Day 010 - 11 Jul 94 - Page 55


     
     1        beginning of the extraction process to the end of the
              disposal process, and even necessarily beyond the clean-up
     2        process associated with toxic disposal.
 
     3        So that if you are going to claim that the energy
              consumption that begins somewhere in the life cycle of a
     4        product and ends when it is disposed of, shows it is more
              beneficial to extract resources continually, pass them
     5        through people's hands and have them wind up in a
              landfill, that this is somehow less exhaustive of energy
     6        resources than reusing items in the middle of the
              product's life cycle.  It would be necessary to fully
     7        account for all of these points in the process of the life
              cycle of the product or the food packaging or the vessel
     8        for food.
 
     9   Q.   But, in your opinion, it seems to defy the laws of
              physics?
    10        A.  That is what I have said, yes.
 
    11   MR. MORRIS:  I have basically finished.  Because of the hurried
              nature of assembling the documents, was there any
    12        particular document that you can remember that you wanted
              to draw the court's attention to?
    13        A.  Nothing occurs to me at this time.
 
    14   Q.   Can I spend a minute collecting my thoughts?
 
    15   MR. JUSTICE BELL:  Yes.  (Pause)
 
    16   MR. MORRIS:  I have no further questions.
 
    17                       Cross-Examined by Mr. Rampton.
 
    18   Q.   Mr. Lipsett, you made a written statement for the purposes
              of this case back in July last year, about a year ago?
    19        A.  Yes.
 
    20   Q.   When you made that statement did you expect you might have
              to come in person and give evidence in this court?
    21        A.  I viewed that as a possibility, yes.
 
    22   Q.   As a possibility.  I expect when you sat down and wrote it
              you, therefore, took care to ensure that it was in all
    23        respects accurate, reliable and credible?
              A.  I would say that I produced the document on my home
    24        computer in my home in Pennsylvania where I am currently
              located.
    25
         Q.   I am not talking about ----- 
    26        A.  I reviewed it as carefully as possible to make sure 
              that there were no major errors in it. 
    27
         Q.   I do not criticise your home computer for misspelling
    28        "fluorocarbon" on two occasions, but I wonder, did you,
              for example, have in front of you when you wrote this
    29        paper the article from what you have as the October 1987
              issue of Modern Plastics?
    30        A.  At that time?
 

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