Epson itself claims its inkjets are up to 85 percent more energy efficient than its laser units and produce 85 percent less carbon dioxide. These statistics might not matter to individuals who occasionally print at home, but they provide businesses and nonprofit organizations with a way to cut down on their energy bills and carbon footprint.
Inkjets typically require fewer single-use resources, too. While laser printers rely on toner, fusers, developer, and other disposable parts, inkjets simply use an ink and waste ink box. Not only do inkjet printers produce nearly 60 percent less e-waste than their laser counterparts, but their production is a bit kinder to the environment as well: creating one toner cartridge requires burning anywhere from half a gallon to a full gallon of oil.
The decision to end all laser printer sales is likely a part of Epson’s “Environmental Vision 2050,” a circular economic model the company first committed to in 2018 and revised last year. Its biggest focus is Epson’s promise to become carbon-negative and “underground resource free” by 2050.
That said, inkjet printers aren’t the definitive solution to sustainable printing that Epson would like consumers to believe them to be. Inkjet cartridges dry out relatively quickly, resulting in some printer users buying more ink than they actually use. Inkjet printing costs more per page, too, which means the energy savings gleaned from ditching a laser printer might just be compensated for during use. Epson has also been in hot water recently for forcing some printer users to visit an authorized repair person to fix suddenly-bricked machines. Some Epson L360, L130, L220, L310, and L365 users even have to replace their machines altogether, which only puts more money in Epson’s pocket while producing seemingly unnecessary e-waste.
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