Woodland Trust Printer Paper is a high white, chlorine free office paper that is suitable for use in photocopiers, fax machines, laser printers and inkjet printers. Woodland Trust Printer Paper is produced to the most demanding environmental standards. Made from forest thinnings from sustainable forests and chippings from saw mills. The pulp and paper are produced on the same site, minimising transportation. 95% of the heat energy used to make Woodland Trust Printer Paper is generated from renewable bio-fuel produced as a bi-product by the mill. The surplus heat from the manufacturing process is piped to over 3,000 homes and civic buildings throughout the surrounding area. There are 0% CO2 emissions from fossil fuels during the production process. Every sheet of Woodland Trust Printer Paper purchased supports projects that improve biodiversity, enhance social well-being and help the UK landscape adapt to climate change. Trees improve our quality of life, making our local communities and neighbourhoods greener and more pleasant places to live. The amount of CO2 generated from the production, storage and distribution of this paper has been calculated and captured by planting trees with the Trust’s Woodland Carbon Scheme. Helping to plant new British woodland across the UK with the Woodland Trust. Woodland Trust Printer Paper - the paper that plants trees! This pack contains 2,500 sheets of 75gsm A4 paper. Size: A4 75GSM CIE whiteness: 161 Pack of 2,500 Completely chlorine free Energy for paper production is generated from waste material with no CO2 emissions from fossil fuels Excess heat from paper production is piped to a community heating project It is calculated that 25m2 of native UK woodland will capture and store one tonne of CO2 and creating large areas of new native woodland, will, over time, remove hundreds of thousands of tonnes of carbon dioxide from the atmosphere. Every sheet of Woodland Trust Printer Paper supports projects that improve biodiversity, enhance social well-being and help the UK landscape adapt to climate change.