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The image depicts a process flow diagram illustrating the lifecycle of paper production and recycling. It begins with "Forests" which provide "Woodchips" that are sent to a "Pulp and paper factory." The factory produces "Paper" which is then delivered to "Customers." After use, "Customers" generate "Waste paper" that is returned to the "Pulp and paper factory" to be recycled and processed into new "Paper," completing the cycle. Arrows indicate the direction of flow from forests to customers, through waste paper and back to the factory.
Given the complexity of the image, the above description may not be entirely accurate.
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Paper is one of the most important product which is used in day today purpose. The amount of processing that it undergoes is quite overwhelming.
Forests are vast and huge containing innumerable trees from which we get timber. The tress either fall or are cut and prepated in logs. While cutting the logs, many wastes of wood and the barks all are collected to form woodchips. These woodchips now go through various processes in the factories, wherby pulp is manufactured. This in turn converts to paper.
The other way by which paper is made is by customers themselves. Man utilise papers, the wastes of paper and its shredding along with used tissue rolls in toto are recycled to make pulp. Thus paper is made from it.
Thus to summarise it all paper is an expensive commodity as far as the environment is concerned and due care is necessary to avoid wastage of the same.
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