Author: admin

  • 2 – Shop on foot

    Just briefly

    There is an architectural movement called New Urbanism that sets out to design cities and suburbs as walkable spaces that encourage community.

    If you are buying a new house, you might consider taking some of these principles into account. I lived in the inner city of Sydney for twenty years, where most of the shops are in old fashioned strip shopping areas.

    Five years ago, I stopped shopping at the mall and started using local stores.

    That was one of the biggest lifestyle changes I have made and it was instrumental in learning to live in a way that does not harm the planet.

    Inner city locations are often more energy efficient than suburban areas where everyone drives everywhere to do everything.

     Benefits

    Costs

     

    • Save oil
    • Build community
    • Get fitter

    Ten minutes to half an hour each trip.

    Downside

    You might have to plan your shopping trip a little more.

    Places to go

    slowmovement.com

    Hard Facts

    One quarter of car trips are to do shopping and last an average of 13 minutes.

    Search terms

    Gruen factor shopping stroll

    woonerf

    new urbanism

    greener shopping centres

    Related tips

    Shop locally

    Bake your own food.

    Share a car

    Spend nothing for a day

     

  • 1 – Reject Plastic Bags

    The trick is to carry your own bags. It’s easy when you plan to go shopping: you just take a bundle of those ugly green bags you can buy in any supermarket.

    Buy now But it is more difficult when you’re out and about and you don’t have the bag with you. Bummer!

    So, borrow a bag from someone, wrap it up in your shirt, maybe even simply carry it…

    Do not, whatever you do,  accept a plastic bag across the counter. There is simply no need.

    The real test is to change your habits. Add ‘Bag’ to that checklist you run through as you walk out the door. You know the one. It goes like this, “Key. Money. Phone. BAG.”

     Benefits

    Costs

     

    • Save energy
    • Reduce greenhouse gas
    • Save marine life

    A good silk bag costs around $6

    Downside

    You have to keep a bag handy, always

    Places to go

    ecosilkbags.com.au

    noplasticbags.org.au

    Related tips

    Shop locally

    Buy fresh food

    Avoid packaging

    Search terms

    Gyre rubbish

    Turtles plastic

    Say no plastic bags

    Hard Facts

    Sydney consumes more than 500 million bags each year.

    Comebacks

    There are enough bags in the world. Don’t you think?

    I’ve got my own bag, thanks.

    Be inspired!

    Read how the English town of Modbury became the first in Europe to ban plastic bags outright.

     

  • 3 – Avoid packaging

    Packaging is waste. Its original function was to make products easy (and hygienic) to handle. Often, though, its purpose is to make products more attractive or look bigger. For the planet’s sake we have to minimise packaging, especially disposable stuff.

    Packaging can operate as a warning signal for other problems, too.

    Packaged food is not fresh, is highly processed, and contains i corn, soy meal and canola oil. These ingredients are grown on a large-scale and are often genetically modified. Packaged food also tends to contain more salt and sugar and other preservatives.

    Buying fresh food avoids all these problems.

    Household items, consumables and appliances actually need relatively little packaging.

    Select brands that use little packaging to cut down on the resources you consume and the waste you produce.

     Benefits

    Costs

     

    • Save oil and trees

    • Reduce waste

    • Reverse global warming

    Usually nothing

    Downside

    It takes some effort to find well packed products

    Places to go

    boomerangalliance.org

    sustainablepack.org

     

    Hard Facts

    Over 100 thousand tonnes of plastic is thrown into Sydney’s landfill
    through the metropolitan waste stream every year.
    Most of this is packaging.
    Another 1.3 million tonnes of paper is also thrown away.

    Search terms

    cornstarch peanuts

    packaging embodied

    Related tips

    Buy locally

    Bake your own food.

    Avoid plastic

  • 4 – Turn off lights at work

    Reality check

    Fluorescent lights do take some time to ‘warm up’. Turning them on and off can shorten their life, but so can leaving them on. Taking all these things into account, it is more cost effective to turn off a fluorescent light than to leave it on if it will stay off for more than ten minutes.

     Benefits

    Costs

     

    • Save energy

    • Save money

    • Changes others

    Hundreds or thousands of dollars for the audit.
    This is offset by the long term savings.

    Downside

    You’ll have to champion this cause on top of your existing workload
    for the short-term.
    The worst offenders are the hardest to change.
    Some companies have no interest in reducing
    their environmental impact. Full stop.

    Places to go

    cooltheglobe.com

    smh.com.au/earthwatch

    abgr.com.au

    nabers.com.au

    gbcaus.org

    Hard Facts

    The commercial sector consumes about 22 per cent of Sydney’s electricity.

    Commercial lighting in Sydney creates 10 million tonnes of CO2 each year

    Search terms

    daylight harvesting

    energy audit office

    greenhouse five star building

    energy efficiency consultant

    Related tips

    Adjust your thermostat

    Win an award for your workplace

    Telecommute

     

  • 5 – Recycle

     Benefits

    Costs

    • Save resourc
    • Reduce pollution

    Domestic recycling is free.
    Corporate services may not be.

    Downside

    You have to sort the garbage and think about what you buy.

    Places to go

    recyclingnearyou.com.au

    freecycle.org.au

    Boomerangalliance.org

    Hard Facts

    Most homes will generate 2kg of garbage and half a kg of recyclables today. year

    The average garbage bin contains 14.4 per cent paper and 11.7 per cent containers.

    Search terms

    plastic recycle logo waste stream

    zero waste

    Four Rs reduce

    Related tips

    Recycled paper

    Avoid packaging

    Win an award for work

     

  • Europe burns as heatwave sets in

    ©AFP - Louisa Gouliamaki

    "The alert remains high across the country," fire services spokesman Luca Cari told AFP earlier. "We have doubled the personnel rotations to ensure a stronger presence … and we have transferred personnel from the north of the country to the south to help us."

    In Romania authorities said the heatwave-related death toll rose to 33 with three more people succumbing on Tuesday.

    In the capital Bucharest where temperatures reached 37 degrees Celsius (99 Fahrenheit) more than 170 people fainted in the street. Ambulance services received a record of more than 1,200 calls over the past 24 hours, according to the Mediafax news agency.

    Power flickered on and off in Bucharest where air conditioners were working overtime.

    Some 30 people died in a heatwave last month in Romania.

    In Slovakia a lightning strike sparked a huge forest fire on Sunday that was still raging across about 10 hectares of the Slovensky Raj (Slovakian Paradise) national park in the east of the country.

    A view of the crowded beach at the Albanian Adriatic sea
    ©AFP – Gent Shkullaku

    Meanwhile the mercury reached 46 degrees Celsius (115 F) in parts of Greece, where a dozen forest fires were burning and up to five people have died from heat-related causes since Monday.

    Authorities set up air-conditioned shelters in Athens and Greece’s second largest city Salonika, while fire forced the evacuation of a monastery, a village and a summer camp near the southern town of Aigion.

    Another fire on the Ionian island of Kefalonia threatened some nearby towns, firefighters said.

    Greeks were warned to stay indoors and help conserve electricity between 11:00 am and 3:00 pm to prevent power outages.

    "Until (Wednesday evening) when the heatwave passes, we ask for restraint," Interior Minister Prokopis Pavlopoulos said, adding: "We don’t need to have the air-conditioning on all day long."

    Italian carabinieri pass through burned cars in the San Nicola Camping in Peschici
    ©AFP – Mario Laporta

    The heatwave caused a spike in smog pollution in Athens, with ozone levels above emergency limits in several districts, prompting the government to urge motorists to avoid the city centre. Ozone levels were not expected to improve on Thursday.

    The fire department said 99 blazes had broken out around Greece since Tuesday, added to hundreds of fires that have burned thousands of hectares of forest and agricultural land since a first heat wave last month.

    Temperatures in Greece were expected to drop slightly over the next two days.

    Hungary, where up to 500 people may have died last week from heat-related causes, enjoyed a significant drop in temperatures overnight with the welcome arrival of a cool front.

    A view of the crowded beach at the Albanian Adriatic sea
    ©AFP – Gent Shkullaku

    Highs on Wednesday did not exceed 28 degrees Celsius (83 F), down from nearly 40 degrees Celsius (104 F) on Tuesday.

    A third degree heat alert — the highest ever applied in the country before last week — ended on Tuesday.

    On the western edge of Europe, even without a heatwave Portuguese firefighters are battling blazes near Abrantes, about 100 kilometres (60 miles) north of Lisbon, and in the Caldeirao mountains in the south.