บทความที่ 1
From a tree, big logs are used for timber. The branches cut to maintain trees healthy are used for paper making. Residues from saw mills such as wood chips, are also used as raw material for paper. Over the years, thinning operations weed out the weaker trees, but there is still a net gain. The Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) reckons that the annual increase of forest cover in EU 27 member countries is app. 503 000 ha/yr. This corresponds to the size of 3403 football (soccer) fiels per day and an area almost twice as large as Luxembourg every year2.
Deforestation is generally occurring in the southern hemisphere and is mainly due to unsustainable agricultural practices and fuel requirements. The European paper industry supports sustainable forest management as well as certification. A sustainable forest management strategy aimed at maintaining or increasing forest carbon stocks, while producing an annual sustained yield of timber, fibre or energy from the forest, will generate the largest sustained mitigation benefit3 . The European paper industry supports certification as a way of documenting sustainable forest management. Certificates based on defined criteria issued by independent auditors make this verifiable for customers and consumers4. Half of Europe’s forests and 92,2% of forests owned by paper companies are certified5.
In Europe, the paper industry signed up for a Legal Logging Code of Conduct6 firmly condemning illegal logging and related corruption and criminal activities. The industry’s commitment to responsible sourcing is clear and beyond any reasonable doubt.
บทความที่ 2
The main source of raw material for paper - trees – is a vast carbon store and the prime absorber of CO2 from the atmosphere. Young trees are much more efficient at absorbing carbon than old trees. Mature trees absorb carbon slower the older they get. To maximize the carbon storage the trees can provide we need young healthy forests where trees are regularly harvested and re-grown.
But the benefit does not stop there as paper also continues to store carbon throughout its lifetime. Around 160 kg of CO2 are emitted during the production of 200kg of paper1 – the average European per capita consumption – equivalent to the amount emitted by a typical family car over 1,000 km. The current climate discussion frequently refers to the “carbon footprint” of
products as a mean for expressing the emission of climate-relevant gases by a process or through the manufacture of a product. In fact, pretty much everything has a carbon footprint. For example, producing half a pound of hamburger for
someone’s lunch releases as much greenhouse gas into the atmosphere as driving a 3,000-pound car nearly 16 kilometres2, while the carbon footprint of a book is equivalent to the greenhouse gas emissions of a journey of about 7 kilometres by car3.
For economic and environmental reasons the paper industry works continuously to optimise its processes. The European pulp and paper industry decreased their CO2 emissions per tonne of paper produced by 42% since 19904
ขอแถมค่ะ
อันนี้หนูแปลได้มึนตัวเองมากค่ะ
The paper industry is not responsible for the depletion of tropical forests.
หนูแปลว่า อุตสาหกรรมกระดาษไม่รับผิดชอบสำหรับต่อการสูญเสียของป่าไม้ในเขตร้อน . <<< ฟังดูพิลึกมั้ยคะ?
ใครเก่งภาษาอังกฤษช่วยแปลบทความเกี่ยวกับกระดาษให้หน่อยค่ะ งง มึน (อีกแล้ว ว) 5 5+
From a tree, big logs are used for timber. The branches cut to maintain trees healthy are used for paper making. Residues from saw mills such as wood chips, are also used as raw material for paper. Over the years, thinning operations weed out the weaker trees, but there is still a net gain. The Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) reckons that the annual increase of forest cover in EU 27 member countries is app. 503 000 ha/yr. This corresponds to the size of 3403 football (soccer) fiels per day and an area almost twice as large as Luxembourg every year2.
Deforestation is generally occurring in the southern hemisphere and is mainly due to unsustainable agricultural practices and fuel requirements. The European paper industry supports sustainable forest management as well as certification. A sustainable forest management strategy aimed at maintaining or increasing forest carbon stocks, while producing an annual sustained yield of timber, fibre or energy from the forest, will generate the largest sustained mitigation benefit3 . The European paper industry supports certification as a way of documenting sustainable forest management. Certificates based on defined criteria issued by independent auditors make this verifiable for customers and consumers4. Half of Europe’s forests and 92,2% of forests owned by paper companies are certified5.
In Europe, the paper industry signed up for a Legal Logging Code of Conduct6 firmly condemning illegal logging and related corruption and criminal activities. The industry’s commitment to responsible sourcing is clear and beyond any reasonable doubt.
บทความที่ 2
The main source of raw material for paper - trees – is a vast carbon store and the prime absorber of CO2 from the atmosphere. Young trees are much more efficient at absorbing carbon than old trees. Mature trees absorb carbon slower the older they get. To maximize the carbon storage the trees can provide we need young healthy forests where trees are regularly harvested and re-grown.
But the benefit does not stop there as paper also continues to store carbon throughout its lifetime. Around 160 kg of CO2 are emitted during the production of 200kg of paper1 – the average European per capita consumption – equivalent to the amount emitted by a typical family car over 1,000 km. The current climate discussion frequently refers to the “carbon footprint” of
products as a mean for expressing the emission of climate-relevant gases by a process or through the manufacture of a product. In fact, pretty much everything has a carbon footprint. For example, producing half a pound of hamburger for
someone’s lunch releases as much greenhouse gas into the atmosphere as driving a 3,000-pound car nearly 16 kilometres2, while the carbon footprint of a book is equivalent to the greenhouse gas emissions of a journey of about 7 kilometres by car3.
For economic and environmental reasons the paper industry works continuously to optimise its processes. The European pulp and paper industry decreased their CO2 emissions per tonne of paper produced by 42% since 19904
ขอแถมค่ะ
อันนี้หนูแปลได้มึนตัวเองมากค่ะ
The paper industry is not responsible for the depletion of tropical forests.
หนูแปลว่า อุตสาหกรรมกระดาษไม่รับผิดชอบสำหรับต่อการสูญเสียของป่าไม้ในเขตร้อน . <<< ฟังดูพิลึกมั้ยคะ?