The question every year is: plastic tree or real tree? What is the best environmental choice for a Christmas tree?
[su_quote cite=”University of Illinois Extension” url=”https://web.extension.illinois.edu/trees/facts.cfm”]In 1930 the U.S.-based Addis Brush Company created the first artificial Christmas tree made from brush bristles. The company used the same machinery that it used to manufacture toilet brushes, but they were dyed green.
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Is one of your family Christmas traditions traveling to your local tree farm and cutting a fresh Christmas tree? Or do you drag a dusty box out of the attic and pull the plastic collapsible Christmas tree out of it?
According to the American Christmas Tree Association, 95 million U.S. households will celebrate Christmas this year with a live or fake Christmas tree in their home. Roughly 50 million Christmas trees, whether live or fake, will be sold for the holiday celebration.
Of those 50 million Christmas trees, real trees will number about 27 million and fake trees 21 million. Real Christmas trees will be mostly Scotch pine, Douglas fir, Noble fir, Fraser fir, Balsam fir, Virginia pine or White pine, available in one color: green (or various shades of green). Fake trees are available in a multitude of colors, from white to green to gold to pink and more, some with lights built-in, and most are easy to collapse and store.
There is an argument to be made for each.
Supporters of buying plastic Christmas trees made of PVC (Polyvinyl chloride), steel, and aluminum, manufactured and shipped from China, claim that fake trees have a lower carbon footprint if their owners hold on to them for six to 10 years. This is when compared to the energy needed to cut and transport fresh trees and the carbon released into the atmosphere when a tree is cut.
But complicating the argument for plastic is the difficulty of recycling that Christmas tree, which is usually tossed into a landfill where it will sit for (literally) a century or more. Polyvinyl chloride is difficult to impossible to recycle and so must be trashed.
Advocates for buying a real Christmas tree argue that cutting fresh fir, pine, and spruce trees has benefits beyond that classic holiday smell. Purchasing from a Christmas tree farm supports local farmers who plant acres of trees that absorb carbon dioxide from the air, manage polluted storm-water runoff before it pours into waterways, and provide habitat for wildlife.
Real Christmas trees, they argue, have a smaller carbon footprint than plastic trees. Environmental groups estimate that an acre of fir trees absorbs more than 11,000 pounds of carbon dioxide annually and that carbon emissions created by families traveling to buy or cut a fresh Christmas tree pales in comparison to the carbon output created by artificial trees manufactured and shipped from China and eventually landfilled. Also, real trees can be recycled in a multitude of ways for everything from wood chip mulch to wildlife habitats.
[su_quote cite=”New York Times” url=”https://www.nytimes.com/2010/12/18/business/energy-environment/18tree.html”]The annual carbon emissions associated with using a real tree every year were just one-third of those created by an artificial tree over a typical six-year lifespan. Most fake trees also contain polyvinyl chloride, or PVC, which produces carcinogens during manufacturing and disposal..
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Buy on Amazon: Christmas gifts and holiday decorations.
A study by AVNIR, a collaborative research platform, Comparative Life Cycle Assessment (LCA) Of Artifical VS Natural Christmas Tree, puts the carbon footprint argument into perspective: “the emitted CO2 over the entire life cycle are approximately 3.1 kg CO2 per year for the natural tree and 8.1 kg CO2 per year for the artificial tree (48.3 kg for its entire life span). These CO2 emissions roughly correspond to driving an average car (150 g/km) 125 km and 322 km, respectively. Therefore, carpooling or biking to work only one to three weeks per year would offset the carbon emissions from both types of Christmas trees.”
So there you have it – not much difference in the carbon footprint. Which leaves 1) the necessity of the landfill for disposal and 2) the inability to recycle as the biggest downside for artificial Christmas trees. Personally, I’m a real Christmas tree man. What’s your preference?
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