Canopy
Canopy asks the world’s largest paper consumers, "Where does your paper come from?" and works with industry to shift demand toward more sustainable paper products. More than 600 publishers and brands in North America, including The Globe and Mail newspaper, changed their paper purchasing policies after working with Canopy. Best known for greening the Harry Potter series, Canopy is changing the way the world consumes paper.
The Canopy Fund furthers Tides Canada’s mission to protect the environment by supporting Canopy’s work to reduce the impact of paper production on our forests and climate.
No, unfortunately. Even I, naively, thought most paper came from recycling, but 71% of the world’s paper is still coming from environmentally sensitive areas.
We had our sights set on a high profile book that we could showcase to convince publishers to switch to environmental papers. Apart from the Bible, there’s no bigger title in the world right now than Harry Potter.
Her willingness to support this campaign publicly took this to a whole new level. We worked with her and her Canadian publisher back in 2003 to ensure the Canadian edition was printed on environmentally friendly paper. It was the only book published that integrated her green message into the core of the marketing – reaching millions of Potter fans. It caught on like wild fire; thousands of stories were written internationally on forests and publishing ‘green.’ When her next book came out in 2005, it was ‘green’ in 9 countries, and then the last book in the series was ‘green’ in 25 countries, with a US print run alone of 12 million books – amassing huge ecological savings.
Are you at the “tipping point”?We continue to provide market leverage for the Great Bear Rainforest, Clayoquot Sound and we’re very involved in efforts to safeguard Canada’s Boreal Forest. We’re getting close to transforming the environmental impacts of the Canadian magazine and book publishing industries. However we’re only getting started with shifting North American newspapers and text book publishers. Given that newsprint impacts more forests than any other sector, we still have a lot of work to do.
The wheat sheet is about using straw, a by-product of our annual grain harvest, to make paper rather than continuing to deplete our carbon, and species, rich forests. In June 2008, we successfully brought Canadian Geographic magazine to the news stand on paper which used 60% fewer trees than most magazines: 20% wheat straw, and 40% recycled content. We grow a lot of wheat and flax here in Canada, and although much of the straw gets ploughed back into the land, a large volume is burned or disposed. There’s an incredible opportunity to use this to make paper – to use what is essentially a waste product to alleviate stresses on our intact forests and climate.
It’s about dealing with the problem at a systemic level. Now we need financial backing to bring the wheat sheet to commercial scale!