4.8 Review

Decarbonizing the pulp and paper industry: A critical and systematic review of sociotechnical developments and policy options

Journal

RENEWABLE & SUSTAINABLE ENERGY REVIEWS
Volume 167, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.rser.2022.112706

Keywords

Climate change; Climate mitigation; Industrial decarbonization; Net -zero; Energy policy; Pulp and paper manufacturing; Pulp and paper processes; Sustainability transitions

Funding

  1. UKRI ISCF Industrial Challenge within the UK Industrial Decarbonization Research and Innovation Centre (IDRIC) [EP/V027050/1]
  2. European Union's INTERREG VA Programme

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The pulp and paper industry has significant energy and carbon emissions effects, and adopting low-carbon manufacturing processes can mitigate its climate impact. However, there are barriers that need to be addressed to enable such adoption, which requires further research.
Paper has shaped society for centuries and is considered one of humanity's most important inventions. However, pulp and paper products can be damaging to social and natural systems along their lifecycle of material extraction, processing, transportation, and waste handling. The pulp and paper industry is among the top five most energy-intensive industries globally and is the fourth largest industrial energy user. This industry accounts for approximately 6% of global industrial energy use and 2% of direct industrial CO2 emissions. The pulp and paper industry is also the largest user of original or virgin wood, with deleterious impacts on both human health and local flora and fauna, including aquatic ecosystems. This critical and systematic review seeks to identify alternatives for mitigating the climate impacts of pulp and paper processes and products, thus making the pulp and paper industry more environmentally sustainable. This study reviews 466 studies to answer the following questions: what are the main determinants of energy and carbon emissions emerging from the pulp and paper industry? What are the benefits of this industry adopting low-carbon manufacturing processes, and what barriers will need to be tackled to enable such adoption? Using a sociotechnical lens, we answer these questions, identify barriers for the pulp and paper industry's decarbonization, and present promising avenues for future research.

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