Wednesday, April 16, 2008

What You Can Do Right Now to Help Your Planet

I wouldn't consider myself a follower, but I'm definitely down with Oprah. Here are some going green tips I got off Oprah.com. I'm good with 1, 2, 4, 8 & 11. Need to work on 5, 7 & 11. 6 might take a litte work...

What You Can Do Right Now to Help Your Planet

Ice caps are melting, coral reefs are shrinking, islands are sinking…. What to do? We can go directly to despair—or we can learn how to be a part of the solution. Eco-activists, Laurie David and Matthew Modine share effective, and inexpensive ideas with O writer Aimee Lee Ball that—really!—can make a world of difference.

1. A Mug of Your Own Every year Americans throw away 25 billion polystyrene cups and 25 billion individual water bottles, most of which end up in landfills. Instead buy a reusable to-go mug and a bottle that you can refill with filtered tap water. Bring your own (to a coffee shop, a meeting), and you cut down on Styrofoam.

2. Want a Lick? A cone beats a cup. Why? "You're eating your silverware instead of using plastic," says Matthew Modine, a passionate promoter of earth-friendly policies. "It's all about consuming less, using fewer of the resources needed to make products and packaging."

3. Clean Without Chemicals Natural cleansers like vinegar and baking soda do a great job without harming the planet. "And," Matthew says, "a little vegetable oil and lemon juice makes a great wood polish."

4. Bag It Get reusable cloth bags for the grocery store and the dry cleaner. More than 100 billion plastic bags are thrown away every year.

5. Stop Junk Mail Every year 100 million trees are chopped down for junk mail sent to American homes. Contact the direct marketing association at dmachoice.org/mps to remove your name from mailing lists of their members.

6. A Better TP Recycled toilet paper is scratchier that three-ply, but it's much softer on the environment. "It's like switching from whole milk to skim," says O writer Aimee Lee Ball. "After a while the beloved original seems over-the-top."

7. How Many People Does It Take To… Compact fluorescent bulbs (CFLs) use four times less energy than incandescent ones. If every American family substituted five CFL bulbs for incandescent, it would be equivalent to taking eight million cars off the road for a year. Ball says "They cost a little more up front, but they last up to 15 times longer."

8. De-Lint the Dryer Lint builds up after every dryer cycle, reducing the machine's efficiency. Removing it does a lot to decrease its usually massive energy use.

9. Pick Safe Paints According to the Environmental Protection Agency, architectural coatings such as paints and varnishes are the second-largest source of fumes from volatile organic compounds, substances that evaporate at room temperature and react in sunlight to form photochemical smog. Look for cans with "No VOC." We'll all breathe easier. (If you don't use the whole can, you can find out how to recycle the rest.)

10. Shorten Your Showers Low-flow showerheads would be a big improvement. "If they're well designed, the pressure should still feel good," says Laurie David, another prominent activist in Hollywood. "For every two minutes you shave off your shower, you save 10 gallons of water."

11. Shut Down The average computer left on all day uses nearly 1,000 kilowatt hours of electricity a year, producing more than a ton of carbon emissions. So turn off your computer anytime you're not on it, and eliminate the screen saver function, which uses more energy than the sleep mode.

1 comment:

lauren jane said...

dig it! great list, num!!
use seventh generation tp and cleaning products, which are made from natural substances and found at whole foods and i'm not sure where else. the tp ain't that bad (is that tmi?), and the reward of doing good prevails over minimal discomfort.
green is the new black.