Hopefully they're talking about recycled paper. Oh... wait. Japan didn't sign the Kyôto Treaty.
Is that supposed to be a dig at Japan, or the US?Anyhow, I'm going to ignore the deforestation (and thus CO2) issue with these, since the cellulose could, in theory, be obtained from a number of 'clean' sources, probably including post-consumer pulp.
The 'problem' is, if you bind all this up with the same old resins or plastics (and you at least need something to protect the data side), there's a good chance you're producing equally-sized lumps of material that's even harder to recycle. There may even be something to that (in the sense that taking more innocuous junk out of the waste stream concentrates toxins; all that old newsprint probably at least served to sop up some of the runoff before it could leach to the groundwater), but if it's also as waterproof as existing polycarbonate, you don't even get that benefit.
So... you do get to cut down on some of the nasty chemicals in the labeling process, and it's not like conventional CDs were getting recycled anyway, but given the question of where you're getting the cellulose from, and the energy cost of even the best pulp recycling operations, it all smells quite zero-sum. (If the disc is effectively edible, hey, maybe it's an improvement -- though now we're starting to realize one problem is what happens when microbes
liberate all that felled carbon -- and otherwise, if it improves the
convenience of printing at inconsequentially different environmental cost, sure, market it on those grounds...)
One thing it might do is put a dent in the already unnoticable requirement for the petrochemical precursors to plastics... which, for all I know, might suffer some unnatural scarcity given current events and people's motives to profit around them.
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Again for all I know, reduced polycarbonate demand might increase CO2 emissions depending on manufacturing dynamics, who'd've thought?---
FWIW, my original comment wasn't intended as a dig at Japan, rather an acknowledgement that, all being products of industrialized society, I'm not going to trust Sony's opinion of "green" any more than I would Alcatel's or IBM's. (Hey, on the bright side, at least everyone's pollution mostly stays in China... for now!) :juggler: