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Increasing paper and cardboard recycling: Impacts on the forest sector and carbon emissions

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  • Lorang, Etienne

    (Tilburg University, School of Economics and Management)

  • Lobianco, Antonello
  • Delacote, Philippe

Abstract

Recycling is emerging as both a viable alternative to extraction in many industries and a cornerstone of the circular economy. In this paper, we assess the role of paper and cardboard recycling on the forest sector, from both an economic and carbon perspective. For this purpose, we add the recycling industry to an existing forest-sector model in an attempt to capture its effects on other wood products and the overall forest resource. As the forest sector has an important potential for climate change mitigation, this model allows us to assess the effects of increased paper and cardboard recycling on the availability of the natural resource and the carbon balance of the forest sector. We show that these results are strongly linked to the hypotheses of substitutability and/or complementarity of recycled pulp and virgin pulpwood. Although we find increased emissions at the pulp sector level, the effects on emissions in other wood products are small. When pulp products are considered substitutes, we find the impact on total net sequestration to be positive. In the case where pulp products are considered complements, we find the impact on total net sequestration to be negative.
(This abstract was borrowed from another version of this item.)

Suggested Citation

  • Lorang, Etienne & Lobianco, Antonello & Delacote, Philippe, 2023. "Increasing paper and cardboard recycling: Impacts on the forest sector and carbon emissions," Other publications TiSEM 0f1b4f67-f34d-4e94-9690-3, Tilburg University, School of Economics and Management.
  • Handle: RePEc:tiu:tiutis:0f1b4f67-f34d-4e94-9690-30baca12c29d
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    1. Karima AFIF & Bocar Samba BA & Eugénie JOLTREAU, 2024. "Tax-subsidy schemes for recycling when quantity and quality of waste matter," Working Papers 2024.02, FAERE - French Association of Environmental and Resource Economists.

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