Here’s something to consider this holiday season: Stop sending greeting cards.
I know this sounds like a tip from the Grinch, but this well-meaning tradition causes very real environmental consequences. Americans mail over 1.6 billion holiday cards to each other each year. This exchange of festive greetings generates over 40,000 tons of waste.
These cards, with their accompanying envelopes, are hardly the only wasteful holiday tradition – think single-use decorations, uneaten leftovers, and of course all that wrapping paper. Yet changing this practice would take a lot of pressure off our forests and climate.
Our planet loses 15 billion trees every year. When a tree dies, it releases carbon it’s stored over its lifetime – significantly contributing to global climate change. According to the Global Forest Resources Assessment, deforestation releases nearly 1 billion tons of carbon into the atmosphere annually.
This devastation of our forests also causes staggering habitat destruction, killing off thousands of species who rely on the unique ecosystems of a natural forest to thrive. Paper production can hurt human health as well. It often requires toxic chemicals for pulping and bleaching paper, which impacts people living downstream of paper mills.
To curb the effects of deforestation, the logging industry must act more responsibly. For starters, it should stop clear-cutting forests. And it needs to reduce its use of “plantation forests,” in which single species of trees are cultivated in row after row, completely distorting the qualities of a natural ecosystem.
Planting new trees to replace the felled ones is noble and important. But our forests and climate would be better off if we could leave more trees in the ground in the first place. To do this, we’ve got to use less paper and other products derived from wood.
A great first step would be to drastically reduce the number of holiday cards we send each season.
Forgoing this tradition doesn’t mean you can’t pass on your well-wishes. Why not send a video message of yourself and your family all dressed up in festive clothing, saying out loud what you’d write in a card? This is a wonderful way to share holiday wishes with loved ones that they can play anytime they need a pick-me-up throughout the season.
You can also replace the paper cards with electronic cards (although there can be a considerable environmental footprint to sending those, too).
Better yet, replace the typical card with a phone call. This will spare your loved ones any guilt from having to toss the card you’ve sent out after the holiday season. Have you talked to everyone on your holiday card list in the past year? The past five years?
I know I haven’t.
If you can’t part with the tradition, opt for a better paper choice, such as Hallmark’s line of recycled content cards (Shoebox Greetings, My Thoughts Exactly), or support companies like Tree-Free Greetings and the Green Field Paper Company’s hemp fiber card line. If you’re ever uncertain about how green a paper product is, the Better Paper Project can help you find the most tree-friendly option.
And what about those cards you receive? You can cut off the front and reuse them as postcards next holiday season.
A little change in your festive habits can go a long way in lessening the environmental footprint the holidays leave on our planet each year. By making even this small change, you can help keep trees in the ground and forests intact, protecting our climate and communities.
Defying Trump’s right-wing agenda from Day One
Inauguration Day is coming up soon, and at Truthout, we plan to defy Trump’s right-wing agenda from Day One.
Looking to the first year of Trump’s presidency, we know that the most vulnerable among us will be harmed. Militarized policing in U.S. cities and at the borders will intensify. The climate crisis will deteriorate further. The erosion of free speech has already begun, and we anticipate more attacks on journalism.
It will be a terrifying four years to produce social justice-driven journalism. But we’re not falling to despair, because we know there are reasons to believe in our collective power.
The stories we publish at Truthout are part of the antidote to creeping authoritarianism. And this year, we promise we will kick into an even higher gear to give you truthful news that cuts against the disinformation, vitriol, hate and violence. We promise to publish analyses that will serve the needs of the movements we all rely on to survive the next four years, and even build for the future. We promise to be responsive, to recognize you as members of our community with a vital stake and voice in this work.
Please show your support for Truthout with a tax-deductible donation (either once today or on a monthly basis).