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Manufacturing Technology Insights | Thursday, August 25, 2022
With recycling becoming an increasingly developing alternative, to escape excess costs, energy, and money investments, eco-friendly products’ value in markets has begun to hike. Thus, employing tree-free fibre alternatives allow business leaders of the domain to remain at their pace.
FREMONT, CA: Recycled products are gaining momentum in recent times. Recycling a product and using it as an altered source ensures that the product has an extended lifetime. A multiple-usage product is always superior when compared to one-time use. The hiked usage of recycled and PCW papers has created an urge to seek alternative eco-friendly sources. Although certain proxies are new and foreign to the existing ideas, they are readily available and affordable.
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Not all durable and energy-efficient papers need to be extracted from trees. There are even better alternatives like seasonal tree-free fibres that can enhance paper manufacturing when trees may take decades to be grown into one whole. Bamboo, cork, cotton, hemp, mulberry, and stone are further known alternatives that tame the traditional paper manufacturing methods. Of all the seasonal tree-free fibres, cotton is notable for its quality standpoint along with its unique luxurious feel and texture. Hence, it is one of the standard tree-free fibres manoeuvred for paper manufacturing. Furthermore, cotton papers are more strong and more feasible when compared to ordinary wood-pulp base papers which consume a long period to develop and be extracted.
Though cotton plants are highly renewable, their utilisation in the paper industry has made them gain momentum. That is, cotton wielded in the paper industry is not the cotton that is generally used in manufacturing clothing. Instead, the paper industry normally employs the byproducts of the textile industry-linters which are likely to be discarded after the manufacturing of clothes. The recovered waste from the textile industry is readily applied for manufacturing cotton papers along with recycled cotton that is extracted from discarded garments. Hence, this new revolution in the paper industry has not only reduced the shortages of paper but also is contributing to controlling land pollution due to excessive landfilling. In the case of mulberry plants which serve as a primary source for Japanese papers, the fibres for manufacturing are generally extracted from living plants’ barks which have the potential to grow further for several more decades.
Another challenge that paper manufacturing industries encounter is the utilisation of energy. Though fibre is essential for manufacturing, the amount of energy utilised for manufacture also accounts. These tree-free alternatives deploy less amount of water, chemical processing, and energy comparatively. This enables effective manufacturing while wood-based paper manufacturing can be expensive in terms of money, time, energy, and processing. Hence, every eco-friendly solution in the paper industry comes with its own set of merits and demerits. While some can yield papers in a little amount of time, others may be cost-effective and energy-consuming. Options vary from cotton plants to fast-growing bamboo. It is a business leader's responsibility in employing the merit-based alternative which in turn can yield unimaginable profits for the businesses.
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