Deliveries are skyrocketing. The U.S. Department of Commerce says e-commerce sales for 2018 were more than $513 billion, an increase of more than 14 percent in a single year. Amazon revealed that in 2017 it shipped more than 5 billion items worldwide, to Prime customers alone. The I-Team and Chicago Sun-Times wanted to know how all those cardboard boxes are stacking up.

“It could add up to some significant impact. And the concern there is, if there is less cardboard available we need to go back to the raw material, which is trees. So we may increase our consumption of trees to kinda meet our cardboard demand,” said Jennifer Dunn, Director of Research for the Northwestern Argonne Institute of Science and Engineering.

One company that sells reusable packaging said the growth of the shipping industry by 2021 will be equal to 1 billion trees consumed. “Did you really need this plastic fill?” Knowles asked Eric Masanet, Associate Professor of Engineering at Northwestern University. “Probably not for a product like this, which is pretty durable. It could’ve been put in an envelope,” Masanet said. Masanet did run what he calls a “lifecycle assessment” number on that oversized package. “If I get 1,000 packages per year it’s still only 1 percent of the typical U.S. household carbon footprint,” he said.

However, industry experts say the production of cardboard boxes continues to steadily increase. “On average a corrugated box contains 49 percent recycled content, so when you recycle it you’re giving that box back to our industry,” said Racheal Kenyan, vice president of the Fibre Box Association in Itasca, which represents 95 percent of all U.S. Shipments.

But does the box have to be so big? “Probably not,” she said. “I think there’s probably a lot of right sizing you’ll see over the next several years where people will be examining their packaging to make sure that it’s the right fit.”

Kenyon said most shippers, including Amazon, are looking for size efficient packaging. Amazon said it reduced waste in 2017 alone by avoiding 305 million shipping boxes, and that it’s promoted the use of 100 percent recyclable packaging.

According to the American Forest and Paper Association, the latest recycling recovery rate for corrugated cardboard is at 96.4 percent.

To read the full story, visit https://abc7chicago.com/society/online-shipping-boom-creates-massive-cardboard-footprint-from-boxes/5302139/.

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