The original subject of this thread was the replacing of plastic use by the use of wood. I've tried to stick to that subject.
However, those wanting to debate climate change instead may like to consider the following.
1) Atmospheric carbon dioxide concentration has increased significantly in recent years, particularly so since about WW2. However, atmospheric temperature has not followed the same path - it has increased (from a minimum in the 18th century) but in the last two decades, has levelled; it has barely increased at all.
2) There are quite a few computer models of climate, all of which have predicted atmospheric temperature increases, some of them fairly severe. As noted above, the actual measured data has shown slow increase in temperature until about the 1990s, then a levelling. If the climate models are wrong in their short term predictions, how much confidence should we have in their long term predictive accuracy?
3) We know from ice core data and analysis of the archaeological and historical records that climate since the last ice age has warmed and cooled several times; indeed, it is possible to construct a graph of temperature against time. It shows a fairly regular cycle of warming and cooling, warm periods occurring most lately during the late Iron Age and Roman period, then cooling during the Dark Ages, warming in the early Medieval, cooling again to the Little Ice Age during the 17th and 18th centuries (last Ice Fair on the Thames held in 1805), then warming to the present. If that pattern is followed, we are at the peak of a warm, and are due to begin the slide towards another minimum, which will happen in about 200 years or so. There is some evidence to suggest that may have begun; sunspot activity has almost ceased, signalling a reduction in the energy radiated by the sun, which will have a cooling effect on the earth's climate, for example.
4) We know that carbon dioxide is a greenhouse gas, but we also know that it's potency is low compared to many other greenhouse gasses. One of the most potent is water vapour - clouds.
There is a very great deal we don't know about how the climate works - it hasn't done what our computer models predicted it would, so the science is very far from being 'settled', despite claims in some parts of the media (I'm looking at you, Roger Harrabin). It is unfortunate that so much of the reporting is somewhat less than accurate and considered, but there we are.
PS. Has the Artic melted yet? Al Gore predicted that it would be free of ice by 2014. What actually happened?
Sorry for this diversion into the thorny thickets of 'Climate Change'. I know it's more a religion to some than a science - and that in itself is something of a problem. No amount of quiet statement of facts will dislodge some of the shibboleths, it seems.
Can we get back to the possible merits and demerits and replacing plastic with wood, now?