Displaying 1 - 11 of 11
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Take a look inside how a two-year-old startup got two of America's largest retailers to put its products on the shelves.
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Adobe launches new software to cut printing costs and paper consumption. Here's how you can cut into the $217 billion that companies are estimated to spend on documents annually, all while saving trees and water.
by Jennifer Kho
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In the first audit of its years-long shift to electronic health records, Kaiser Permanente found that the project has eliminated 1,000 tons of paper waste, 68 tons of x-ray film (and the chemicals to process it) and saves patients millions of gallons of gasoline.
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Xerox has tapped an Australian company to help it collect and recycle customers' used toner and ink cartridges.
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The Green Portflio Program from KKR and EDF has saved more than $160 million in operating costs and eliminated more than 345,000 metric tons of CO2 emissions, 1.2 million tons of waste and 8,500 tons of paper use for eight companies.
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The news anchors for a Georgia television station are all getting iPads instead of paper scripts; the station expects the move to save $24,000 a year in printing costs.
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The University of Wisconsin is using Century Gothic instead of Arial for its email system; the school says the move will save 30 percent on printer ink.
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The American Forest & Paper Association this week released its annual paper recovery statistics for 2009, with a record-breaking with 63.4 percent beating the group's goal three years ahead of schedule.
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Even if you're conscientious about the three R's when it comes to packaging, odds are your vendors are still shipping you excess materials. These three steps can help you ship smarter and greener.
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A new report from JP Morgan outlines the steps to transition to a paperless financial system, and finds that companies can save roughly $1 for every sheet of paper not used.
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JCPenney's new paper-reduction strategy will save millions of pounds of paper, and likely an equal amount of shipping and manufacturing costs, but that's just the silver lining to a sadder development.