Changing Your Impact on the Environment
Being eco-friendly isn’t a new concept, but it is certainly taken on a greater sense of urgency in the past few years. With the rise cost of fossil fuels, global warming, and all of the other environmental issues that are coming to light, everyone is looking for ways to reduce their carbon footprint and become more ‘green’.
Being energy conscious can be a good way to help the environment. Turn the heat down, each degree you turn down the heat saves 3 percent of heating costs, while each degree you raise the temperature of your air conditioner saves 3-4 percent of cooling costs. Lower the temperature, in fact by changing the temperature by 2 degrees all year, you can save about 2,000 pounds of C02 a year.
If you switch to cold water, you can save 80 percent on energy used for laundry and save an estimated $60 a year. Air dry or hang your clothes instead of using the dryer and save 700 pounds of C02 a year.
Turn off those lights. When you aren’t in a room, turn them off and reduce your direct lighting energy use by 45 percent. Stop using heat-producing halogen lamps. Besides using more energy, they are actually dangerous and can cause fires. A cool thing outside can be to install occupancy or motion sensors outdoor lights, they save energy too.
While most people are familiar with these methods for reducing the impact on the environment, one great way is to replace outdated appliances with more enegy efficient models. Most manufacturers are now gearing products to the ‘green’ initiative. While appliances are an easy way to think eco-friendly, another option is to find everday materials that are also eco-friendly. By changing their manufacturing processes, most manufacturers have found ways to take items that traditionally were not thought of as being ‘green’, and reducing their impact on the environment.
One less obvious way to lessen the impact is by buying direct. One thing that people don’t consider is where they buy their products. Retail stores utilize a huge amount of resources and inevitably have a huge impact on the environment. By sources products on-line or direct from the manufacturer, you are eliminating that high overhead and ecological impact.
So by simply changing the way you look at your daily habits and the products you buy, you can have a positive impact on your overall carbon footprint.
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Another way to have a positive impact on your carbon footprint is by going vegetarian. The Live Earth Global Warming Survival Handbook (David de Rothschild) says that “refusing meat” is the “single most effective thing you can do to reduce your carbon footprint”. Vegetarianism is indeed one of the most powerful, if not the most powerful, act of green that someone can do. Consider the following fact: it takes over 5,000 gallons of water to produce 1 pound of meat, while growing 1 pound of wheat only requires 25 gallons. A totally vegetarian diet requires only 300 gallons of water per day, while a meat-eating diet requires more than 4,000 gallons of water per day. The implication of it is astonishing: you save more water by not eating a pound of beef than you do by not showering for an entire year. Switching to a vegetarian, or better vegan diet, also helps reduce environmental pollution due to animal agriculture, and decreases animal suffering. For more information on the reasons beyond choosing a vegetarian diet, and many positive and practical ideas to help the environment and the animals, check out:
Building an Ark: 101 Solutions to Animal Suffering
By Ethan Smith with Guy Dauncey
Forward by Jane Goodall, PhD, DBE
http://www.earthfuture.com/ark