Tuesday, September 14, 2010

eBooks (saving our forests one book at a time)

"No tyranny is so irksome as petty tyranny: the officious demands of policemen, government clerks, and electromechanical gadgets."
- Edward Abbey



The wave of the future in books is the rapid expansion and use of electronic Books (eBooks). Environmental issues are raised with these electromechanical gadgets produced mostly of plastic.  However, further research into production of plastic reveals that it is merely a byproduct of North America's dependency on oil--as long as you are driving that gas-guzzling hunk of Detroit metal. The ingredients for plastic have already been ripped from mother earth to feed your need to get there faster than your own two legs will carry you.


Oil Rig on the edge of Canyonlands NP

In 1979 the annual volume of plastics produced exceeded the volume of steel that was manufactured. The annual volume of plastics produced tripled during the period of 1940 to 1945, due to the wartime demand for products. Plastics are essentially a byproduct of petroleum refining.  So as long as we are using petroleum products for energy, plastic will be available without further destruction of the environment, specifically for the production of plastic.

As with all materials, there are environmental costs and benefits associated with the use of plastics. Plastics replace natural materials, including ivory and wood. Synthetic fibers also provide a substitute for cotton, a water- and energy-intensive crop. The use of plastic materials in cars and airplanes reduces their weight and therefore increases their fuel efficiency. The insulating capacity of plastics such as styrofoam reduce the amount of energy required to heat and cool homes.

One of the most significant environmental problems associated with plastics is the improper disposal of plastic goods by consumers. The use of plastics has enabled the development of innumerable disposable products, which has increased the amount of trash that is disposed.  Although paper accounts for most of the trash in landfills by volume, plastics account for 25% of all waste in landfills when buried.
A significant amount of plastic, however, is not properly disposed in landfills and makes its way into the environment. Plastic does not biodegrade quickly which means it remains in the environment for a very long time. Plastic trash has made its way to coastal ecosystems and the ocean, presenting a danger to marine and birdlife.
For my money, the eBook seems the best environmental way to go, and it also makes it easier to carry my library into the field.  Research materials, birding books, plant identification, first aid...all of it able to fill the space of my old copy of  The Monkey Wrench Gang or Ecodefense: A Field Guide to Monkeywrenching (I'll have to go look to see if that is on Kindle).

Birds:  110 mile training toss this last weekend...still have two birds in the Beaver I-race...34th and 76th...beat out by my partner whose bird was 32nd.

Honey:  This weekend I will be bottling the Backyard Blonde and cleaning the carboy to start a new batch of Mead that will be ready in March, and with any luck will last us through the summer.

10 comments:

  1. I learned a lot from this, thanks for sharing

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  2. Thanks for reading...share with your friends =D

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  3. This is the best place for discussion, not on facebook, share with others and let them comment too.

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  4. Jenni: We have over 5,500 reports and publications regarding rehabilitation and related fields available online for free download. We also publish a professional journal, and the only issues printed are those specifically ordered. The less paper we use, the better.

    Birdman: Thanks Jenni...and what about the concern of plastics in the environment? The blog talks a little about some of the "whole picture" issues

    Jenni: Although some uses of plastics are beneficial, it's been exploited too much with no thought to the future. When we, as humans. create something that causes harm in the making, harm in the use and harm in the disposal, extreme caution should be used. Alternatives can usually be found that may be a little less convenient to the immediate need, but much, much easier in the long run.

    Paul: I like holding a book. I'm on a computer all day at work and when I get on the bus or train or ready for bed I want to read. A book. Not a mini-comp. I have friends I share books with and they put notes on pages and I like that. Its like a note to me.

    Birdman: I know the feeling, Paul...but, I think change is in the wind...California is going to all electronic text books for college...

    Paul: I know, times they are a changing. I'm just getting to be an old fart. Just wait until Dec.

    Tishia: Paul, I'm with ya on the "notes on pages" and holding a book in the hand. Not some computer gadget. I like my printed books. One book I read and held was not made from paper. It was from soy and you could eat it if you had an appetite for it.

    Kriket: i love the feel of a book in my hands..i just dont know if i will get on the ebook wagon....we will see...

    Jenni: I too love the feel of a book,but how about printing them on demand? and so far as the text books are concerned, I nearly died when I picked up my 13 year old's back pack...I weighed it...28 pounds, and she left two of them at school because they didn't fit!

    Teri: honey, I have to tell you... I still prefer to sit down with a good book in my hands..love to turn those pages...I remember sitting in the cherry tree with a good book when I was a kid...eating cherries and turning pages. KEEP THE BOOKS...Plant more trees!!

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  5. Birdman: Here is the thing about "real" books, the cost to produce them is crazy, the cost to publish eBooks is minimal, keeping the cost lower...the author gets a larger return for their efforts in royalties, and THE BIG PUBLISHERS are no longer in control...the cost of "real" books will rise, but they will still be available. If enough books are sold as eBooks, then they will warrant printing them. Like Jenni said, there will be books on demand, Amazon will do that for you now...for a fee.

    Birdman: The biggest loop hole is the possibility of books loosing quaility as they are mass produced...the trick is going to be finding an ePublisher with a reputation for quaility books and authors, and sticking with them...the good ePublishers will be making the reader feel more intune with the author through electronic media and directed sales.

    Teri:I understand from your side of the the "book". Gotta tell ya been reading "The Overton Window" by Glen Beck...the only thing that lets me know I fell asleep while reading is the "thunk" when I drop the book.

    Birdman: I think you will find books will become like art (which they are in my opinion) and you will be able to browse them on eFormats and then decide which are worthy of going on your book shelf and purchase a real book in that fashion...or the public demand for certain books...I shudder to say it, like "Twilight" will still find their way to print.

    Birdman: All this discussion should really be occuring in the comment section of the blog, so that those not on facebook can find it on a google search and maybe develop their own thoughts on the subject from this great conversation.

    Jenni: I have 4 teen age girls, do you really think I had a choice on the Twilight topic? I will say, however, the kids' share one copy. I still buy books, and this may seem odd, but I only buy books I've already read and love, and want to pass on...I will forever and always have Dr. Seuss's ABC book and the Jabberwocky in my home, but for new books I view or listen first.

    Jenni: another benefit of electronic media?...copy and paste, dear!

    Birdman: But Jenni, it is so much more authentic in your own words...lol
    Besides, that raises the number of hits on the blog site and raises the SEO:
    SEO is greatly improved by inner linking, (SEO=Search Engine Optimization)

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  6. For me personally e-books are not beneficial. When I read its lying in bed relaxing or on the "throne" I need a hard copy book to read. I agree there are a lot of benefits to e-books but I would never read them. Looking at a computer screen for a length of time hurts my eyes and my head.

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  7. Kim--you don't have to read on the PC. Phone, eReader...they are affordable now and much easier to read "on the throne" or at the gym...

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  8. Thanks JulieAnn...I know you are an eReader. Anything to add to the environmental side?

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  9. You forgot distribution: Wireless distribution of eBooks. Pennies to get the book into my hands. No warehouse, no trucks, no brick and mortar store, no environmental impact in the delivery other than a few cents of electricity.

    Oh, and as for eReaders being hard on the eye, Kim, you need a Kindle or Nook. eInk technology is print, not backlit, so your eyes will never know the difference, unless of course you need to avoid bi-focals like me, in which case, you just increase the font size. Much easier on the eyes.

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  10. Oh yeah, and it is much easier to read my Kindle lying in bed or on the throne than a book -- it always stays open for me without a struggle.

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