010-04-22
A shortage of high-quality paper for recycling could mean scratchy toilet tissue. To keep consumers happy and avoid any chafed rear ends, companies are now on a quest to find new paper supplies, according to an article in the current issue of Chemical & Engineering News (C&EN).

The problem: Consumers once could fill up large bins with their recycled newspapers, magazines and print paper. But as electronic communication surges, these sources of recycled paper are becoming scarce.

The shortage could impact those who choose toilet paper with a bulky amount of recycled material, but most household tissue products contain very little recycled paper, according to WWF, an international environmental organization.

For those who prefer the eco-brands, high-end choices are more than about status. High-quality paper contains long cellulose fibers with intact cell walls, so it can be used to make high-end products, including toilet paper. The gold standard is virgin pulp from newly harvested trees, whose fibers are long and strong. Each time that paper gets recycled, the fibers become shorter and weaker, with lower-quality brown paper producing recycled material with the shortest, weakest fibers.

One green-products company, Seventh Generation, is already feeling the heat. The Vermont-based company has had to extend beyond its normal paper mills to find the best recycled paper.

"We want a recycled paper that has certain quality," Martin Wolf, director of product and environmental technology at the company, told C&EN. "We look for the longest fiber possible for strength and absorbency, and as flexible a fiber as possible so toilet tissue is soft."

In addition to the paper chase, chemical companies are developing new coatings and other additives that can improve the softness, strength and performance of recycled paper.
Posted by:GolfBravoUSMC

#16  swksvolFF wins the thread!

"For those who prefer the eco-brands"

"Eco-brands" - that chaps my a@@ right there. :-(
Posted by: Barbara Skolaut   2010-04-22 20:21  

#15  The Obama administration plans to deal with the shortage by supplying VERY large quantities of a perfectly good substitute called US currency.
Posted by: DMFD   2010-04-22 19:16  

#14  LOL @ swksvolFF.
Posted by: gromky   2010-04-22 15:55  

#13  Think "Junk Mail", a fresh inexhaustible supply delivered to your door every day, except Sundays.
Posted by: GolfBravoUSMC   2010-04-22 13:16  

#12  The problem with using newspapers and magazines nowadays is that, when wiping, they always smear left.
Posted by: swksvolFF   2010-04-22 12:56  

#11  The Roman legionnaire used sponges in the latrines. Wash and recycle.
Posted by: Procopius2k   2010-04-22 12:20  

#10  The lack of TP made Sears Corporation. Their idea of sending out free catalogs was hugely popular among rural Americans, as they could be recycled as TP. And they got into the habit of reading a page before using it, and discovered that Sears sold a lot of stuff that they wanted.

This got another boost whenever electrical plants were built, as the plants wanted consumers to get and use electrical appliances, so even subsidized the sale of things like lamps, toasters, and other appliances, sold mail order by Sears.
Posted by: Anonymoose   2010-04-22 11:23  

#9  I understand that before TP came along folks used corncobs. Hopefully before they totally dried out.
Posted by: gorb   2010-04-22 10:09  

#8  2 things. First of all, just pre-washing with warm water from a hanging enema bag reduces TP use to just one wad, just to pat dry, rather than several, to wipe off.

This was an inexpensive trick used during the "Johnny Carson" TP shortage of the early '70s. Because of the oil embargo and other shortages, the public was very shortage conscious, so when Carson cracked a joke about a TP shortage, the next day stores were stripped of their TP, and it took weeks for the supply chain to catch up.

This especially hit the "Depression Babies", who had lived through a real, extended TP shortages during the Great Depression. They freaked out at the thought of no TP.

The other thing is that there is a superb alternative to wood pulp paper, that is both eco-friendly and better than wood pulp paper. Refined hemp paper. It feels a lot silkier, and is better for both high quality paper and silk-like cloth.

Hemp grows in marginal farmland, requiring little or no fertilizer, pesticide or even irrigation. It grows just about anywhere in the US, and for us to use it would save trees for much higher valued products like lumber.
Posted by: Anonymoose   2010-04-22 10:01  

#7  A hundred years ago, when my grandmother was growing up in Brooklyn, her mother always used the German language newspaper for toilet paper, saying that it was less irritating. Whether the difference was in the ink or in the paper stock, I don't know.
Posted by: mom   2010-04-22 09:46  

#6  There is an alternative. Naturally it's from Japan.
Posted by: Nimble Spemble   2010-04-22 09:13  

#5  When "raw material" and "toilet paper" are in the same headline, you know bad things are going to happen.
Posted by: no mo uro   2010-04-22 08:16  

#4  Happened in Iraq following the first Gulf War. The Sheridan Baghdad doubled their supply by sawing the scruffy rolls in two pieces with a hacksaw. Becomes a bit more painstaking when the 40mm econo-roll is employed.

Sears, Roebuck and Co. Catalogs were widely used in outhouses years ago, and rag bags became common for other purposes as well. I hope we never see those days again.
Posted by: Besoeker   2010-04-22 08:08  

#3  We'll be able to use dollar bills before too long. Then fives.
Posted by: Glenmore   2010-04-22 07:50  

#2  Consumers once could fill up large bins with their recycled newspapers, magazines and print paper. But as electronic communication surges, these sources of recycled paper are becoming scarce.

From my observations, the demand was never there for the last decade or so. Used to watch Boy Scout et al drop off bins fill up and stay filled with the old stuff for weeks/months on end till the bins were removed. Apparently, it wasn't economical to handle it, so the process died out many places.
Posted by: Procopius2k   2010-04-22 07:19  

#1  I guess we'll just have to start using both sides then.
Posted by: gorb   2010-04-22 02:17  

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