Anonymous,

I wanted to make sure you'd had a chance to take action on our campaign to save Canada's irreplaceable boreal forest from being clear-cut to make softer toilet paper.

Our petition to tell Costco to only sell tissue products made from recycled materials already has just over 15,000 signatures -- will you help us get to 20,000?

Costco sells more than a billion rolls of toilet paper each year, which is why we're urging it to make its own tissue products from at least 50 percent recycled materials and to only sell other brands that meet the same standard.1

We need about 5,000 more signatures to get 20,000. Will you speak up for Canada's boreal forest?

Thank you,

Hannah

1. Morgan Cutolo, "This Is the Best-Selling Item at Costco," Yahoo Finance, October 24, 2018.

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Environment Colorado <[email protected]>
Date: Sun, March 1, 2020
Subject: Tell Costco: Help stop the destruction of Canada's boreal forest
To: Anonymous Donor <[email protected]>

Environment Colorado Banner

Act now

Anonymous,

The world's largest intact forest is getting smaller by the day.

The Canadian boreal forest -- a vast, ancient ecosystem teeming with life -- is shrinking at a rate of 1 million acres per year. Trees that have stood for centuries are being chopped down to make toilet paper we use once and flush away.1

We can help protect Canada's boreal forest from right here in Colorado. Tell Costco to only sell tissue products made from recycled materials.

The Canada lynx, the wood bison, the snowshoe hare and countless other species make their home amid the forest's trees. Owls, woodpeckers and finches are among the birds that nest in its branches -- and nearly half of all birds in North America rely on the forest at some point during the year, stopping to breed or passing through on their migration.2

The forest also protects our climate, removing 24 million cars' worth of carbon emissions from our atmosphere each year.3

It would be a tragedy to lose Canada's boreal forest for any reason, but we're chopping it down to make throwaway tissue goods such as toilet paper, facial tissues and paper towels.4 These are items that can be made from recycled paper or alternative materials such as wheat straw or bamboo.

There's simply no reason to keep destroying an irreplaceable ancient forest.

That's where Costco comes in. Costco sells more than a billion rolls of toilet paper a year.5 If it required its tissue products to use recycled materials, it could make a major impact on the market.

We're calling on Costco to take two steps to help save Canada's boreal forest:

  • Make its Kirkland Signature tissue products from at least 50 percent recycled materials.
  • Refuse to sell other brands of tissue products until they implement the same change.

Tell Costco to stand up against the logging of Canada's boreal forest.

We will make sure that your petition is placed directly into the hands of Costco's leadership. By leading the way on recycled tissue products, Costco can help preserve one of our planet's last great forests.

Thank you for standing with us.

Sincerely,

Hannah Collazo
State Director


1. Ryan Flanagan, "How a toilet paper boom is harming Canada's boreal forest," CTV News, February 26, 2019.
2. "Hinterland Who's Who: Boreal Forest," Canadian Wildlife Federation, accessed February 11, 2020.
3. Sam Wolfson, "Wiped out: America's love of luxury toilet paper is destroying Canadian forests," The Guardian, March 1, 2019.
4. Ryan Flanagan, "How a toilet paper boom is harming Canada's boreal forest," CTV News, February 26, 2019.
5. Morgan Cutolo, "This Is the Best-Selling Item at Costco," Yahoo Finance, October 24, 2018.


Donate today. A cleaner, greener future is within our reach. Your donation today can help us bring the vision we share a little closer to reality.

Environment Colorado, Inc.
1543 Wazee St., Ste. 400, Denver, CO 80202, (303) 573-3871
720-627-8862

Member questions or requests call 1-800-401-6511.
Facebook | Twitter

If you want us to stop sending you e-mail then follow this link -- Unsubscribe