Sustainability in the Industry

Paper, Cardboard

Impacts, Risks and Opportunities

Sustainability in Paper, Cardboard

Notes, newspapers, toilet paper, packaging: the production of pulp products uses a lot of energy, water and wood. Climate protection and resource efficiency are therefore playing an increasingly important role for manufacturers. While around 8,200 kilowatt hours of electricity were used to produce one ton of paper in 1955, today it is only 2,600. Water consumption has also fallen from around 50 liters per kilogram to less than nine liters. Over 70 percent of the paper used in Germany is now recycled.

The majority of all cardboard boxes are made from recycled paper; the rest requires fresh wood fibers. It is crucial here that the wood comes from sustainably managed and certified sources.
The industry’s key sustainability efforts therefore focus on circular management in order to increase the proportion of reused fibers compared to that of virgin fibers and to develop high-quality recycled paper types. Dissolving contaminants in the recycling process, e.g. mineral oil components in newspaper printing inks, is also one of the challenges facing the industry. New paper products or printing processes whose influence on recycling cycles have not been tested pose a problem. Products from the industry are often a central part of the offerings of other industries. While demand from sales markets such as the newspaper industry has declined over the last five years, demand from mail order has continued to rise. In addition, paper-based packaging has an environmentally friendly image from the consumer’s perspective, as it is recycled in significantly higher proportions than, for example, plastic packaging. However, the critical discussion about the increasing amount of waste from pizza boxes or online packages and the littering of cities does not go unnoticed by the industry. Every single-use packaging – even made from recycled cardboard – requires energy and water in production and is less ecological than reusable packaging. Resource-saving, climate-neutral production and sustainable product design are therefore crucial driving forces for greater sustainability.

The industry includes, for example, the production of pulp, paper, cardboard and cardboard as well as related goods.

Industry Materiality

Key Fields in the Industry 

Sustainability is different by industry. Learn key material transformations fields in Paper, Cardboard.

Resources

Nature

Climate

 

You can find more details on the fields and criteria for Paper, Cardboard with score4more explore.

 

EU NACE Classification 

Industry NACE Classes

Unsure if the industry is the right one? A comparison with the EU’s granular NACE classification Rev. 2.1 provides clarity.

Included NACE classes in the industry

C 17.1 Manufacture of pulp, paper and paperboard
C 17.11 Manufacture of pulp
C 17.12 Manufacture of paper and paperboard
C 17.2 Manufacture of articles of paper and paperboard
C 17.22 Manufacture of household and sanitary goods and of toilet requisites
C 17.24 Manufacture of wallpaper
C 17.25 Manufacture of other articles of paper and paperboard

YOUR OPTIONS FOR THE INDUSTRY 

Create company profile

Select this industry and create your company profile to participate in industry ecosystems like the DNP.

Explore industry leadership

Explore more insights into sustainability leadership in this industry with score4more explore.

Get the company profile preview for your Industry

Request the free PDF and we will sent it by email to you. 

 

Select the industry and the required document language: