The massive expansion of the cardboard industry is changing the environment around us. Just look at the American South, says Robert Abt, an emeritus professor at North Carolina State’s Department of Forestry and Environmental Resources. In Georgia and Alabama, once-diversified family farms have given way to small empires of tree plantations, largely by planting pines in a region where other types of trees—or other crops, like cotton—once grew.
“You’re pivoting to where the profit is,” Abt says.
Jamie Jordan, who owns a farm outside of Rome, Georgia, is one of those farmers who’ve pivoted.
“We’ve always been farmers, as far back as any of us can remember,” Jordan says. “It was my daddy, and his daddy before that, and so on, and then it was me. . . . And we grew it all: vegetables, corn, cotton.”
These days, Jordan grows a lot of pine, sending much of the pulpwood to the I.P. mill in Rome. His farm has become a forest—it’s just pines as far as the eye can see. And little wonder: Those trees are powering a huge and growing part of our economy—e-commerce.
“It’s easy to produce, it’s strong, and it’s sustainable,” Cooper says of cardboard, “because unlike plastic, it comes from a renewable resource.”