HOME PAGE
ABOUT ENEWSCHANNELS
OUR STAFF
Part of the Neotrope News Network


News Desk Columns Books Business Medical Music Software US Govt. RSS

PALNET Wants to Debunk the Environmental Myth of Plastic Pallets

Email this Page Print Page      Feedback      Social Media Options (click)
Wed, 15 Apr 2009 12:22:00 -0500 EST  |  No Comments

VINELAND, N.J. — Michael Smith, President and C.O.O. of PALNET, a leading nationwide supplier of shipping pallets, issued a statement today regarding the environmental impact of plastic versus wood pallets. According to Smith, “For all the green rhetoric being tossed around today by the manufacturers of plastic pallets about their sustainability and recyclable nature, the facts are still the facts. Wooden pallets made from the unusable trims of the lumbering process are greener, cleaner and more environmentally friendly by a mile.”

Palnet palletsSmith responded to a recent press release issued by a manufacturer of plastic pallets stated their desire to “be responsible stewards of the environment” and described their pallet as being “100 percent recyclable.”

When you follow the manufacturing chain of a plastic pallet from oil well, to refinery, to oil tanker, to the plastic processing plant — and add up all the pollution and environmental stress that accumulates along the way, “100 percent recyclable” doesn’t necessarily end up to be a champion of the environment.

Among the 47 chemical plants ranked highest in carcinogenic emissions by the EPA, 35 are involved in plastic production. “The long and short of it is,” adds Smith, “plastic, whether in bags, bottles or pallets could be public enemy #1 to any environmentally-conscious group or person.”

Wooden pallets, on the other hand, have always had a story and a product that is sustainable. According to the EPA, when wood pallets reach the end of their useful life they can be converted into value-added products like wood flooring or replacement parts for other pallets.

When a pallet is recycled in this way, it generates approximately $0.25 when sold as boiler fuel, $1.00 for replacement parts, and potentially $5.00 to $8.00 when processed into products such as flooring.

According to Smith, “PALNET pallets are the greenest part of the supply chain. We use scrap lumber from sustainable sources, never virgin hardwoods. They are constantly repaired and recycled and when no longer useable, they’re ground up into mulch or stove pellets. They’re green from cradle to grave and actually help clean up the environment by reducing waste. And nothing is greener than that.”

For more information on PALNET, visit http://www.PALNETUSA.com or call 1-877-PALNET-1.

About Aria Munro

ABOUT THE EDITOR: Aria C. Munro works in the book publishing industry and has been a content editor for the Neotrope News Network since 2004. Her black video iPod is most often shuffling Invader Zim episode vids and Thomas Dolby or Dead Can Dance tunez.

Web | More Posts (3942)

Some rights reserved - attribution required Copr. © 2009 eNewsChannels™ and Aria Munro.
Related Topics: Business, Green Products, Manufacturing, Newsdesk, State: New Jersey.
Tags: ,

Permalink for this story: http://enewschannels.com/2009/04/15/enc6662_122200.php
Important Note: for questions or clarification about any information in the above news item or article, contact the company mentioned in the story and NOT this website. This online publication, eNewsChannels™, cannot assist you with information regarding any person, product, company or opinion expressed or mentioned in the above news story. [84 views]
SIMILAR NEWS CONTENT:
Comments Off

Comments are closed for this story, sorry. Please provide any feedback to the company(s) mentioned in the above story or press release.


IMPORTANT NOTE: All feedback and comments are moderated and will not appear automatically. Any self-promotional or inappropriate remarks, and/or advertising URLs, will be removed and your entry will be submitted to Akismet for spam abuse tracking.

eNewsChannels Categories:
Popular Topics by Content and Search
Neotrope®
News Network