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- Newsgroups: alt.drugs
- From: an2531@anon.penet.fi (/dev/high)
- Subject: Earth Journal, Part 9
- Message-ID: <1993Jun3.232439.22955@fuug.fi>
- Date: Thu, 3 Jun 1993 20:50:26 GMT
-
-
- ===================Letters to EARTH JOURNAL=======================
-
- Kenaf is Better than Hemp
-
- I read that you are going to be doing a story on hemp next issue. I
- hope you will let your readers know they don't have to wait out a long
- legal battle for tree-free products.
-
- One acre of kenaf produces up to 11 tons of usable fiber per year,
- while an acre of forest requires 20-30 years to produce only 4 or 5
- tons of usable fiber. Kenaf fiber also has better strength and
- performance characteristics than wood fiber. It has a lower lignin
- content, so kenaf is whiter than wood and requires fewer chemicals and
- less energy to process.
-
- Kenaf paper and envelopes are available from Earth Care Paper Company.
- Please stop beating a dead horse if this product fills the same need.
-
- [signed, someone from Long Beach]
-
- EJ Note: Excellent point, [person]. Hemp (cannabis) produces 3 to 6
- tons of usable fiber per year, which makes it many times better than
- wood but not as good as kenaf for paper. Both hemp and kenaf are hardy
- annual plants requiring minimal water, fertilizer or pesticides. Both
- fibers are much better suited for paper than wood fiber.
-
- However, hemp has been in use much longer and currently has many more
- applications than kenaf. Hemp replaces oil as well as trees, and
- varieties of cannabis have also been used throughout history for
- medicinal and relaxation purposes.
-
- Hemp is indeed an environmental and holistic health issue, but useful
- as it is, hemp is still a no-no. Farmers could plant today and harvest
- a cash kenaf crop next fall, and manufacturers could be mass producing
- kenaf products in three years. We've got the kenaf story on page 14,
- and thank you for pointing it out to us. (But [person], the only thing
- we beat at Earth Journal is swords into plowshares and occasional
- deadline - never horses, dead or otherwise!)
-
- =======================kenaf article================================
-
- Facts About Kenaf Paper
-
- A new printing and writing paper made from the fibrous kenaf plant is
- being offered in the United States for the first time. Kenaf has great
- potential for paper production and offers environmental advantages over
- paper from trees.
-
- One acre of kenaf produces 7 to 11 tons of usable fiber in a single
- growing season. In contrast, an acre of forest requires 20 to 30 years
- to produce 4 to 5 tons of usable fiber. It's easy to see the
- tremendous potential of kenaf as an alternative to tree pulp. USDA
- kenaf expert Daniel Kugler predicts that kenaf will be widely used to
- make paper, and that it represents a promising cash crop for American
- farmers.
-
- In California, Texas and Louisiana, 3,200 acres of kenaf were grown in
- 1992, most of which was used for animal bedding and feed. It is
- estimated that growing kenaf on 5,000 acres can produce enough pulp to
- supply a paper plant having a capacity of 200 tons per day. Many of
- the facilities that now process yellow pine can be converted to
- accommodate kenaf. Over 20 years, one acre of farmland can produce 10
- to 20 times the amount of fiber that one acre of yellow pine can
- produce.
-
- Various reports suggest that the energy requirements for producing
- pulp from kenaf are about 20 percent less than those for wood pulp,
- mostly due to the lower lignin content of kenaf. Because the kenaf
- fibers are naturally whiter than tree pulp, less bleaching is required
- to create a bright sheet. The first production run of Earth Care's
- kenaf paper was bleached with sodium hypochlorite. However, subsequent
- runs will be bleached with hydrogen peroxide, an environmentally-safe
- bleaching agent that does not create dioxin.
-
- Kenaf is considered a hardy plant that requires a minimum of
- fertilizers, pesticides and water in comparison to conventional row
- crops. Chemical fertilizers and pesticides used in large-scale farming
- cause run-off pollution in rivers, lakes, estuaries, oceans and
- underground water. All insecticides have damaging environmental
- consequences. Large-scale kenaf plantations would essentially be grown
- like corn or soybeans. Further kenaf production should be directed
- towards ecologically sustainable farming techniques. A recent report
- from the National Academy of Sciences concluded that the current use
- of chemical fertilizers and insecticides does not necessarily result
- in better crop yields than does the use of organic farming methods.
- Currently the environmental cost from pesticide use alone is about $1
- billion annually.
-
- In 1960, the USDA surveyed more than 500 plants and selected kenaf as
- the most promising source of "tree-free" newsprint. In 1970, kenaf
- newsprint produced in International Paper Company's mill in Pine
- Bluff, Arkansas, was successfully used by six U.S. newspapers. Again
- in 1987, a Canadian mill produced 13 rolls of kenaf newsprint which
- were used by four U.S. newspapers to print experimental issues. They
- found that kenaf newprint made for stronger, brighter and cleaner
- pages than standard pine paper.
-
- Kenaf paper is completely new to the American marketplace. Earth
- Care's kenaf paper is an 18# bond suitable for copiers, offset presses
- and laser printers. Because the fibers of the kenaf plant are longer
- and stronger than tree fiber, kenaf paper is quite stiff and bulky for
- its basis weight and this helpfs it perform well in high-speed sheet-
- feeding copy and press machines. Kenaf also creates less fiber dust in
- copy machines due to its fiber strength. Kenaf fibers can also be
- mixed with waste paper to enhance the performance characteristics and
- strength of recycled paper. Kenaf paper should be recycled with white
- ledger in office recycling program.
-
- ====================================================================
- by EARTH CARE PAPER COMPANY
-
- In the last three years, the timber industry cut down almost three
- million acres of national forests; forests that took hundreds of years
- to mature. Almost two-thirds of this forestland was old-growth. One-
- half to two-thirds of the cut ended up as pulp. They continue to
- clearcut the remaining five percent of our native forests, destroying
- irreplaceable ecosystems in the process. The U.S. and other world
- governments must legislate absolute restrictions on the clearcutting
- of any ancient forests.
-
- Our country needs to begin cultivating kenaf now to meet newsprint,
- printing paper, and corrugated container pulp needs. Kenaf is a fiber
- source that requires a minimum of input and is renewable annually.
- Adequate research has been done on kenaf and the technology is in
- place to have manufacturers begin the investments necessary to produce
- kenaf paper products on a mass scale. Let's get it done! For details,
- contact:
-
- International Kenaf Association
- PO Box 7, Ladonia, TX 75449
-
- Kenaf International, Ltd.
- 120 E. Jay Avenue, McAllen, Tx 78504
-
- KP Products, PO Box 4795
- Albuquerque, NM 87196-4795
-
- Earch Care Paper Company
- PO Box 7070, Madison, WI 53707
- 608.223.4000
-
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- =============================================================================
-
- From: Paul Stanford <treefreeeco@igc.apc.org>
- Newsgroups: talk.politics.drugs
- Date: 04 Jun 93 23:04 PDT
- Subject: Hemp beats kenaf!
- Message-ID: <1484000237@igc.apc.org>
-
-
- Topic 77 Earth Journal, Part 9 Response 3 of 3
- treefreeeco
- alt.drugs 10:34 pm Jun 4, 1993
-
- The info on hep vs. kenaf is wrong. Hemp produces two types of fiber,
- hemp bast and hemp hurds. Per acre annually hemp produces 4-9 m. tons of
- bast fiber and 12-40 m. tons of hurd fiber; more than twice as much as kenaf.
- A recent Dutch study concluded that hemp fiber production is cheaper, better
- ecologically and that we wouldn't be talking about kenef if hemp weren't
- prohibited. Hemp was prohibited to protect the wood-pulp paper, synthetic
- fiber, and petro-chemical industries, which are capital intensive(lots of $)
- while hemp fiber, oil, and protien production are, by their nature,
- decentralized and have low capital entry requirements.
- Earth Care Paper of Madison, WI went out of business last month.
-
- Did you know that the US Department of Agriculture Bulletin 404
- [TreeFree Paper Co. advertisement deleted - CAK]
-