As a
bookseller and a lifetime lover of the printed word who also takes earth
stewardship seriously, I have thought and read a great deal on the subject of
the environmental impacts of books in various formats. Sadly, most of what I
read fails to present a full consideration of the relative costs of print
versus electronic books. The scant half-page in the Winter 2013 issue of ForeWord magazine is, I’m sorry to say,
hardly an exception to the usual run of superficial and incomplete additions to
this vitally important discussion. I’ve written about this before, but the
topic doesn’t go away, so here is a more current response to the specific
recent article.
Aimee
Jodoin’s “How Green Is Your Library?” gives a few figures for the carbon costs
of printing books on paper. None are given for e-books (one is simply asked to
assume that they are less), and there is no consideration of how long printed books last, let alone any acknowledgement whatsoever that
books can be printed on anything other than paper. Anyone serious about this
question cannot ignore William McDonough and Michael Braungart’s Cradle to
Cradle: Remaking the Way We Make Things. McDonough and Braungart’s thesis is that products can
and should be designed for the life of their component materials, and physical
copies of their book exemplify the feasibility of their thesis. Failure to take
account of this way out of the dilemma presented so glibly in the popular
press, when put forward in a magazine dedicated to books, is indefensible.
Jodoin
states that “carbon emissions from both the production and use” of e-readers
versus books makes the electronic devices “the more environmentally friendly
choice for those who read more than 23 books per year.” This claim (others I’ve
read put the figure at 100 books per year) is made despite “the typical
lifespan of a year and a half” for an e-reader. I doubt very much that the
skewed comparison takes the reading of used print books into account, but the
omissions do not end there. No consideration is given to (a) the lifespan of a
printed, bound book; (b) the number of readers any single printed book may
serve in its lifetime; (c) rare minerals needed to produce electronic devices,
along with political and working conditions in countries where these minerals
must be obtained; or (d) the mountains of electronic waste generated by devices
with a “typical lifespan of a year and a half,” to mention only obvious questions that come to mind without painstaking research. Signal towers? Privacy? Make up your own list of concerns and see how long it gets.
Yes, I
am a retail bookseller, but I chose my work much more out of love and on
principle than from any dream of riches. If I were ever to retire someday from
bookselling, the future I see for myself as far as books is concerned is that
of continuing to buy, borrow, and share printed books, both new ones and those
that have been around the block a few times or have been loved and shared for a
hundred years. If any of my paper books fall irretrievably to pieces, I’ll
either keep the pieces for what they contain or tear up the pages to add to my
compost pile.
An
entire paper could be written on any of the points I raise here. Nevertheless,
I hope I have made clear that I find the environmental case against print books
inconclusive at best. At worse? Downright specious.
Okay,
one last word here. Wouldn’t it be great if we human beings, the current
dominant species on earth, could all work to keep our planet livable and
beautiful without looking down on and dissing each other all the time? I
confess that I was instantly put off simply by the title of the magazine
article I’ve criticized here. You think you lead a green life? It seemed to sneer at me. You’re
an old fogey, polluting the planet with your business and personal life full of
old-fashioned books!
So yes, I was instantly on the defensive.
And yes, I realize that newspapers and magazines—themselves print media, let us not forget; pot calling kettle black?—face
tremendous fiscal challenges these days. Getting in readers’ faces and
being controversial sells copies. In the war for readers, and in a time when
reader attention span is diminishing (some say because more and more readers
are scanning screens instead of taking in pages), an attention-getting headline
is probably much more important than depth of treatment. I get all that.
I
realize, too, that I am, in a sense, biting the hand that has fed me a few
snacks, if not meals, because I’ve written a handful of paid reviews for the
magazine in question. The publisher and editor are intelligent, hard-working,
and charming people, women I call friends. I like and admire them very much, so make of that
what you will. They have gone public with their point of view, and I am simply
doing the same with mine. We’ve got a disagreement here, and intelligent people
can disagree.
At the
end of the day, after all, how any of us feels about anything is beside the
point, because the degree of harm done to the earth we leave behind for
succeeding generations will come not from how we felt, but from our actions and
the consequences of those actions. So all greener-than-thou, one-upsmanship
aside (here I picture the Paleolitic diet folks and the vegans carrying big
signs, wearing printed t-shirts, and yelling at each other), what are the
facts? It’s a serious question that deserves more than a few glib paragraphs.
5 comments:
Well said.
Marjorie701
Thanks, Marjorie. Now if only I could eliminate the formatting glitches, such as that first sentence of the last paragraph. But oh, well! This blog is ephemeral, not printed and bound for the ages!
That's the thing. This topic is so much bigger than most of us see. Like many things, the real costs of books v.s. ebooks (or printed newspaper v.s. digital newspapers) haven't really been tallied. And everyone's 'costs' are different...as are everyone's 'needs.'
It's a difficult discussion, one that is taken up in graduate programs but never resolved. We live in an evolving time and you are right, we need to respect each others choices while continuing the debate.
I'm still buying hard cover books;
too old to stare at a kindle (haven't even used a cellphone yet). It is true that older papermills were environmentally unfriendly-they used much water and returned it to streams heated and polluted. That industry has seen a continuing to decline, although bookprint is probably a minor part.
Electronics mfg. is hardly green:
toxic solvents, plating heavy metals and battery residues contribute to environmental degradation. Much, due to the global economy occurs offshore . We modern
humans have a heavy footprint.
Expensive art books and all kinds of greeting cards and postcards (including racy "French" postcards) used to be printed in Holland. Nowadays most of those foreign-produced items you see in our country were made in China. That's paper. But everyone knows, I think, that there is also a huge electronics industry in China, too. It's easy not to see the costs of pollution when they're in someone else's backyard.
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