Just so we all know

Jan 22, 2007 19:39

Stop worrying and start ACTING!

Woe to the world, we've destroyed our environment beyond repair. We hear this everyday and in every article they say to do your part by reducing your Carbon Footprint, but there aren't enough of them that tell us HOW, so we sit there and continue to contribute to the problem and say "oh well, the world is a gonner." I have compiled some very simple things that YOU as an individual can do to help reduce the amount of Carbon output that you are personally responsible for. 20 per cent of emissions of CO2 - the main greenhouse gas - comes from energy use in homes and 25 per cent comes from cars. Here are 40 easy steps to reduce your contribution to
climate change.

In and around the home

1 Turn off the lights when you leave a room.
2 Turn off radiators and other heating or cooling vents in unused rooms.
3 Use economy settings on home appliances.
4 Cook with lids on pots and use a pressure cooker.
5 Run the washing machine and dishwasher with full loads.
6 Wash clothes at 40°C or less instead of 60°C - it uses a third less
energy than normally needed to heat the water for a hot wash.
7 Use a washing line not a tumble dryer.
8 Turn down your thermostat - every 1º less can cut your heating bill
10 per cent.
9 Turn your refrigerator up a notch - keeping it just 1° warmer saves
about 50kg of greenhouse gas a year.
10 Take shorter showers.
11 Turn your TV and other appliances off at the power point instead of
using your remote and leaving them on stand-by.
12 Protect trees and shrubs (to absorb CO2).
13 Minimise your use of paper and recycle the paper you use.

Travelling
14 Walk, cycle, take public transport or consider a car-pool whenever
possible.
15 Reduce your air travel.
16 Telecommute from home one or more days a week during normal
business hours.

Shopping
17 Shop locally rather than in out-of-town superstores.
18 Eat more plant-based and less meat-based meals (to reduce methane
emissions from intensive animal rearing).
19 Buy products with the least packaging.
20 Avoid the products of companies like Esso (Exxon) that are
obstructing solutions to the problem of climate change.
21 Switch your investments away from fossil fuel companies to
renewable energy ones or ethical investment funds, or exercise your right as a shareholder to vote at companies' AGMs in favour of resolutions demanding reductions in emissions.
22 Lobby your political representatives to press them to act, and vote
accordingly.
23 Switch to a clean electricity or Green power supplier if you have
the option.
24 Replace your light bulbs with Compact Fluorescent Lightbulbs. A
fluorescent bulb costs more up front, but it uses one-fifth of the electricity of an average bulb, lasts 10 times longer and saves half a tonne of carbon dioxide in its lifetime.
25 Increase your loft insulation to a depth of 20cm (8in) - this alone
will slash the average fuel bill by 20 per cent.
26 Draught-proof windows and doors to prevent heat loss and save
energy.
27 Insulate your water tank with at least 7.5cm (3in) thickness.
28 Put aluminium foil behind your radiators with the dull side of the
foil against the wall.
29 Install a low-flow showerhead.
30 Service your car regularly - keeping the engine tuned saves up to a
tonne of greenhouse gases a year for a family car and keeping your car tires at the maximum recommended air pressure saves up to 100kg of greenhouse gases each year.
31 Buy regionally, seasonally and organically produced food whenever
possible.
32 Buy recycled paper and only buy wood products that display the
Forest Stewardship Council (FSC) label.
33 Plant new trees.
34 Replace your old boiler with a condenser boiler - the most
efficient way of heating water and space in a home (converting 85 per cent
of fuel into heat compared with not much more than 65 per cent for standard boilers).
35 Buy the most energy efficient appliances (look for the 'energy
star' logo, and labels showing how much energy each product uses, with 'A' being the most efficient and 'G' the least). An energy efficient fridge, for example, can use less than half the energy of an old, inefficient model, and can save you money.
36 Install cavity wall insulation (if you live in a house built after
1930) - it can reduce heat loss through walls by up to 60 per cent.
37 Install double-glazed windows - almost a quarter of heat lost from
a home can be through poorly insulated window frames and single glazing.
38 If you need a car, buy one that gets most miles to the gallon (the
most fuel-efficient cars are currently Toyota's Prius and Honda's Insight -
hybrid petrol and electric cars).
39 Buy a solar water heater.
40 Invest in solar photovoltaic tiles for your roof.

Now I realize that not all of these are things you can do this minute, but do what you can.
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