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12-04-2007, 02:50 PM | #1 |
Grand Sorcerer
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Environmental study: 30 min of e-paper reading = 30 mins of print reading
A new study by the Royal Institute of Technology in Stockholm, "Screening environmental life cycle assessment of printed, Web-based, and tablet e-paper newspapers," examines the environmental impact of e-paper versus the process of creating paper-based newsprint, and proclaims that reading e-paper for 30 minutes equals the environmental impact of producing paper for a 30 minute read. It also suggested that reading the same content on the web would have the same environmental impact after only 10 minutes.
The study took into account the full process of preparing paper for reading, including harvesting, processing (which includes significant chemicals and electricity), transportation, and of course, disposal, and compared that to the process of manufacturing an e-paper reader (which can be reused... length of life also figured into the equations). (Report in PDF, English: http://www.csc.kth.se/sustain/publications/reports/) |
12-04-2007, 02:55 PM | #2 |
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Interesting, but i assume, this will change in the future.
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12-04-2007, 03:08 PM | #3 |
Grand Sorcerer
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12-04-2007, 05:18 PM | #4 |
Wizard
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Thanks for the link. The first assumption that jumps out at me is a one year life for the e-reader (Iliad in this case, see 2.3.2 on pg 32).
That is an awful assumption. It should have been at least two years and possibly three. While they note the desirability of new units, how many of people trade up $300+ readers annually? I'd be willing to bet the center of our distribution is at least two years. They at least consider the possibility of longer life (pg 95). The other assumption is the environmental impact of specific electrical energy consumption. This one was closer to truth but if we wanted to lower that impact tremendously we could increase nuclear power production. I see that as a necessity anyway to power near-future all-electric cars. Hybrid cars are a stop-gap not an end. One thing is certain, printed newpaper environmental impact cannot drop by as much as the electronic techniques they are comparing it to. I understand their objective (clear to me) was to point out misconceptions about how "clean" electronic distribution is but I feel they bent too far the other way. |
12-04-2007, 05:49 PM | #5 | |
Wizard
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Quote:
Exactly! I fully expect to use my Cybook Gen3 for three or more years and will probably hand it over to a friend when I *DO* upgrade. Which means it will be probably be useful for 6 or 7 years. Given that life span, the 'footprint' of my Cybook will be about as much as that of 5 or 6 minutes worth of paper product. Bad study. I bet if we dig further we'll find the funding for this study was ponied up by the paper-products industry. Derek |
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12-05-2007, 01:03 AM | #6 |
Grand Sorcerer
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Naah... the paper products industry would've simply pointed out all the rare and toxic metals used in electronics manufacture, and claim the e-book readers were wasting vaulable resources and poisoning us...
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12-05-2007, 04:47 PM | #7 | |
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It's a good study in that it places the environmental impact quite low, but I don't agree with some of the premises. In the end eInk will be probably surpass dead tree books, though if you consider that the physical media this stuff will be stored on will last ages more than paper, I could be wrong. Thanks for the review Steve! <rant>It kinda reminds me of a recent study done in England that suggests shift or night-shift workers are more susceptible to cancer than day workers. They failed to produce enough info on this to indicate their test base, jobs interviewed, work conditions, hereditary conditions, etc. Guess you prove any point you like if you load it with only the facts you want to consider and ignore the rest.</rant> |
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12-05-2007, 05:08 PM | #8 | |
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Dale |
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12-06-2007, 02:26 PM | #9 |
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The 10-minute figure for the PC seems ludicrous. Is that assuming you only bought the PC for reading your newspaper and you turned it on solely for that? Most people I know that read the news online do it on a break while at work. The PC would be there and on regardless.
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12-06-2007, 02:53 PM | #10 |
Wizard
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Dale, isn't that quote attributed to Mark Twain?
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12-06-2007, 03:20 PM | #11 | |
Retired & reading more!
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The real solution is to eliminate newspapers! |
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12-06-2007, 03:39 PM | #12 | |
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I do have it on good authority (from a statistician) that 87% of all statistics are made up on the spot. |
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12-06-2007, 03:51 PM | #13 |
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I'm about 17 months into my 1st Iliad and hoping to get between 5-7 years out of it. There are two things that would change my time frame, one is a failure that has a high cost to repair so that a repair makes less sense than a new reader, or a major breakthrough (primarily a fast color e-ink or high quality screen device w/long battery life & maybe internet access) available before the, erm, 7 year itch.
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12-06-2007, 05:55 PM | #14 |
Retired & reading more!
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12-06-2007, 06:04 PM | #15 |
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95% confidence is assumed
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