Friday, December 28, 2007

New Years Resolutions Go Green

Start the New Year with Steps toward Helping the Environment!
By Linda McDonnell

When you're making your New Years resolutions, try adding a few environment-friendly practices you can follow all year to help save the planet.

This New Year why not make a few resolutions to help keep the environment healthy. Simple changes in daily routines followed throughout the year can make a difference. Below are some suggestions that are easy to do and can set you on the road to sustainable living. Some may even save money as well as helping the environment.
  • Reuse shopping bags, or better yet, get a durable bag to carry with you to the grocery store and on all your shopping trips.
  • Buy locally made and grown products. They usually require less packaging and eliminate the environmental costs of long-distance transport. The added bonus is that local fruits and vegetables are often fresher, and locally produced goods help support your own community.
  • Buy fewer disposable items. Look for long-lasting goods that won’t have to be replaced as often. You’ll reduce waste and save landfill space.
  • Compost leaves and garden trimmings. The compost will improve your garden soil while reducing waste.
  • While you’re shopping with your reusable shopping bag, look for products with recycled content. Buying recycled closes the cycle by putting resources back into use.
  • If possible, find a carpool partner to share your daily commute. Carpooling helps reduce air pollution and traffic congestion. It could mean room for more trees if less land is needed for highways!
  • If one of your resolutions is to get more exercise, try doing your shopping and errands on foot as part of your exercise program. Walking will help keep automobile pollution down and, like carpooling, help ease traffic congestion.
  • If you have a ceiling fan that’s reversible, don't forget about it when summer ends. In winter, set it to rotate clockwise at low speed. As heated air rises, the fan will distribute it downward to keep you warmer without turning up the thermostat.
  • Switch to environmentally friendly commercial laundry soaps.
  • More exercise! In sunny weather, dry your laundry the old fashioned way: outdoors on a clothesline. You'll save energy by not using the dryer.
  • Try using natural, home-made cleansers instead of chemical ones. Here are a few simple recipes: For an all-purpose cleanser, mix ½ cup vinegar in one quart of water (reduce water for hard jobs). Use it in a spray bottle. Instead of commercial fabric softener, add ¼ cup (or less) borax to the laundry wash cycle. To deodorize and soften laundry, add one cup of vinegar to the rinse cycle.

Starting the New Year with a few environmental resolutions can offer the satisfaction of knowing you’re doing something positive toward ecological sustainability.

From GreenLiving.com

Thursday, December 20, 2007

Carbon Free Book

An Interview With Author And Offsetter Larry Nocella

Did you ever consider the greenhouse gas costs of publishing a novel? Author Larry Nocella did. His new book Where Did This Come From? is the world’s first CarbonFree™ novel.

Read on for our complete interview with award-winning author Larry Nocella about his novel Where Did This Come From? and his decision to offset with Carbonfund.org.


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Larry Nocella is Carbonfund.org’s first author to offset the emissions from a book publication, placing him on the cutting edge of writers and artists who seek ways to reduce their greenhouse gas output.

Based in the fictional South American nation of Palagua, Where Did This Come From? follows the Huapi tribe’s desperate struggle for survival. When a leading U.S. toy manufacturer discovers a rare and beautiful crystal on the Huapi’s sacred land, mining operations begin immediately. Christmas shopping season is coming, and Crystal Clay is by far the top seller. Soon the Huapi find themselves and the jungle that supports them on the brink of annihilation. Can they hope to resist the desire of consumers who never bother to ask, Where Did This Come From?

Carbonfund.org recently chatted with Larry Nocella about the novel and his decision to offset the carbon emissions associated with publishing it.

Carbonfund.org: Where did the inspiration for this novel come from?

Larry Nocella: It all began as I learned about what happens to animals as they are changed from living beings into what we call food. After watching a few documentaries on factory-farming, my stomach (and my conscience) turned and I decided to pursue being a vegetarian.

That journey led me to question more than just food. I wondered about the origin of all things we purchase and the unknown impact we cause. Whether it’s food, sneakers, diamonds, oil, or chocolate, everything we consume has a mysterious and, sadly, often tragic story behind it. Demand drives the world.

At first encounter, that realization can make you feel powerless, but then you realize your decisions matter, and therefore you can make a positive difference, so with the right attitude, coming through that ignorance, striving against it, is empowering.

CF: When did you get the idea to offset the carbon generated by publishing the book?

LN: They were born together. The title of the novel, Where Did This Come From?, paired with the physical book itself, is a summary of the unanswerable question that forms the core of the plot.

I also prefer to lead by example. It didn’t make sense for me to raise all these questions and not even try to make a difference. I don’t believe that’s helpful. A lot of writing raises questions, but the writer doesn’t take a shot at a solution. I like to lead the charge toward brainstorming a solution.

CF: How did Carbonfund.org come to be your choice for a carbon offsetter?

LN: In short, simplicity. I looked at a few different carbon offsetters, and they wanted me to do a large amount of research. My thought was: but that’s what you’re for; I’m busy writing. Carbonfund.org made it simple: I got quick answers on what I had to do to become CarbonFree. It also adds one more aspect of the book to think about and discuss.

Where Did This Come From? is available from Amazon.com. Also, be sure to take a look at Larry Nocella’s website.

Monday, December 17, 2007

Toy firms under fire over toxic Christmas

As you finish your Christmas shopping, you might think twice before grabbing just any toy off the shelf for your little ones. Many toys have harmful chemicals in them that consumers are unaware of. But don't fret - there is a new website that has information on the most popular toys and whether they contain harmful chemicals or not. So before you run to the store for those last minute gifts, take a few minutes to browse the list first.

New web site allows consumers to check if their kids' Christmas presents contain toxic nasties

With toy firms looking to cash in on the Christmas shopping boom, pressure on them to remove hazardous chemicals from their products stepped up a notch today with the launch of a web site designed to allow consumers to easily check if their products contain harmful chemicals.

The Healthy Toys site is based on research from US environmental group The Ecology Center that assessed 1,200 popular children's toys for toxic chemicals capable of harming human health or the environment, including lead, PVC, cadmium, arsenic, bromine and tin. It allows consumers to search by product name and gain information on its chemical content.

Friday, December 14, 2007

Solar Powered Bluetooth Headset

Iqua Sun is the worlds first solar powered Bluetooth headset

Green Products
Wednesday, 21 November 2007

If you thought Bluetooth headsets couldn't get any better, think again. The Iqua Sun is the worlds first solar powered Bluetooth headset. Light and compact the Iqua Sun Bluetooth headset looks simple and modern in design, but delivers on performance.

The Iqua Sun combines first-rate technology with elegance and innovation, drawing its power directly from the sun giving you complete freedom, for the first time, from any charging devices.

Amazingly, the Iqua Sun weighs just 14 grams and fits directly into the ear, worn in complete comfort without the need for an uncomfortable ear hook. The headset boasts an impressive 200 hours standby time, and 9 hours talk time in complete darkness.

Get Free Stuff and Help the Environment too!

Do you have a pile of old clothes sitting around? Do you have a surplus of tools you don't use stacked up in the garage? Do you have lots of stuff that is still in good condition but you just don't use it anymore?

Why not try www.freecycle.org - its a networking website that allows you to give your stuff away to someone who wants it. That means it won't end up in the trash or a landfill and you'll help someone out! You can also request items and look for the things you need too. Everything from puppies to event tickets can be given away to those who want or need them, so take a look and start giving (and getting!) today.

For the locals here in Lubbock, the website is http://groups.yahoo.com/group/LubbockFreecycle/

For everyone else, check out the main page at www.freecycle.org

Top 10 Environmental Searches of 2007

Thursday, 13 December 2007

2007 may go down as the year people stopped talking about the climate crisis and actually did something about it.

Environmental awareness gained momentum over the year, which marks the 10th anniversary of the Kyoto Protocol.

  1. Recycling
  2. Global Warming
  3. Freecycle
  4. Earth
  5. Pollution
  6. Al Gore
  7. Environmental Protection Agency
  8. Live Earth
  9. Hybrid Cars
  10. Solar Energy

In February, Al Gore's "An Inconvenient Truth" won an Academy Award and brought global warming front and center. Throughout the summer, buzz on "stop global warming" boomed, and conscientious citizens looked to reduce their carbon footprint.

Another familiar eco-issue on the minds of searchers this past year was pollution, from water to air. Clearly, rising oceans and falling air quality are concerns, and people used Search to monitor what the Environmental Protection Agency was doing about them and look into the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, which shared this year's Nobel Peace Prize with Al Gore.

Closer to home, hybrid cars, solar energy, and recycling programs proved popular. And Freecycle.org, a social networking approach to local recycling emerged a hit as consumers sought to exchange used goods in their neighborhoods. (Take that, landfills!)

In terms of sheer search volume, residents of the Big Apple proved the most interested in global warming, edging out the environmentally conscious San Francisco Bay Area. When it came to hybrid cars, Los Angeles posted the most searches. Whether that's out of concern for the planet or frustration over gas prices and gridlock, we can't really say.

2007 saw queries on global warming reach their highest level ever, as searchers acted on their environmental concerns. Feel free to do your part and recycle the top 10 list by emailing it to a friend.


From www.Zegreen.com

Friday, December 7, 2007

Have yourself a 'green' little Christmas

More household waste is produced during the holidays than any other time of year. Sanitation departments estimate that between Thanksgiving and New Year's alone, about six million tons of extra waste is generated nationwide. The 2.6 billion holiday cards sold each year in the United States could fill a football field 10 stories high. And then there are the Christmas trees, the gift wrap, the Styrofoam peanuts….Gwen Shaffer files this report on how to have an extravagant, yet "green," Christmas....


Green Christmas
Americans generate millions of additional trash over the holidays. But there are alternatives to wrapping paper and Styrofoam peanuts.
December 21, 2001

More household waste is produced between Thanksgiving and New Years than any other time of the year - as much as six million additional tons. The 2.6 billion holiday cards sold each year in the United States could fill a football field 10 stories high. And then there are the mountains of gift-wrap, Styrofoam peanuts, Christmas trees and candy boxes that generally end up in the landfill. But it doesn't have to be that way. There are alternatives to highly packaged gifts and prepared food trays.

Fran Pieri, director of education for the Pennsylvania Resources Council, says most cities will pick up Christmas trees for recycling. "Also, if you have woods behind you, you can put peanut butter on the pine cones and seeds and it can actually be a refuge for birds in the winter time," she adds.

The biggest trash generator is gifts, Pieri says.
"Some of the things people can do would be minimize on 'stuff' purchases - like big packages with extra packaging. Things like theater tickets and gift certificates do not require a lot of packaging. They are usable but don't create that environment of trash," she says.

There are also plenty of environmentally friendly gifts available. One idea would be to give friends items that save energy - such as low-flowing shower heads and fluorescent light bulbs that use much less energy than candescent bulbs. Rechargeable batteries are an especially thoughtful gift for kids whose toys require batteries that are otherwise thrown away on a regular basis.

If you have your heart set on wrapping gifts, though, look to see if the paper you do buy is made from recycled paper. You can also purchase beautifully decorated gift boxes and bags (the dollar stores sell them).

"You just have to put ribbons on them and don't have to use all that wrapping paper," Pieri points out. The ribbon and box are both reusable. "And for children who want to wrap presents for parents, they can glitz up an already used brown paper bag."

As people upgrade new computers and electronics this year, look into donating your old equipment to a non-profit that will refurbish it and donate it to a school or needy family, Pieri says. The Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection runs an e-cycling program, as well.

Since packaging is among the biggest contributors to holiday trash, Pieri recommends avoiding gifts with "excess packaging."

"Rather than using new tissue paper to wrap ornaments and things you don't want to break, reuse that same bubble wrap and peanuts," she says. "Also, plastic bags that you buy at the supermarket are great for wrapping ornaments or things that are breakable."

It is certainly quicker and easier to serve prepared foods, but the containers they come in will be here forever if they aren't recycled. When you are entertaining this year, Pieri says, try to make dishes from scratch or ask people to bring just one dish that's homemade.

Rather than toss out your holiday cards in January, Pieri suggests donating them to a nursery school or day care.

"Kids cut out the pictures and glue them into a scene or a collage," she says. "I've used wrapping paper to make bowties on figures like a reindeer, so I'm not throwing it away but rather reusing it for an arts and craft project."

And in order to save energy, consider writing out a shopping list, Pieri says.

"Plan your shopping trip. Head towards where you need to go and purchase as many products as possible the first time - instead of going back and forth to the store and wasting the gas because you forgot one thing."

Monday, December 3, 2007

Hereford hosts first ethanol plant to run in Texas

The New Brew



HEREFORD - Jeffrey See looked over his shoulder and swept his arm toward the vats and pipes lining the dusty, concrete hallway.

"I know it's hard to believe now, but it is going to look like a hospital," See said.

It wasn't hard to believe. The building already felt sterile, despite the dirt on the floor, and only the rows of windowed cisterns, instead of gurneys, and the hard hats that crowned See and everyone around him ruined the effect. Pipes twisted their way around the large metal box of a building, ready to push, first, ground corn, then mash, then fermented slurry toward tall, outdoor columns. High-proof mush would drip down the metal tubes, leaving vaporized alcohol to float into a condenser, be ruined for human consumption to fit federal health requirements, and then pushed out to huge storage tanks to wait for the next train.

Jim Watkins / Staff
White Energy V.P. of Construction and Development, Jeff See describes the flow at the Hereford, Texas ethonal plant they are building.
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The yeast needed the cleanliness, explained See, White Energy's vice president of construction and development and a veteran builder of ethanol plants. The vats will be scrubbed again and again to ensure no bacteria interfered with the tiny organisms that would ferment millions of bushels of corn into an initial, 30-proof brew.

"Super-strong beer," See said.

Texas's first ethanol facility should begin grinding bushels for fuel late this month. White Energy's 100 million gallon facility in Hereford comes online as its industry struggles with low prices, large supplies and bad press. It also opens a much smaller field than excited announcements with datelines from smaller Texas towns promised - the refinery is the first of four nearing completion and nine originally permitted in the state.

Residents who will live and work not far from the newest addition to the smalltown skyline did not know what to make of the facility. None of the fuel distilled in the tall, steel columns

constructed over the past year will be sold in the surrounding region, and the majority of the corn will come from far away. New jobs will help but are far fewer than the 350 workers that built the complex and lived and ate in the city for now.

"What's going to happen when they leave and they're up and running?" Terri Sursa asked.

Gallons for gallons

White capitalized on 50-year-old grain and rail infrastructure in Hereford. All of the corn used for the process will come by rail from the Midwest, through a contract with ADM Cargill. Local sorghum may play a part in the ethanol mix, though price and quality would dictate that, and the mix would not likely reach higher than 20 percent, chief executive Gary Kuykendall said.

Jim Watkins / Staff
The White Energy ethonal plant under construction in Hereford, Texas.
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Each Deaf Smith County ethanol plant will use roughly 400 million gallons of water a year, or more than a third of what Hereford pumped from its well fields in 2006.

Because both sites import their corn from the Midwest, the operations drain less of the region's water than other projects. A bushel of corn, which in Nebraska took 2,100 gallons of irrigation in a 2003 study, produces 2.7 gallons of ethanol, according to a recent report by the National Research Council. Using those numbers, a 100 million gallon ethanol plant would need more than 77 billion gallons of water a year for its corn alone - close to eight times what the city of Lubbock used in 2006.

The Panhandle couldn't handle that for long. Cash crops, dairies, feedlots and cities rely on the Ogallala aquifer, a massive underground formation stretching from West Texas to Nebraska, to quench the arid reason. The aquifer has declined steadily over the past 50 years, and as surface water resources like Lake Meredith struggle, bigger cities like Amarillo and Lubbock will compete with traditional agricultural users for the water.

Long term water usage estimates projected a Deaf Smith County shortage for irrigated agriculture before the plants began construction.

Hereford Mayor Bob Josserand doesn't believe water issues would turn away the dairies or other businesses that have moved to his area any time soon, but he regrets not investing in a more expensive city wastewater treatment center that could have recycled gray water and expects to make a costly investment in brackish groundwater tucked far below the Ogallala to supply the city in the future.

"There are several solutions, none of them very appealing to the average citizen," Josserand said.

The ethanol plants would be pushed to increase water recycling, too, he said. White Energy is designing a gray water system that would allow the plant to move off of the city's treated water supply and recycle waste, though the company has not made enough progress to set a date for when it could begin using such a system, Kuykendall said.

"We are working with several water organizations today to try to figure that out, not only for this plant, but for all of our plants," Kuykendall said.

A lonely spot

This Panhandle town is a lonely southern dot in the galaxy of ethanol plants marked in See's wind-blasted office trailer.

It's as far south as he has traveled to build a facility, he said, though he'll soon move a little further to work on another White Energy plant under construction in Plainview.

White is not likely to have much more company in the current market. Panda Energy worked toward opening its 100 million gallon facility outside Hereford, fueled by burning cow manure, in the first quarter of 2008. A smaller, Levelland ethanol plant fueled mostly by local grain also expects to open early next year.

But other proposed Panhandle projects remain, at best, on the drawing board - a 200 million gallon plant in Pampa has not moved toward construction, and smaller sites in Friona and Sunray remain in the planning or finance stages, according to representatives from the projects. Other plants announced years ago in central and southern Texas do not have permits from the state's environmental regulatory agency.

Kuykendall faulted a wave of reports tying ethanol to rising food prices, reports that ignored the increases in transportation costs and tight global supplies for grain, he said, for the industry slow down. State leaders chose not to fund ethanol incentives this year, which led White Energy to reconsider its position in Texas, he said.

It's become tougher to find private financing, too. Bruce Bullock, director of the Maguire Institute for Energy at Southern Methodist University, pointed to the fuel's dependence on government mandate to create a market and an estimated 80 percent increase in domestic ethanol production over the past two years. Global production is up 30 percent over the last year, he said.

Investment interest dried up as potential ethanol production climbed.

"Needless to say, as a result of that, ethanol prices have come down," Bullock said.

Kuykendall considered the national supply numbers overblown. Refiners were perking up at low ethanol prices, and the smaller supply could find a wider market than government mandates.

"We're not nearly that bullish," Kuykendall said. "I don't think you're going to see as much capacity come online as people thought five months ago."

No easy street

Stores, hotels and rental properties have enjoyed the construction. Sales tax revenue jumped 30 percent as crews raised the refinery, and occupancy rates at city hotels and motels are three times better than normal, city manager Rick Hanna said.

In ten years, after city tax abatements on the facility phase out, Hereford anticipates $400,000 a year in straight revenue - a new fire engine, Hanna said.

"It'll be significant, but it won't put us on easy street," Hanna said.

Antonio Saucedo Baldo, manager of Baldo's restaurant down the road from the ethanol plant, believed the project would help his city grow. Wanda Cepeda, a hairstylist sitting in her empty salon off of Main Street, hoped the same. Her friend was already interested in trucking jobs related to the distillery.

"I'm certain that it will bring a lot of work in and help some businesses that are slow," Cepeda said, looking around her shop. "We need some business around here."

Crystal Velasco, manager of JJ's Diner, wondered about a brewery smell once the plant cranked up, and worried about the safety of the facility sitting so close to town. But at least it offered some variety to the standard trade for the area, she said.

"There's a lot of dairies, a lot of things to do with cows," Velasco said. "It's something different."

Terri Sursa, manager of the Sun Loan company and Tax Service on Main Street, figured those nearby dairies and feedlots meant Hereford residents could handle any smell the refinery might throw at them. She rifled through the local paper to one lonely rental property advertised in the classifieds. Prices improved and the number of available rental homes plummeted with the arrival of the construction crews, she said.

But the flood of contract workers had not meant much to her business, she said, and she wondered about what the plant would contribute to the community once it began producing fuel. The whole operation could be monitored at night by four employees monitoring work stations and a fifth rover to watch the machinery. The site will employ 40.

"In the long run, I don't know what it will do," Sursa said.

Mushy anchor

Josserand thinks he does. The town may not boast the acres of grain the northern states populated with ethanol refineries do, but Hereford is no stranger to a corn-fed economy. Idle cattle and mountains of dry feed covered with tarps and tires blanket the landscape rolling toward the city of 14,000. Feedlots have long been big business in the county, and dairies fleeing higher land costs elsewhere have begun to join them.

Cargill supplies a good amount of the dark food pellets stored under those tarps. But high corn prices have helped drive cattle out of the Panhandle and into northern states, according to Cattle Fax, a market research service for the industry.

An estimated 150,000 fewer head of cattle were fed in the southern states this year, owing in part to the lower feed costs that can be found in the corn rich north, said Kevin Good, a senior market analyst for the service.

Huge centrifuges at the ethanol plant wait to prepare 830,000 tons of wet distiller's grain, a high-energy corn mush, for the area's cattle operations.

The plant jobs, the trucking opportunities, the tax boost - all of that would be good for Hereford, Josserand said.

But the real value to the area was the high-energy wet feed White Energy and other ethanol plants will eagerly look to unload, he said in a telephone interview from the office of his feedlot, AzTx Cattle Co.

"We'd see a lot more cattle move north into the northern states where the product is available," Josserand said. "Because the product will be here, it will keep the feedlots here, keep the packing houses here - it will be very beneficial to the area overall."

How Green is Your Christmas Tree?

Artificial Christmas trees are from China and over the years, have affected the sale of real live trees in the United States. Nearly all of these fake trees contain lead, polyvinyl chloride (PVC) and insects and are not environmentally friendly.

However, real trees are making a comeback. Formed by two of the largest Christmas tree growers in the U.S. - Holiday Tree Farms and Yule Tree Farms - the Coalition of Environmentally Conscious Growers(TM), a not-for-profit 501 (C)(6), is an organization dedicated to environmentally-sound farming practices and consumer education.

The Coalition has recently developed hang tags to mark trees that have been certified as having been grown under stringent environmental criteria. The intent of the certification process is to ensure that growers are utilizing sustainable growing practices in the production of Christmas trees. Over 200,000 trees will bear the tag this year.

Certification Process

Growers will be evaluated by Freer Consulting Company based in Seattle, an independent auditor using the program elements outlined in this document. To meet the requirements for certification under the Coalition of Environmentally Conscious Growers criteria, each of the program elements must result in Level Two or higher ratings in six or more elements.

Scoring

Scoring of program elements will be on a three level system.

  • Level One: Farm management shows little or no knowledge of the required element or does not practice management techniques that fulfill the criteria.

  • Level Two: Farm management demonstrates basic knowledge of the required element and practices that meet the minimum standards that fulfill the criteria.

  • Level Three: Farm management demonstrates extensive knowledge of the required element and meets or exceeds the minimum standards that fulfill those criteria.

Maintaining Certification

The Coalition of Environmentally Conscious Growers certification is valid for three years. All participants are subject to annual site evaluations that include a performance overview focusing on any significant alterations in management practices that could affect the continued validity of certification. Satisfactory progress in meeting any deficiencies in program elements or requirements is confirmed during the annual evaluation.

Elements

  • Riparian/Wetland Management – The focus of this element is on the measures taken and management practices employed to protect areas adjoining streams and waterways to and their inhabitants. The prevention of adverse impacts is accomplished through the design and management of the riparian zone buffers, vegetative cover, and by minimizing stream channel disturbances.

  • Soil and Water Conservation – The goal must be to minimize soil losses through conservation tillage and other erosion control practices. Responsible farmland management does not rely exclusively on buffer zones. Some soil loss is unavoidable, creating the need for sediment traps and diversions to control run-off water flows through and off the farm.

  • Nutrient Management – Proper nutrition is critical the producing a healthy, viable crop. Care needs to be taken to use the proper fertilizers and amendments to provide for the needs of the trees while not applying in excess so that it ends up in waterways.

  • Site Selection – Careful consideration of the growing site is important for a successful Christmas tree crop. Soil type, organic content, slope, drainage, climate, and altitude are some of the key factors in considering a new field.

  • Pest Management – Misuse of chemicals can lead to waterway and soil contamination making it important for growers to carefully look at how they manage pests. Implementation of an Integrated Pest Management (IPM) is criteria step in environmental protection. While such a program does not exclude the use of chemicals, it includes careful pest monitoring and identification, determining acceptable pest thresholds, and treatment with the least toxic products.

  • Worker Safety and Protection – A key part to a raising quality Christmas trees is a healthy, productive staff. Employee safety and well-being is always a priority.

  • Biodiversity – Sustainable farming also include practices that support and enhance biodiversity throughout the farm. Soil micro fauna, such as bacteria and fungi, break down soil organic matter and help maintain soil quality while recycling nutrients. Many insects are beneficial and prey on agricultural pests. Increasing biodiversity on the farm not only benefits wildlife but also the farm itself.

  • Consumer Education – Most of the general population does not understand farming practices, especially that of Christmas trees and how they are good for the environment. The public needs to be informed of sustainable practices that promote the best care of the land, water, air, and nature in general and understand that renewable, recyclable crops are the key to the future.
http://www.christmastreeoregon.com/cecg.html

Wednesday, October 31, 2007

Online Bill Pay Saves More Than Just Trees

Scientific American points out that the benefits of online banking and billing reach beyond saving trees. Reducing paper use also reduces the resources needed to make, ship and discard the paper.


Imagine every US household opting to receive no paper bills or bank statements. The fuel saved (26 million BTUs) in this scenario would power San Francisco for a year, and 16.5 fewer trees would be cut down annually. 20,000 swimming pools full of water would be saved and 56,000 garbage trucks of solid waste would be eliminated. Air pollutants and particulates would be cut, contributing to increased air quality. And the cost? Just displacing a few electrons to receive your bills and statements online.

53% of households do their banking online already. If you're ready to go paperless, ask your bank, utility, phone and cable companies, etc. how to stop paper mailings on your account.

From: , Triple Pundit
Published August 20, 2007 09:41 AM

Monday, October 8, 2007

Green Farming and the Government

Calls Grow to Subsidize Green Farming

Listen to this story... by

 Art Thicke (right) with Chad Crowley (center) and Tex Hawkins
Dan Charles, NPR

Art Thicke (right) says the current farm subsidy system encourages farmers to grow crops that damage the environment. Also pictured: Tex Hawkins (left), of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, and Chad Crowley (center), who works on Thicke's farm.

Farm Subsidies: Key Facts

Under the current federal farm-subsidy system, cotton and rice farmers can get up to hundreds of dollars per acre in production subsidies. These farmers would be unlikely to get as much money if the U.S. switched to a system that subsidized them for improving the environment instead.

-- The federal government expects to pay farmers just over $24 billion in 2005, a new record.

-- The subsidies are distributed through a variety of programs. Some payments kick in when crops fail, or when prices for key commodities, such as corn, fall below a target level. Others are based solely on how much a farm produced in the past.

-- Five crops -- corn, wheat, cotton, soybeans and rice -- account for two-thirds of all subsidies. Vegetable growers and ranchers get very little government money.

-- Large commercial farms, which account for 9 percent of all farms, get more than half of all subsidies.


Farm Subsidy Distribution

Source: USDA

The chart above looks at direct government payments to farmers. Agricultural areas that rely heavily on subsidies include:

• the Corn Belt, where corn and soybeans dominate
• the southeastern Coastal Plain, source of cotton and peanuts
• the lower Mississippi River, where cotton and rice are grown
• west Texas and southern Arizona, where cotton is important
• California, where rice and cotton are important

More from Dan Charles
Morning Edition, July 11, 2005 · The federal government is expected to pay $24 billion in farm subsidies this year. Critics, including quite a few farmers, say taxpayers shouldn't pay for corn or cotton surpluses. Instead, they say the funds should go toward things that benefit the public, such as cleaner water and a healthier environment. Dan Charles has the first of two reports for Morning Edition.

Web Extra: For NPR.org, Dan Charles takes a closer look at a new U.S. government initiative that pays farmers to help the environment:

Art Thicke jokes that he might dig a ditch through the hill that's next to his farm, because if water draining from his land could somehow get through that hill, he might qualify for a check from the federal government.

That hill separates Thicke's farm, near the town of La Crescent, in southeastern Minnesota, from the boundaries of the Root River watershed. (Rain that falls within that area drains into the Root River, which in turn runs into the Mississippi.) The watershed is one of 220 areas around the country where farmers can apply for funding this year from the U.S. Department of Agriculture's Conservation Security Program (CSP).

The CSP is a new initiative. It pays farmers to give the environment a helping hand. Farmers can qualify for payments if they can show that they've done a good job protecting the environment in the past. They must also show that they're preventing manure or other fertilizer from running into streams, and that they're conserving soil and minimizing pesticide use.

Once they qualify, farmers can get extra points -- and higher payments -- for doing additional things that provide habitat for wildlife or protect streams and groundwater. They include cutting back on fertilizer or pesticides, converting crop land into permanent pasture, or building windmills to supply the farm with energy.

Art Thicke's farm probably would qualify for a good-sized payment. Environmental experts consider his farm a model for other farmers. Twenty years ago, Thicke stopped growing corn and soybeans and converted those fields into pastures for his cows instead. That stopped soil erosion, and his pastures have become a haven for ground-nesting birds like bobolinks and meadowlarks.

Congress established the CSP in 2002, but it's just now getting off the ground. It will distribute about $240 million to farmers this year.

That's just 1 percent of all federal farm subsidies. Art Thicke -- along with other environmentalists and farm activists -- wishes it were a lot more. "I'd like to see a farm program that was all based on conservation," he says.

And even though Art Thicke won't get any of that money this year, he should get another chance in the future. The program expects to include a new batch of watersheds each year. USDA officials say that within eight years, it will reach every watershed in the country. -- Dan Charles

http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=4735566

'Green' Walmart in Texas

A 'Green' Wal-Mart in Texas

Listen to this story... by

All Things Considered, August 4, 2005 · A new Wal-Mart store in McKinney, Tex., was designed as a test-ground for various energy conservation technologies and practices, and has thus been dubbed Wal-Mart's "green store." Wal-Mart officials say the store will help them design buildings in the future. Bill Zeeble of member station KERA reports.

http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=4785891

Friday, September 28, 2007

INKETC.: Inks Go Green for Graph Expo

Look toward Graph Expo for these eco-friendly inks, low on VOCs and high on marketability.

By Tim Avery -- Graphis Arts Online, 9/1/2007

The bustling exhibits at this month's Graph Expo leave little room for smog-spouting volatile organic compounds (VOCs). Ink manufacturers are exhibiting in full force their eco-friendly products, either free of, or low in, VOCs.

Flint Group (Booth 2226) is showing its recently introduced vegetable-based Novavit F918 Supreme Bio sheetfed ink line. Sold under the K+E premium brand (acquired in Flint's 2005 merger with XSYS), Novavit's vegetable oils emit fewer VOCs, reports the company. Although low-VOC sheetfed inks are generally thought to set more slowly, Flint says its Novavit dries quickly enough to run without set-off, even through a perfector. The company also reports sharp dots, good ink/water balance and high color intensity from the ink, which is said to be especially well suited for glossy-coated papers and boards.

UV ink cures emissions

INX Int'l. (Booth 429) is exhibiting its new Fusion UV hybrid process ink line, which can be run immediately after conventional inks without reconfiguring presses or conditioning rollers. UV ink means reduced VOC emissions, along with drying in only a matter of seconds. Also on display will be the new Ecopure HPJ soy-based sheetfed ink. INX says Ecopure HPJ provides faster set times than its predecessor, Ecopure HP, and its soy base releases fewer VOCs than oil-based counterparts. Early users report lower water settings, with better gray balance and improved trapping. Both Fusion UV hybrid and Ecopure HPJ accept aqueous and UV coatings, as well as overprint varnishes.

Sun Chemical (Booth 2819) is launching Synergy, a package of UV ink, coating, press conditioner, wash and fountain solution chemistries. The company reports Synergy inks can run on hybrid presses when UV-approved hybrid rollers are used.

Formulations are available for sheetfed, web, high-gloss and plastic applications. According to Sun, the high-gloss series does not require UV coating, and Synergy's plastic inks let operators set up jobs on paper to simplify makeready and reduce start-up costs for plastic printing.

Also at Graph Expo is Sun's low-VOC Liberty sheetfed ink line, sold under the Kohl & Madden brand. A PIA/GATF InterTech Technology Award recipient last year, Liberty also does not contain cobalt driers, another potential environmental hazard. The ink is formulated to dry almost instantaneously once printed, yet can stay open on press without drying for days. Sun says Liberty's ability to come up to color quickly and remain stable reduces press waste.

Toyo Ink America (Booth 455) is showing its VOC-free HyPlus 100 premium sheetfed ink, formulated without petroleum-based solvents. Toyo says HyPlus 100 produces strong contrast and high density with low dot gain, and its low water pick-up accelerates makereadies with less emulsification. It reportedly also reduces chalking, gas ghosting and print mottling in folding-carton applications. Other vegetable-based inks from Toyo include HyLite—said to offer great versatility—and HyUnity.

For web presses, Toyo offers soy-based Soya-News ink, which contains a maximum of 0.08 VOC lb./gal. The company says it resists rubbing and scuffing and is formulated to dry quickly.

Van Son Holland Ink (Booth 3470) is introducing its new SonaCure UV-curable, VOC-free inks, which are available in formulations for use on coated or uncoated paper, board stock, foil and plastic substrates, and lacquered or corona-treated surfaces. Van Son says SonaCure offers high gloss and good rub resistance and, though drying quickly under UV light, stays fresh overnight on-press.

taken from www.graphicartsonline.com

Monday, September 24, 2007

Get Tax Incentives for Green Living

Take advantage of state and federal green living tax incentives

There has never been a better time than now to tap into a laundry list of tax rebates and other financial incentives designed to encourage individuals and businesses to go the greener mile. At the federal level in the U.S., individuals can reap the rewards of no less than eight different financial incentives ranging from tax credits and home loans for replacing windows and installing insulation around the house to tax rebates for purchasing a hybrid car or hooking up a solar hot water heater.

Besides these federal incentives, nearly every U.S. state has additional state or local incentives available. Many require utilities to rebate consumers who save electricity. Some utilities even offer “net metering,” whereby consumers who generate some of their power through rooftop solar panels or other technologies can sell electricity back to the utility, thus reducing or zeroing out their electric bill—even earning money.

Green Living Tax Incentives for Business
Many financial incentives are in place for businesses, as well.

At the federal level, examples include an energy-efficient commercial buildings tax deduction, a business energy reduction tax credit, an energy-efficient appliance tax credit for manufacturers, and a new energy-efficient tax credit for green-savvy builders.

At the state level, many are eager to attract renewable energy companies to their region, and offer tax breaks to get them there. Washington State, for example, charges no sales tax on renewable energy equipment produced or sold there. And some forward-thinking cities are beginning to offer “density bonuses” and green building incentives to developers and builders to encourage sustainable land use.

Find Information About Green Living Tax Incentives
The best place to look for what’s available is to steer your web browser to the free online Database of State Incentives for Renewables and Efficiency (DSIRE), a comprehensive source of information on state, local, utility and federal incentives that promote renewable energy and energy efficiency. DSIRE is a federally funded project of the Interstate Renewable Energy Council, whose membership includes state and local government agencies, national laboratories, renewable energy companies and advocacy groups.

In Canada, the Office of Energy Efficiency at Natural Resources Canada offers a slate of federal grants and incentives under its ecoENERGY Retrofit program to homeowners, businesses, large industries and public institutions to help them invest in energy- and pollution-saving upgrades. The agency also administers the High Efficiency Home Heating System Cost Relief program, which will contribute up to $300 to homeowners who upgrade their old oil or gas furnace or boiler to a new high-efficiency model. And low-income households might qualify for additional federal financial assistance for energy retrofits. Another Canadian program, the Vehicle Efficiency Incentive (VEI) rewards those who buy fuel-efficient cars or trucks with rebates of up to $2,000 each. Beyond these federal programs, selected provincial and municipal entities across Canada also offer incentives to those looking to save energy and the environment.

Taken from www.environment.about.com

Friday, September 21, 2007

Paper, Plastic or Something Better?

Reusable Bags Are Best for Both Consumers and the Environment

The next time the clerk at your favorite grocery store asks whether you prefer “paper or plastic” for your purchases, consider giving the truly eco-friendly response and saying, “neither.”

Plastic bags end up as litter that fouls the landscape, and kill thousands of marine mammals every year that mistake the floating bags for food. Plastic bags that get buried in landfills may take up to 1,000 years to break down, and in the process they separate into smaller and smaller toxic particles that contaminate soil and water. Furthermore, the production of plastic bags consume millions of gallons of oil that could be used for fuel and heating.

Is Paper Better Than Plastic?
Paper bags, which many people consider a better alternative to plastic bags, carry their own set of environmental problems.



For example, according to the American Forest and Paper Association, in 1999 the U.S. alone used 10 billion paper grocery bags, which consumed 14 million trees.

Reusable Bags Are a Better Option
But if you decline both paper and plastic bags, then how do you get your groceries home? The answer, according to many environmentalists, is high-quality reusable shopping bags made of materials that don’t harm the environment during production and don’t need to be discarded after each use. [You can find a good selection of high-quality reusable bags online at reusablebags.com. In addition, many organic grocery stores and consumer co-operatives carry reusable shopping bags.]

Experts estimate that 500 billion to 1 trillion plastic bags are consumed and discarded annually worldwide—more than a million per minute.

Here are a few facts about plastic bags to help demonstrate the value of reusable bags—to consumers and the environment:

  • Plastic bags aren’t biodegradable. They actually go through a process called photodegradation—breaking down into smaller and smaller toxic particles that contaminating both soil and water, and end up entering the food chain when animals accidentally ingest them.
  • According to the Environmental Protection Agency, more than 380 billion plastic bags are used in the United States every year. Of those, approximately 100 billion are plastic shopping bags, which cost retailers about $4 billion annually.
  • According to various estimates, Taiwan consumes 20 billion plastic bags annually (900 per person), and Japan consumes 300 billion bags each year (300 per person), and Australia consumes 6.9 billion plastic bags annually (326 per person).
  • Hundreds of thousands of whales, dolphins, sea turtles and other marine mammals die every year after eating discarded plastic bags they mistake for food.
  • Discarded plastic bags have become so common in Africa they have spawned a cottage industry. People there collect the bags and use them to weave hats, bags and other goods. According to the BBC, one such group routinely collects 30,000 bags every month.
  • Plastic bags as litter have even become commonplace in Antarctica and other remote areas. According to David Barnes, a marine scientist with the British Antarctic Survey, plastic bags have gone from being rare in the late 1980s and early 1990s to being almost everywhere in Antarctica.

Some governments have recognized the severity of the problem and are taking action to help combat it.

Strategic Taxes Can Cut Plastic Bag Use
In 2001, for example, Ireland was using 1.2 billion plastic bags annually, about 316 per person. In 2002, the Irish government imposed a plastic bag consumption tax (called a PlasTax), which has reduced consumption by 90 percent. The tax of $.15 per bag is paid by consumers when they check out at the store. Besides cutting back on litter, Ireland’s tax has saved approximately 18 million liters of oil. Several other governments around the world are now considering a similar tax on plastic bags.

Governments Use the Law to Limit Plastic Bags
More recently, Japan passed a law that empowers the government to issue warnings to merchants that overuse plastic bags and don’t do enough to “reduce, reuse or recycle.” In Japanese culture, it is common for stores to wrap each item in its own bag, which the Japanese consider a matter of both good hygiene and respect or politeness.

Companies Making Tough Choices
Meanwhile, some eco-friendly companies—such as Toronto’s Mountain Equipment Co-op—are voluntarily exploring ethical alternatives to plastic bags, turning to biodegradable bags made from corn. The corn-based bags cost several times more than plastic bags, but are produced using much less energy and will break down in landfills or composters in four to 12 weeks.

Taken from www.environment.about.com

Campaign Earth - step by step conservation

c a m p a i g n e a r t h ! n. a series of actions undertaken to achieve a sustainable future.

Lessen the junk mail and catalogs coming to your house!

Did you know that more than 17 billion catalogs were distributed in the United States in 2001 - that's more than sixty-four for every man, woman, and child. Not surprisingly, this requires a lot of paper, the fourth most energy-intensive of all manufacturing industries and one of the most polluting. The average American uses over 700 pounds of paper per year. The good news is we've got some simple steps for you to take to greatly reduce that number.

If we successfully reduced the number of catalogs produced in this country by 30% we would:

  • preserve 16.6 billion gallons of water each year = the amount of water used by 172,333 households.*
  • conserve over 100 barrels of oil
  • keep 3.5 million tons of CO2 out of the atmosphere = the amount of CO2 produced by 570,000 cars driven 200 miles/ week annually.*
    *Figures from The Alliance for Environmental Innovation (www.environmentaldefense.org/alliance/catalogs_tips.html)

Listed below are three actions you can take to lessen the mail you receive. Take a look at the list and do what you can. Remember, every action counts.

  1. Stop Those Unwanted Catalogs! Now, with the internet, we can do most of our mail order shopping online. Stack your unwanted catalogs in a pile and spend ten minutes a week calling to request that your name be removed from their mailing list.
  2. Receive Less Junk Mail! Send a short letter to: DMA Mail Preference Service, P.O. Box 643, Carmel, NY 10512. You can read more about this at DMAConsumers.org. You need to include $1. List your name, in all its infinite variations, and request that all of these names be removed from their national database. This removal lasts five years, so keep this address handy. For more information contact the DMA at 212-768-7277.
  3. Keep Your Catalogs and Magazines out of the Landfill! Many municipalities don't accept catalogs as part of their recycling program so find a second home for them. Keep them out of the landfill by dropping them off at a local hospital, assisted living home, senior residence facility or school (they use them for art classes and other projects). It's the next best thing.
Duration: 30 days
Average CO2 Savings: 70 pounds a month


Taken from www.campaignearth.org

Monday, September 17, 2007

Back to School - Keep it Green!

Back-to-School

Photo collage: in the classroom; chemistry lessons Students, parents, and teachers can all make a difference in reducing waste at school. By practicing the "3 Rs" of waste reduction—reduce, reuse, and recycle—we can all do our part.

Before starting a new school year, sort through your old materials. Many of last year's supplies can be reused or recycled.

Recycle unwanted papers and reuse your old folders and binders. Paper that had only one side written on it can be reused; you can cut it up and re-staple it to make a notebook.

Many schools reuse text books to save money and reduce waste. Share your used books with friends, relatives, or younger schoolchildren.

Make a list before you shop for school supplies, it will help you remember what you wanted to purchase and limit impulse buying. When you have a plan it's easier to take action.

Buy smart! Purchase and use a wide assortment of supplies made from recycled products, such as pencils made from old blue jeans; binders made from old shipping boxes. Many types of recycled paper products contain a percentage of Post-Consumer Waste (PCW). You can also reuse items like refillable pens, rechargeable batteries, and scrap paper for notes.

Buy used goods from resale shops. This is an inexpensive way to get assorted merchandise, and retro fashions are always coming back into style.

Waste from packaging accounts for more than 30 percent of all the waste generated each year. Use school supplies wrapped with minimal packaging; use compact or concentrated products; or buy products that come in bulk sizes.

Save packaging, colored paper, egg cartons, and other items for arts and crafts projects. Look for other ways you can reduce the amount of packaging you throw away and recycle!

Cover your textbooks with cut-up grocery or shopping bags helps reduce waste and keeps your books in good condition. Be creative - use markers or colored pencils to give your covers unique and fun designs. Paper grocery bags and newspaper are also great for wrapping packages.

Use nontoxic products, inks and art supplies, such as vegetable-based inks, white tape instead of whiteout, and water-based paints, and batteries with less mercury.

Use and maintain durable products, or ones with a lifetime warranty. Sturdy backpacks and notebooks can be reused for many years, which helps reduce the amount of broken items tossed away each year.

Maintain newly purchased items. Students frequently lose small items like pens and pencils. Make a conscious effort to put school supplies in a safe place every day. This will not only reduce waste but it will save you a headache if you lose something important!

If you bring your lunch to school, package it in reusable containers instead of disposable ones, and carry them in a reusable plastic or cloth bag, or lunch box. Bring drinks in a thermos or water bottle instead of disposable bottles or cartons.

If you buy lunch, take and use only what you need: one napkin, one ketchup packet, one salt packet, one pepper packet, one set of flatware. Remember to recycle your cans and bottles, and separate your waste if your school has separation bins!

Take public transportation to school. But, if you do drive, carpool with a friend (or two). Both help prevent wasted fuel, reduce air pollution, and decrease traffic in your community.

Put long-lasting, high-quality tires on your car and bicycle. Be sure to keep your tires properly inflated.

Borrow or rent your decorations and supplies for school parties, dances, and proms. If you buy these supplies, try adopting a theme that can be used from year-to-year, so that you can reuse your decorations and supplies. Your school's theater or acting class is a great place to start finding props and decorations.

Pass it on! Share the "buy smart" message with your family, friends and schoolmates.
Waste less by reducing, reusing, and recycling. Volunteer for, or start, an environmental club or recycling project in your school.

Work with your teachers and friends to find ways to encourage everyone in your community to make waste reduction a part of their everyday lives. You can also look for unique ways to make your school more waste-free, such as starting a school composting project or ask for a day in art class where you can use things that would have normally been thrown away. .

Get ready for school next year by making locker decorations out of old CDs. Decorate them with paint, stickers, rhinestones, or photos; stick magnetic tape to the back; and spruce up your locker! Another great locker decoration: pictures from old magazines that would have been thrown away.

Don't be shy; tell the managers at your favorite stores that you and your friends are interested in seeing more green items on the shelves. Tell your teachers you want to have a time dedicated to learning more about what you and your fellow classmates can do for the environment.

from www.epa.gov

Traveling Tips - Keep it Green!

Travel and Vacations

Photo collage: exploring new lands;  in the field; in the forest There are many opportunities to reduce waste when traveling away from home on business or on vacation. From packing and planning your trip, to hitting the road, learn how you can make a difference.

Before you leave home, adjust the air conditioning and water heater thermostats to conserve energy.



Rather than buying small, travel-sized toiletries, fill reusable containers with shampoo, soap, and other necessities.

Reuse plastic or paper shopping bags to pack items for your trip and recycle them afterwards. Plastic shopping bags are perfect for keeping dirty shoes and wet bathing suits separate from other items in your suitcase, while paper bags are great for packing snacks for the car.



Book flights with airlines that offer electronic tickets to reduce paper waste.

On the Road

If staying in a hotel, check the bedding and linen policy with housekeeping. Some hotels ask that the customer request the bedding or linen be laundered by putting a specific note card on the bed and leaving the towels on the floor. This practice conserves water resources. If your hotel does not follow this practice, use a comment card to ask them to adopt it.

When you leave your hotel room, switch off the air conditioning, lights, and TV to reduce energy use.



While on your trip, remember to take only the amount of products that you need from restaurants or lodgings. Take only napkins, condiment packets, free brochures, maps, or coupons that you will actually use.

Take along a plastic bag to collect your used beverage containers for recycling at rest stops.



When traveling by car or RV, make sure the vehicle is well maintained—this improves fuel economy which prevents pollution and saves you money!

When making reservations at campgrounds, ask about their recycling facilities.

If you change your own motor oil, recycle it at a "quick lube" shop, gas station, or auto store that accepts used motor oil for recycling.

Enjoying the Outdoors

Summer is a popular time for barbecues and other outdoor festivities. At your next party, set the picnic table with reusable dinnerware or ask people to bring their own reusable plates and containers. And remember to recycle all bottles and cans after the party!

Hot summer days require gallons of thirst quenchers. Be sure to recycle the used beverage containers. Instead of buying many small drink bottles, buy drinks or drink mixes in bulk and fill reusable bottles.



At the beach, use old buckets and other items in your house to build sand castles instead of buying new products at the store.



When visiting beaches and parks, be sure to take out everything you bring in, so that you leave places unlittered and undisturbed.

from www.epa.gov

Keep America Beautiful - Lady Bird Johnson

STAMFORD, Conn. - July 12, 2007 - Keep America Beautiful, Inc. was saddened yesterday by news of the passing of former first lady, Lady Bird Johnson.

While Keep America Beautiful, Inc. was originally founded in 1953, Lady Bird's tireless Lady Bird Johnsonadvocacy for the organization throughout the 1960s brought national attention to the organization's mission to bring natural beauty to America's public spaces. As first lady, she was instrumental in convening the White House Conference on Natural Beauty in 1965, and afterward championed the findings through her public support of the Keep America Beautiful organization.

"Lady Bird Johnson always believed that natural beauty was much more than cosmetics," said Keep America Beautiful President G. Raymond Empson. "She understood, and helped others to understand, that beautification efforts have a larger ripple effect throughout all of society."

Indeed, recent studies at the University of Illinois and the Wharton School of Business have proven that beautification efforts - planting trees and flowers in public spaces and removing signs of blight such as litter and graffiti - increase property values, decrease crime, improve public health, and even improve student performance. Lady Bird Johnson understood this important dynamic of "greening" a community well before her time.

In 1969, Keep America Beautiful unveiled the Mrs. Lyndon B. Johnson Award, the organization's highest honor bestowed annually to a female individual for outstanding contribution to the environment and community improvement. Pennsylvania Environmental Protection Secretary Kathleen McGinty won the award in 2006, and the 2007 winner will be announced at the KAB National Conference in Washington, D.C., this December.

For years, the Johnson family has been actively involved in Keep Texas Beautiful and the Keep Austin Beautiful affiliate of the national organization.

"Our organization owes much of our success to Lady Bird Johnson's enthusiasm and visionary approach to improving communities through the power of natural beauty," added Empson. "We extend our condolences to the entire family, knowing that they too are celebrating this blessed life of service to America and the world."

About Keep America Beautiful, Inc.
Keep America Beautiful, Inc., established in 1953, is the nation's largest volunteer-based community action and education organization. With a Network of nearly 1,000 affiliate and participating organizations, Keep America Beautiful forms public-private partnerships and programs that engage individuals to take greater responsibility for improving their community environments. For additional information, visit http://www.kab.org/.

###

Taken from www.kab.org

Friday, September 14, 2007

Recycle your computer hardware

Don’t throw your used and outdated computer hardware in the dumpster...RECYCLE!

Bring any hardware including your hard drive, monitor, keyboard, mouse, or printer to the Southside Recycling Center located at 1631-84th Street (84th and Avenue P). Hours of operation are from 8 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. on Monday through Friday and from 8:00 a.m. to 2:00 p. m. on Saturdays (closed between noon and 1:00 p. m. each day). If you have a large quantity of computer hardware, please call 767-3545 to make special arrangements for drop off.

In August 2006, the City of Lubbock Solid Waste Department began participating in the Texas Department of Criminal Justice (TDCJ) Computer Recovery Program. The computer hardware collected for recycling is sent to one of two TDCJ facilities for refurbishing (Huntsville and Snyder).

TDCJ inmates inspect all items and make needed repairs to insure that the computer hardware is in working order. Inmates are given the opportunity to gain skills to become certified computer technicians and gain employment after their incarceration is completed. Special care is taken to assure hard drives are completely erased prior to refurbishing activities.

The TDCJ offers the refurbished computer hardware to state agencies, counties, cities or school districts at no charge. To view commodities available for purchase from the TDCJ, or for more information on the TDCJ Computer Recovery Program, visit their website at:

http://www.tci.tdcj.state.tx.us/services/cr/default.aspx

How To Shop Green

Considering "going green"? You're probably not the only one.

Enter almost any grocery store and you're bound to find so-called green cleaning products next to traditional ones. Take Tide Cold Water detergent. Procter & Gamble (nyse: PG - news - people ) claims it deep cleans clothes in cold water, cutting down on your energy use, not to mention your energy bill. Car buyers have plenty of environmentally friendly models from which to choose, and energy-efficient appliances get prominent placement on showroom floors.

Even retailers are getting in on the act. Sweden-based fashion emporium H&M introduced a green line in spring 2007, offering frocks and tops made with organic cotton. And Nike (nyse: NKE - news - people ) recently announced plans to make its footwear sustainable, vowing to adopt environmentally friendly production methods where possible.

In Pictures: How To Shop Green

But while an ever-growing range of "green" consumer products are finding their way into our homes, there is very little in the way of industry standard. One manufacturer's green product may have been produced in an entirely different manner than another's. As a result, experts say it's good to maintain a healthy dose of skepticism when choosing environmentally friendly products, and to rely on a select group of organizations monitoring the practices of certain industries.

Do Your Homework
Dig a bit and you'll likely come across the word "greenwashing." This, according to Julia Cosgrove, deputy editor of ReadyMade, a San Francisco-based magazine that focuses on do-it-yourself, sustainable projects, entails marketing a product as environmentally conscious without enough evidence that it really is.

"Much of what we're seeing now is just spin," she says. "When you look further, many of these companies are still making a big environmental footprint."

Translation: Even if a retailer offers clothes made with organic cotton, chances are they are being shipped via huge, gas-sucking airplanes.


Another example is vinyl. It is used in a great deal of vegan shoes, but the production of the material can create dioxin, a known carcinogen.

Clothing company Edun has experienced a case of greenwashing. Although some of its products are made of organic cotton, the company's main objective is to produce ethical (fairly traded, socially responsible)--not green--clothing. Although both concepts are positive, they certainly don't mean the same thing. Edun is an ethical clothing company, and although they take measures to protect the environment, they should not be categorized as green.

How to tell one from the other? Look to several watchdog organizations for a real education.

Digging Deeper
Netherlands-based Made-By tracks a garment's environmental footprint from the first thread on, and the International Forest Stewardship Alliance certifies wood-made products by ensuring that manufacturers collecting lumber are making the best use of forest resources, reducing damage and waste, and avoiding overconsumption and overharvesting. You can find a complete listing of their findings on www.fscus.org.

The Environmental Protection Agency's (EPA) labeling system, Design For The Environment (DfE), ensures that the chemicals in DfE-certified products--like Earth Choice's new range of household cleaners--are environmentally preferable, which means such products are created with lower volatile organic compounds. High levels of these materials can damage soil and groundwater, and emit greenhouse gasses, contributing to global warming.

Kitchen appliances now possess one of the most widely recognized labels, EnergyStar, another EPA-run unit. These labels ensure an appliance meets energy-efficient guidelines set by the EPA and the Department of Energy. Criteria for each appliance differs and can be found on www.energystar.gov under the Products tab.

"It's a fairly well-known metric that will reduce your energy use and save you money," says Ron Jones, founder of Greenbuilder, a development, media and consulting firm dedicated to sustainable development and green building, of EnergyStar. Often, buying a new, energy-saving air conditioner will save you in the end since older models not only cost more to run but often don't work as well.

Whether you're buying one piece of green clothing or remodeling your entire home with energy-efficient appliances, Jones says it's important to note how your everyday activities affect the environment.

"If you start to look at a person in terms of their individual footprint, which includes their transportation habits, eating habits, clothing and housing, it starts to get very complex," he says. "Think through everything. Determine how it will affect your everyday living conditions, and your quality of life going forward."

*from Forbes.com via KCBD Lubbock News