The Print Council States that Toshiba Is Misinformed and Ignorant of the Facts
WASHINGTON DC—June 13, 2012—The Print Council today expressed strong disappointment with Toshiba America Business Solutions for its announcement to have a “No-Print Day” on Oct. 23, 2012. According to the company’s press release, National No-Print Day is intended to “raise awareness of the impact of printing on our planet.”
According to the Executive Director of the Print Council, Benjamin Y. Cooper, “The announcement by Toshiba is unfortunate on many levels. First, paper is the most recovered and recycled product reaching roughly 70 percent recovery. Second, paper companies in fact plant three trees for every one that is used. Third, Toshiba itself is in the printing industry producing equipment to print on paper.”
According to the announcement, Toshiba plans to plant 1.5 million trees by 2025. Cooper noted that the goal would represent about one third of the average daily planting of trees that currently takes place in the U.S.
“Planting 1.5 million trees sounds like a laudable goal and it is but it represents an insignificant addition to the anticipated 20 billion trees that will be planted by the forest products industry during that same 13 year stretch,” Cooper said.
“A better program for Toshiba is to become a sustainable company by the proper use, re-use and disposal of all their products. Different communication needs and applications call for different media. No one media is impact free. Paper based communication is, however, recoverable, recyclable, and renewable—a claim that few are able to make,” Cooper concluded.
Marty Maloney, chairman of Broadford & Maloney, a founding member of The Print Council and its first executive director added, “Toshiba has made a major business faux pas based on sophomoric enthusiasm matched by kindergarten level misinformation. They just didn’t do enough homework. Perhaps they are trying to take the spotlight off the lack of sustainability in the electronics industry and instead get consumers to incorrectly focus on paper.
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