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MISSION: The mission of EcoArtLA is to create art that promotes sustainable
living, explores our environmental crisis, and honors the life giving
diversity in all nature.
VIDEO: available upon request.
Email
Llundell@aol.com for a copy of the video. The cost is $14.00
including shipping, include mailing address in email.
EcoArts:
Environmental study and exhibition group.
Founded by Linda Lundell
Llundell@aol.com
Meets Monthly on Sunday
Afternoons
“We cannot have peace on the Earth unless we
also have peace with the Earth”.
Julia
Butterfly Hill
EcoArtLA's is a circle of artists focused on our environmental
crisis. We are gathered together to educate and inspire ourselves and
others to take action and move towards a sustainable future. The
destruction of nature, “our life support” can be stopped, but it will take
a non-violent grassroots movement that is unstoppable. World wide,
EcoArtLA's is one among several million groups working together in every
small and large way to stop this assault on the earth.
EcoArts is in its second year of
existence. We are now in the midst of preparing art work for our upcoming
exhibition at Barnsdall Art Park, April 14, 2007, 2-5 PM. EcoArts meets
once a month and we share our art work, books, videos and the necessary
moral support each of us needs to look objectively with heart and mind at
the world as we see it. It is not easy to face this environmental crisis
and that is why we have gathered together for mutual support. Even though
our upcoming Barnsdall show is closed to new participants, everyone is
encouraged to join us at our monthly meetings as we continue to learn and
grow. We are planning future exhibitions that will again be open to all
concerned SCWCA artists.
We believe we are witnessing the
greatest crisis of our known world’s history. When our population was
small the human impact on earth was less consequential. As our world
population is now 6 ½ billion our unexamined dream of unlimited growth and
exploitation of resources is no longer functional. While oil corporations
are making historical record profits, glaciers and ice caps are melting at
a rapid rate through out the entire planet. As we cut down one football
field of rainforest trees every second we are destroying the earth’s
natural ability to clean the billions of tons of CO 2 we
pour into our air daily from cars and coal burning industries. As we
deforest our land we loose billions of tons of top soil annually and
create deserts that can no longer support life. As our consumer society
mindlessly “throws away” item after item, one day we realize there is no
place to throw it away any longer. The united scientific community tells
us that 90% of our large ocean fish are gone and there are only a handful
of elephants, tigers, and polar bears left. Our wastefulness and
aggression on the earth is causing a massive extinction of life forms.
Something is drastically wrong with what we are doing, when 19 species
become extinct every day.
As we look at all this
information we have to wonder how did we get to this perilous state? No
one planned these outcomes and yet we are responsible for them. We humans
are the ones buying and driving our cars, over fishing our oceans, over
cutting our forests and over consuming our limited resources. It is as if
we are living in a trance or a dream that is filled with unexamined
assumptions that are causing these unsustainable behaviors. Let’s explore
some of these unexamined assumptions that keep us in our trance. One
assumption that is at the heart of all the others is that we are separate
from one another. We see this in unchecked individuality and greedy
competition instead of supportive cooperation and nurturing community
life. At the same time we can see that nature is clearly demonstrating
the seamless interdependence of the entire web of life. The universe
holds all the galaxies united and moving as our Suns gravitational pull
holds our nine precious planets together in cosmic harmony. Our Universe
is alive, our earth is alive. We are all one, we are all related, we all
came from the same swirl of heat, energy and chemistry that created the
first molecule of life on earth. Even if we destroy life as humans know
it, another crop of DNA will mix up yet another earth full of new life
forms. A second assumption is that we can continue our course of
unlimited growth and expansion without irreversible devastation to our
fragile life support systems. Already entire ecosystems are being heated
up and failing. Our fresh water aquifers in the US that support our food
chain are depleted by more than 50% and in some cases exhausted
altogether. The water that remains is polluted to varying degrees by
toxic farming pesticides, pharmaceuticals of various kinds, and so forth.
We also find ourselves nursing a continued romance with the trance
assumption that technology is progress and it will save us. Yet billions
of people will become environmental refugees because we can’t seem to make
a car that won’t cause global warming. Even in the US where we are
accustomed to living at the top of technological advancements we haven’t
raised the minimum wage in over nine years. People can’t pay their
gasoline bills much less buy the latest conveniences. This fatal dream of
technology though admirable, is increasingly available to only the very
few and ultimately will not save us. Technology can make us cars, even
clean cars, but we are unable to replace the bees that pollinate out
fields and forests which provide us food and shelter. The countless
billions of interconnected, interdependent, inseparable units of life that
cooperate with one another to make earth one living life process can not
be replicated by our technology. We are also finding ourselves living in
the unexamined trance that “more” is better and will make us happy and
fulfilled. We have available to us more consumer products than any other
country in the world and yet the US has the highest rate of mental
illness. One out of four, (27% - of people in the US) is suffering from
significant mental disorders. In the midst of our ever consuming
affluence it seems we have lost meaning and purpose. The center for
Disease Control says that 17 percent of American high school kids report
having seriously considered suicide during the previous 12 months. And
what is happening to our middle class and our living democracy as
corporate ownership of our news media monopolizes mass communication?
International corporations promote biased information, designed to create
ever greater short term wealth for the very few. This assault is
sanctioned by another unexamined belief that exploitation of resources and
people is clever, smart, and good business.
The “bad news” is that we have
created all this because we are working from unexamined assumptions. The
“good news” is that because we have created it, we can uncreate it. We
are reexamining and deconstructing old assumptions and creating new dreams
for America and the world. Dreams that include environmental
sustainability, social justice and spiritual fulfillment because when you
dig deeply they are all interconnected. Renowned author and lecturer Paul
Hawken has compiled a list of the organizations small and large that are
working towards sustainability. In a plenary at the Bioneers conference
he presented a film list of the organizations that runs continuously for
days. He includes all the growing grass roots organizations that are
springing up throughout our world, like stars in the night sky.
Organizations that are capable and ready with healthy and sustainable
answers to each of our areas in crisis. We are at the beginning of a
rebirth of what it means to be a human being inseparable from the earth.
We are artists, and as artists we have our own personal Medias of
expression. That is why we are so fortunate to have EcoArts, a creative
group helping to grow this great movement. It is an honor to be a part of
and facilitate this group as we work towards and are dedicated to
environmental sustainability. All are welcome.
Linda Lundell, August 2006
“Darkness cannot drive out
darkness; only light can do that.
Hate cannot drive out hate; only
love can do that,
Hate multiplies hate, violence
multiplies violence, and toughness multiplies toughness in a descending
spiral of destruction…..The chain reaction of evil----
Hate begetting hate, wars
producing more wars-----must be broken, or we shall be plunged into the
dark abyss of annihilation.”
Martin
Luther King, Jr., Strength to Love, 1963
EcoArts Recommended
Readings:
1.
The Last Hours of
Ancient Sunlight; by Thom Hartman
2.
Through a Window;
by Jane Goodall
3.
The Sacred Balance;
by David Suzuki
4.
Natural
Capitalism; by Paul Hawken, Amory Lovins, and L. Hunter Lovins
5.
In The Absence of
the Sacred: The Failure of Technology and the Survival of the Indian
Nations; by Jerry Mander
6.
Cradle to Cradle; by
William McDonough and Michael Braungart
7.
The Great Work; by
Thomas Berry
8.
Confessions of an
Economic Hit Man; by John Perkins
9.
An Inconvenient
Truth; by Al Gore
10.
Wholeness: On
Education, Buckminster Fuller, and Tao; by Alex Gerber Jr.
11.
The Universe Story;
by Thomas Berry and Brian Swimme
EcoArts Recommended Organizations:
1.
Bioneers
Bioneers.org
2.
The Pachamama
Alliance www.pachamama.org
3.
Sustainable Works in
Santa Monica offers classes. Phone: 310-458-8716
Concerned people are always
asking, but What Can I Do? There are many things that each of us can
begin doing right now. One of the biggest things is to start buying earth
friendly products. Use your buying power. Those companies who don’t
change will go out of business, and be replaced by companies who are
sustainable. EcoArts has included below a list of 50 tips that each or
us is capable of doing to be a part of this great grassroots movement
towards living sustainably on earth. Do a few at a time at a pace that
works for you.
“I must be the change I wish
to see in the world around me.” Ghandi
Section XIII
Fifty Was to Help Save the Planet
What you can do
Vanity Fair Magazine, May 2006
FOR A LIST OF ECO-ORGANIZATIONS:
http://www.vanityfair.com/news/dailydose/listings
MY SITES: TREEHUGGER FOUNDER'S FAVORITE CLICKS
VIEW VF.COM'S ECO-HEROES SLIDE SHOW:
http://www.vanityfair.com/features/portfolio/060417fepo
The problem is so vast and the urgency so great that advice
which suggests you turn off the tap while brushing your teeth or switch
off lights and standbys when they are not needed or go vegetarian for one
day a week seems, well, ridiculous. Global warming is probably the
greatest threat our species has ever faced. The sheer scale of the
processes under way in the atmosphere and the oceans makes it hard not to
view anything an individual does to reduce emissions as being too little
too late. Not true. The astonishing fact is that each of us can have an
immediate impact on the production of greenhouse gases, and if enough of
us act together in these minor ways, the cumulative effect will be
dramatic. That's because so much of the way we live our lives is wasteful
and. to put it bluntly, thoughtless. It takes nothing to switch off a
lamp, unplug the phone charger, take a shorter shower, cook without
pre-heating the oven, skip the pre-wash part of the dishwasher cycle, or,
often , walk or bike instead of drive. And they all save money, which is
one of the rather striking things about reducing your carbon
footprint--the standard way of measuring the CO2 emissions each person is
responsible for.
Some of the suggestions that follow may involve a little
more effort--recycling, ditching plastic bags, and fixing leaky faucets
and toilets; others require you to spend money--insulating your home,
installing solar panels or buying a fuel-efficient car. Even with these,
however, there is almost always an eventual payback in terms of reduced
bills.
The overwhelming and heartening point about the ideas here
is that, if adopted by large numbers of people, they will have an
immeasurable effect. When it comes down to it, the continued rise in
carbon emissions is a matter of individual conscience: each of us can and
should do something, however small. In 5 or 10 years' time that thought,
together with everything written here, should be second nature to us.
Ladies and gentlemen, this little booklet is the future--a more ingenious,
more satisfying, and less wasteful future. Welcome to it. --HENRY PORTER
Reporting for V.F.'s Green Guide by DAISY PRINCE and
EMILY BUTSELAAR
- LIGHT BULBS MATTER
– Switch from traditional incandescent lightbulbs to compact fluorescent
lightbulbs (C.F.L.). If every American household replaced one regular
lightbulb with a C.F.L., the pollution reduction would be equivalent to
removing one million cars from the road. A 30-watt C.F.L. produces about
as much light as an ordinary 100-watt bulb. Although the initial price
is higher, C.F.L.'s can last 12 times as long. C.F.L.'s are available at
most home-improvement stores and at
bulbs.com.
- DITCH PLASTIC BAGS
– Californians Against Waste (cawrecycles.org), a nonprofit
environmental advocacy group, estimates that Americans use 84 billion
plastic bags annually, a considerable contribution to the 500 billion to
one trillion used worldwide. Made from polyethylene, plastic bags are
not biodegradable and are making their way into our oceans and
waterways. According to recent studies, the oceans are full of tiny
fragments of plastic that are beginning to work their way up the food
chain. Invest in stronger, re-usable bags, and avoid plastic bags
whenever possible.
- RINSE NO MORE
– According to Consumer Reports, pre-rinsing dishes does not necessarily
improve a dishwasher's ability to clean them. By skipping the wash
before the wash, you can save up to 20 gallons of water per dishload. At
one load a day, that's 7,300 gallons over the course of the year. Not to
mention that you're saving time, dishwashing soap, and the energy used
to heat the additional water.
- FORGET PRE-HEATING
– Ignore cookbooks! It is usually unnecessary to pre-heat your oven
before cooking, except when baking bread or pastries. Just turn on the
oven at the same time you put the dish in. During cooking, rather than
opening the oven door to check on your food, just look at it through the
oven window. Why? Opening the oven door results in a significant loss of
energy.
- A GLASS ACT
– Recycle glass (think beer bottles, jars, juice containers) either
through curbside programs or at community drop-off centers. Glass takes
more than one million years to decompose; Americans generate almost 13
million tons of glass waste a year. Glass produced from recycled glass
reduces related air pollution by 20 percent and related water pollution
by 50 percent. Go to
earth911.org for local recycling information.
- BANKING ON THE
ENVIRONMENT – Want to have a more
energy-efficient home or office? Save green by being green. Purchase
appliances and electronics with the Energy Star certification. Begun in
1992 by the E.P.A. to rate energy-efficient computers, the Energy Star
program today includes more than 40 product categories, and it also
rates homes and workplaces for energy efficiency. Energy Star estimates
that, with its help, Americans saved enough energy in 2004 to power 24
million homes, amounting to savings of $10 billion. To learn more about
Energy Star, visit
energystar.gov.
- HANG UP YOUR DRYER
– It goes without saying—clothes dryers are huge energy gluttons. Hints
to reduce energy use: Clean the lint filter after each load (improves
air circulation). Use the cool-down cycle (allows clothes to finish
drying from the residual heat inside). Better yet, abandon your dryer
and buy some drying racks, if you don't have a clothesline. Generally,
clothes dry overnight.
- GET A GOLD LAUNDRY STAR
– An Energy Starqualified washing machine uses 50 percent less energy
and could reduce your utility bills by $110 annually. Standard machines
use about 40 gallons of water per wash; most Energy Star machines use
only 18 to 25 gallons, thus also saving water. Whenever possible, wash
your clothes in cold water using cold-water detergents (designed to
remove soils at low temperatures). And do your laundry only when you
have a full load. If you must do a small load, adjust the water level
accordingly.
- GREEN PAINT
– Most paint is made from petrochemicals, and its manufacturing process
can create 10 times its own weight in toxic waste. It also releases
volatile organic compounds (V.O.C.'s) that threaten public health. (V.O.C.'s
are solvents that rapidly evaporate, allowing paint to dry quickly.)
They cause photochemical reactions in the atmosphere, leading to
ground-level smog that can cause eye and skin irritation, lung and
breathing problems, headaches, nausea, and nervous-system and kidney
damage. The best alternative? Natural paints. Manufactured using plant
oils, natural paints pose far fewer health risks, are breathable, and in
some cases are 100 percent biodegradable. Remember: Never throw your
paint away. Check out Earth 911's "Paint Wise" section for re-use
programs in your community:
earth911.org.
- BUILD GREEN
– Before embarking on any home remodeling, make sure your architect has
green credentials. Although there is no national organization of green
architects in the U.S., that doesn't mean you can't get an architect who
will build along sustainable lines. Ask where he or she sources
materials, and request that energy-saving devices, such as solar
paneling, be installed. Visit
directory.greenbuilder.com or
environmentalhomecenter.com for more green-building information.
- GET A GREEN ROOF
– A green roof is more than simply a roof with plants growing on it. It
functions like a "breathing wall," consuming carbon dioxide from the
atmosphere and emitting oxygen. Green roofs generally use
low-maintenance, drought-resistant plants. Vegetation is planted or laid
down as pre-vegetated mats on a thin layer of soil. More intensive
green-roof systems may contain trees and larger plants, but these
require deeper soil and are more expensive. One of the biggest benefits
of a green roof is water management: it can absorb more than 50 percent
of rainwater, thereby reducing runoff, a major source of pollution in
our waterways. Plus, it can help reduce air-conditioning costs during
the hot summer months. The vegetation looks after itself through the
seasons and creates a habitat for insects, which, in turn, provide food
for birds. Green roofs can also last more than twice as long as
conventional rooftops. They look better too. For more information, visit
greenroofs.com.
- PLAY IT COOL
– Avoid placing your air conditioner next to a TV, lamp, or other
electrical appliance that generates heat. A heat source will confuse the
unit's thermostat, causing it to misread how hot the room is and make
the air conditioner run longer than it should. You can also program an
air conditioner to start running 30 minutes before you arrive home (as
with heating). There is no need to cool a home if no one is in it.
- FOOD MILES MATTER
– Food is traveling farther than ever. Once upon a time people ate
seasonally—artichokes in the winter, cherries in June. Now you can buy
most fruits and vegetables practically year-round. The average American
meal contains ingredients produced in at least five other countries. The
transportation of food and agricultural products constitutes more than
20 percent of total commodity transport within the U.S. To help reduce
CO2 emissions (released from trucks, airplanes, and cargo ships), it's
best to buy food that's in season, organic, and grown locally. Go to
ams.usda.gov/farmersmarkets to find the farmers' market nearest you.
Also see
localharvest.org and our listing of
Lehigh Valley Farmers' Markets
- GO VEGETARIAN
– To produce one pound of beef requires 2,500 gallons of water—that's 40
times more water than is used to produce a pound of potatoes. Before
buying beef, think about the immense cost of energy used to raise cattle
and to transport meat to your supermarket shelf. Besides all this, cows
consume enormous amounts of antibiotics and are a prodigious source of
methane, which is the number-two greenhouse gas; livestock are
responsible for almost 20 percent of the methane in the atmosphere.
- BUY EGGS IN CARDBOARD
CARTONS – Cardboard egg cartons are
normally made from recycled paper, which biodegrades relatively quickly,
and are also again recyclable—Styrofoam or plastic cartons take a much
longer time to biodegrade and their manufacture produces harmful
by-products.
- DRINK SHADE-GROWN
COFFEE – Shade-grown coffee is for the
birds, literally. According to
coffeeresearch.org, about 150 species of birds live on
shade-grown-coffee farms, while only 20 to 50 inhabit full-sun farms.
With increased demand for cheap coffee, many Latin American growers have
moved toward full-sun plantations, clearing the habitat of numerous
native birds and increasing the use of pesticides and fertilizers. By
drinking shade-grown coffee, you can help bird habitats and reduce the
need for farming chemicals. Shade-grown coffee beans can be purchased at
many grocery stores. Starbucks offers shade-grown coffee as well.
NOTE: Not all shade-grown coffee is Fair Trade coffee — make sure
coffee has the Fair Trade Certified label!
- SAVE WATER INDOORS
– A typical American household uses 350 gallons of water each day. About
half that—175 gallons—is used indoors (toilets consume about 30 percent
of the indoor total). Unnecessary water usage comes in the form of
leaks. Fixing leaky faucets and toilets is a quick and easy way to
conserve water. A steady faucet drip can waste 20 gallons of water a
day. Leaky toilets are even worse, wasting upward of 100 gallons a day.
Since toilet leaks are generally silent, check for them regularly by
removing the tank cover and adding food coloring. If the toilet is
leaking (and 20 percent of them usually are), color will appear in the
bowl within 30 minutes.
- TAKE SHOWERS, NOT BATHS
– The average American household consumes about 60 gallons of water a
day from showers and baths. To reduce this number, take quick showers
and install a low-flow showerhead that uses fewer than 2.5 gallons of
water per minute, as compared to about 5 gallons with an older
showerhead. Baths are relaxing, but it can take 50 gallons of water to
fill a tub.
- STOP THE WATER
– By leaving the water running while you brush your teeth, you can waste
150 gallons of water per month—that's 1,800 gallons a year! Turning the
water off while you brush can save several gallons of water per minute.
Also pay attention to this water-saving principle while shaving or
washing your face.
- INSULATE YOUR HOUSE
– Good insulation is one of the best ways to reduce your heating bills
and cut your CO2 emissions. Heating and cooling make up 50 to 70 percent
of energy use in the average American home. Also, replace old windows
and be sure to seal holes and cracks in your house with weather
stripping or caulk. A well-insulated house can prevent hundreds of
pounds of CO2 emissions per year and can cut your heating and cooling
bills by up to 20 percent. For more information, visit
eere.energy.gov/consumer/tips/insulation.html.
- TURN YOUR THERMOSTAT
DOWN ONE DEGREE – If you turn your
thermostat down by one degree, your heating costs will decrease by about
3 percent. Turn it down five more degrees for four hours a day and
reduce your heating bills by almost 6 percent. If you're going to be
away for the weekend or out in the evening, turn your thermostat down.
It's not true that reducing the temperature means it will take more heat
to bring it back up to a warm level (unless you have a heat pump in your
home). Also, turn the heat down if you are throwing a party—every guest
will be the equivalent of a 100-watt heater.
- DON'T BE A BUTT TOSSER
– About 4.5 trillion cigarette butts are littered worldwide each
year—making them the most-littered item. The myth that cigarette filters
are biodegradable is just that, a myth. Although the filters do
eventually decompose, they release harmful chemicals that enter the
earth's land and water during the decaying process. There is nothing
earth-friendly about the breakdown. If you must smoke, carry a 35-mm.
film canister to store your used butts in until you can properly discard
them.
- DON'T JUST DUMP
– Envelopes come in huge quantities for free every day. If you are
careful when opening letters, you can use the envelopes again by simply
putting a label over the original address. This saves money and trees,
while reducing waste. Try to re-use jars and plastic containers—for
example, when taking your lunch to work. (Doing so prevents waste, and
making your food at home is less expensive than the alternative.) Ask
your office manager to buy re-usable mesh coffee filters instead of
bleached paper ones, which may contain dioxins. They are tree-free and
should save your company money.
- AVOID DISPOSABLE GOODS
– Institute a mug policy in your office. Americans throw away some 25
billion polystyrene cups every year, most of which end up in landfills.
Refill your water bottles once or twice, and make your coffee in a
ceramic mug. If you bring in cutlery from home, you will also cut down
on those pesky plastic forks, knives, and spoons.
- GROW YOUR OWN GARDEN
– In 1826, J. C. Loudon wrote in An Encyclopaedia of Gardening,
"For all things produced in a garden, whether salads or fruits, a poor
man that has one of his own will eat better than a rich man that has
none." To start a vegetable garden costs nothing but a few packs of
seeds and rudimentary garden implements, and it saves enormous amounts
of money, to say nothing of the food miles and the packaging that go
into supplying you with fresh fruits and vegetables. Of course, a
vegetable garden is only productive for part of the year, but it is
amazing how long that growing season lasts and how much you can produce
from one small patch.
- BUY RECYCLED PRODUCTS
– There has to be a market for products made with recycled goods.
Support this movement by purchasing recycled goods—you will save virgin
materials, conserve energy, and reduce landfill waste. Recycled paper
products include toilet paper (which is no longer scratchy, like it used
to be), copy paper, paper towels, and tissues. Look for garbage bags and
bin liners labeled "recycled plastic," and buy recycled toner cartridges
for your fax machines and printers.
- PLANE BETTER
– Air travel is currently responsible for 3.5 percent of the
global-warming gases from all human activity and is growing fast. Cargo
transport by air is increasing by about 7 percent annually and passenger
air travel is up in the last few years by between 4 and 7 percent. The
impact of air travel is enormous; a round-trip between New York and Los
Angeles emits one ton of CO2 per passenger. (To determine CO2 emissions
for your next flight, go to
co2.org.) Try to limit the number of flights you take. If you're
traveling within a country, why not take a train? (Air travel releases
at least three times more carbon dioxide into the atmosphere than rail
travel does.) If you're planning a business trip, consider whether a
video linkup or a conference call will suffice.
- CARBON OFFSETTING
– Air traffic is the fastest-growing source of greenhouse-gas emissions,
so when you do fly, consult a carbon-offsetting organization such as
Climate Care to "carbon-offset" your journey. Climate Care determines
your flight's emissions and the cost to offset the CO2. For example, to
offset that round-trip flight between New York and Los Angeles, you
would pay about $10 to Climate Care, which invests in forestry and
energy-efficiency projects. For more information, visit
climatecare.org.
- SWITCH TO GREEN POWER
– The leading cause of industrial air pollution is electricity
production. According to the American Lung Association, more than 50,000
Americans die each year from air-pollution-related causes. If available,
get your electricity from renewable energy sources such as wind, sun,
water, and biomass, all of which generate electricity with fewer
environmental impacts. With utility companies in 35 states offering
green-power pricing plans, around half of all electricity consumers
could buy green, yet only half a million do. Does green power cost more?
Yes, but barely. For example, New York's Con Edison charges an
additional one-half cent per kilowatt-hour for its green-power products.
To see if your energy provider offers green-power options, visit
eere.energy.gov/greenpower.
- STANDBY NO LONGER
– Electricity "leaks" are no laughing matter. Televisions, video and DVD
players, cable boxes, and other electronic equipment found in nearly
every American home are wasting huge amounts of energy. When these
devices are left on standby (the equivalent of "sleep" mode for
computers) they use about 40 percent of their full running power. Every
year, the energy wasted in this way is the equivalent of the annual
output of 26 power plants. To avoid the drain of these "energy
vampires," plug them into a power strip and turn it off when they are
not in use.
- TURN OFF YOUR CHARGERS
– Most cell-phone chargers continue to draw electricity even when the
phone isn't plugged into it. If your cell-phone charger averages five
watts per hour and is plugged in all the time, that means a total of
more than 40 kilowatt-hours every year, or about 93 pounds of CO2. The
same problem applies to your other electronic equipment—your laptop,
iPod, digital camera, and BlackBerry. Unplug all your chargers when they
are not in use.
- RECYCLE YOUR BATTERIES
– Although the number of electrical gadgets that use disposable
batteries is on the decline, each person in the U.S. discards eight
batteries per year. Overall, Americans purchase nearly three billion
batteries annually, and about 179,000 tons of those end up in the
garbage. Batteries have a high concentration of metals, which if not
disposed of properly can seep into the ground when the casing erodes.
Avoid disposable batteries by using your outlets whenever possible. If
you can't do without batteries, use rechargeable and recycled ones. You
should also have your batteries collected and recycled. Go to
rebat.com for a list
of companies that participate in battery reclamation.
- TURN OFF YOUR COMPUTER
WHEN YOU LEAVE AT NIGHT – While computers
do require a power surge when you first turn them on, they don't need
enormous amounts of electricity to function for lengthy periods. Also,
you can set your computer on "sleep" mode, which uses about three watts
per hour, if you are going to be away from your desk for more than 15
minutes.
- GET INVOLVED
– Recycling at home doesn't get you off the hook at work. If your office
doesn't recycle, or recycles only paper, find out why. If you work in a
small office, call your local authority to discover what recycling
equipment and services are available. These may include storage
containers and compacters as well as collection. If you work in a larger
office, ask your building-services coordinator why there are no
recycling facilities and whom you would need to speak to about starting
a recycling program for paper, glass, metal, and plastic. For more
information, visit
earth911.org.
- PRINT DOUBLE-SIDED
- American businesses throw away 21 million tons of paper every year,
175 pounds per office worker. For a quick and easy way to halve this,
set your printer's default option to print double-sided (duplex
printing). This has the added advantage of halving the paper pile on
your desk. To further cut your paper wastage, make sure you always use
"print preview" mode to check that there are no overhanging lines and
that you print only the pages you need. Other ways to cut down on paper
before you get to the printing stage include using single or 1.5 spacing
instead of double spacing, and reducing your page margins.
- CONSERVE WATER IN YOUR
GARDEN – Attach a barrel to your
downspout that will collect rain from your roof's eaves. Your plants
will thank you: rainwater is better for your garden, as the chlorine in
tap water can inhibit plant growth. You can also save six gallons every
minute of watering simply by attaching a trigger nozzle to your hose so
that you use water only when it's needed. In addition, if you grow your
grass a little longer, it will stay greener and require less water than
a closely mowed lawn.
- CREATE A LIVING FENCE
– When replacing yard fences, instead of building a wooden fence, opt
for a living fence. A living fence is a hedge or row of trees, which can
be groomed to maintain appearance. Not only is a living fence less
expensive than a traditional fence, it also never needs to be painted.
This saves you money and time and keeps harmful chemicals out of the
environment. Try to use native flora and to avoid hedges comprised of
only one species.
- RECYCLE YOUR NEWSPAPER
– There are 63 million newspapers printed each day in the U.S.; 44
million, or about 69 percent, of these will be thrown away. Recycling
just the Sunday papers would save more than half a million trees every
week.
- PLANT A TREE
– It's the simplest thing in the world to gather acorns, chestnuts,
sweet chestnuts, and sycamore seeds in the autumn, plant them
immediately, and forget them until the following spring. The success
rate for acorns is not as high as for the other three, but in a good
year about 40 percent germinate into oak trees. There's little that will
stop the others from growing into healthy trees within the first year.
Start saplings in Styrofoam coffee cups, which can be split with a knife
so that the roots aren't disturbed when you plant them outdoors. Keep
the saplings for four or five years, then plant them in your own garden,
offer them to friends, or return them to nature. It may seem like a very
small contribution, but if 5 percent of the U.S. population were to
germinate one tree in one year, there would be almost 15 million extra
trees absorbing carbon from the atmosphere. For more information, visit
arborday.org.
- AVOID PESTICIDES
– Use natural methods of pest control. Form a log pile—dead wood
provides a habitat for many kinds of wildlife, such as snakes and ground
beetles. Both are natural predators for snails and slugs. If you create
a small pond to encourage frogs and toads, they will help mop up the
rest of your slug life. In the short term you can get rid of slugs using
beer traps (slugs are attracted to yeast). To get rid of whiteflies, buy
Encarsia formosa, small parasitic wasps that eat whiteflies. Grow
flowers such as marigolds to attract ladybugs, hoverflies, and
lacewings, all of which protect against aphids.
- BAT BOXES
– Want to reduce the number of mosquitoes in your backyard? Then invest
in a bat box. One bat can eat up to 1,000 mosquitoes a night. You will
also be making a contribution to our country's temperate biodiversity:
bat populations in America and around the world are declining,
especially in urban areas, where they have few roosting spaces. Ideally,
group two or three boxes together, place them as high as possible, and
face them so the sun directly heats them for six to seven hours each
day. If you are making a bat box yourself, use untreated and unpainted
wood. It is essential that bats not be disturbed, so make certain your
bat boxes cannot be reached by any local cats. For more information,
visit
batconservation.org/content/Bathouseimportance.html.
- WALK OR BIKE
– Always consider alternatives to driving, especially for journeys under
two miles. It's better for the environment to walk, cycle, or even take
the bus than to hop in your car. Currently, only 2 percent of employed
adults walk to work in the U.S. Walking adds to life expectancy, is
safe, helps with mental and physical health, and, best of all, is
completely free. Cycling is another way to get around and has recently
become more popular, what with more bike paths and cool new gadgets like
L.E.D. lights for riding in the dark. New kinds of folding bikes have
been specially developed for the commuter. Surprisingly, recent studies
have shown that bicyclists in cities are less exposed to air pollution
than people in cars and taxis.
- BUY A HYBRID
– Hybrid cars, which run on a combination of a gasoline engine and an
electric motor, are all the rage these days. They get up to 50 miles per
gallon, while a typical S.U.V. might travel around 15 m.p.g. Hybrids can
offer substantial savings, and you may qualify for a one-time tax credit
of up to $3,400. For information on U.S hybrid-car incentives, go to
hybridcars.com/tax-deductions-credits.html.
- BIOFUELS 101, PART 1
– Have you heard of biofuels? Biodiesel and bioethanol are alternative
fuels derived from crops such as sugarcane, oilseed rape, and used
cooking oil, which are generally blended with diesel fuel or gasoline.
Biofuels are available in a range of different blends—for example, 30
percent biofuel and 70 percent gas or diesel. Biodiesel is generally
appropriate for any diesel vehicle designed to run on low-sulphur
diesel. Biodiesel blends are becoming more widely available in the U.S.
To find out about local availability, check
biodiesel.org/buyingbiodiesel/distributors.
- BIOFUELS 101, PART 2
– Bioethanol is an alcohol-based fuel. A 5 percent blend of bioethanol
can be included in ordinary gas and used by any car in the U.S. that
runs on unleaded gas. You may already be using bioethanol-blended gas,
as the 5 percent version is now being sold in the U.S. through unmarked
unleaded-gas pumps. Saab and Ford both have a flex-fuel model available,
which can run on bioethanol-based fuel or on straight gasoline. If you
drive an older model, you can still use biofuel if you are willing to
have your car converted to flex-fuel.
- DISCOVER YOUR CARBON
FOOTPRINT – If you think you're already
pretty green, determine your carbon footprint: a measurement of how your
lifestyle choices affect carbon emissions. Your footprint will take into
account your habits, the food you eat, your gas and electricity usage,
your car and air mileage. Your score will be compared to the average
figures for your county. These online tests aim to help you estimate
your own carbon emissions and calculate how much of the planet's
resources are required to sustain your lifestyle. They may motivate you
to make changes, helping you set simple goals to reduce your negative
impact on the planet. To learn about your carbon footprint, go to
carbonfootprint.com/calculator.html.
- GET AN ELECTRIC LAWN
MOWER – Surrender your gas lawn mower.
Gasoline lawn mowers are among the dirtiest of modern machines. A study
funded by the Swedish E.P.A. found that using a four-horsepower lawn
mower for an hour causes the same amount of pollution as driving a car
93 miles. The trouble with gas lawn mowers is that they not only emit a
disproportionate amount of CO2, they are also responsible for releasing
carcinogens such as polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons into the air.
Retire the noisy monster and buy an electric or manual model. Better
still, reduce the number of times you mow per season and let some of
your lawn grow wild, which has added benefits for bugs, butterflies, and
birds. For more information, visit
greengrasscutters.com.
- GREEN GRILLING
– If you have a charcoal barbecue grill, make sure your charcoal comes
from a sustainable source. Enormous areas of tropical rainforest are
destroyed every year to produce the 900,000 tons of charcoal burned
annually in the U.S. Chimney starters are the most environmentally
friendly solution to lighting charcoal. They use only a couple of pieces
of newspaper, meaning you can avoid the gas-flavored meat that
accompanies barbecues started with lighter fluid or fire starters. If
you are replacing your grill, remember that using a gas, rather than
charcoal, grill is the most environmentally friendly way to barbecue. It
avoids forest destruction and doesn't add to local air pollution.
- RE-GIFT GIFT WRAP
– Help cut down on the consumption of paper and plastic by re-using
wrapping paper, ribbons, bows, and gift bags. These items should be good
for at least one more wrapping. If you are feeling creative, use old
calendars, pages from magazines, or even newspaper to wrap gifts.
- A GREEN ENDING
– Green funerals don't just mean a woodland burial. Very few people
actually know about the green alternatives to steel or hardwood coffins.
Many private funeral homes present green alternatives to traditional
coffins, including wicker caskets and shrouds. Currently, 89 percent of
coffins sold are made of chipboard that is manufactured using
formaldehyde. When chipboard coffins are cremated, they can release
toxic gases. If buried, they disrupt local ecosystems; as the chipboard
decays, the formaldehyde and glue leach into the soil and groundwater.
Finally, most people opting for a green good-bye will choose a meadow or
woodland burial, with only a memorial tree marking the grave. For more
information, visit
fullcirclecare.org/endoflife/funeral.htm.
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