About this deal
Both recycled and bamboo have their pros and cons with respect to the environment, and a great place to read more about that is in the 2019 report by the NRDC, “The Issue with Tissue: How Americans are Flushing Forests Down the Toilet.”
Who Gives A Crap’s toilet papers blow any public washroom toilet paper we’ve used out of the water with their quality. They are both much stronger and softer than any public washroom toilet paper we’ve ever tried (and we’ve tried a lot). Forty-eight biodegradable, three-ply cushy rolls that shouldn't hurt your septic tank. This is Who Gives A Crap’s most luxurious TP!This example shows that it’s not possible to generalise about the carbon impact of a particular material and that the specifics of production matter. To add to the complexity, some argue that the collection of waste paper shouldn’t be included in the calculation of recycled paper’s carbon footprint as it would be collected and taken to landfill anyway. They got a middle rating if they used between 50% and 75% recycled fibre and had clear, dated targets for increasing their use of recycled fibre to 75% or more.
Disclaimer: since we’re stationed in North America, we’re only going over WGAC prices for Canada and the USA.Now, we had read about recycled toilet papers before purchasing them and we’d read that a lot feel recycled in a very bad way, but Who Gives A Crap’s toilet paper feels and performs excellently. Who Gives A Crap vs public washroom toilet paper That doesn’t mean that all recycled toilet papers are more eco-friendly than bamboo toilet papers. It depends on factors such as how much of the recycled content is post-consumer vs pre-consumer material, and whether or not the bamboo is farmed sustainably, etc. Before we start talking about Who Gives A Crap, we should probably answer the following question first: