Writing about all that's good
 
 

June

Posted at 22 June, 2010 by Oliver

Arzel Ariosa who often goes by the nickname Arencis is no stranger to the blogging scene and a frequent guest blogger around the web. Having read some of her previous work, there was no way we could refuse her the opportunity.

Little things matter when it comes to caring for the environment. Help reduce greenhouse gases and other harmful impacts through following ten simple steps.

1. Conserve water. This may sound like an old record, but conserving water can be a big impact to the environment. There are already countries experiencing fresh water shortages due to global climate change. Brush your teeth with the faucet turned off. Check for leaks in your toilet so you don’t waste gallons of precious water. Try drinking tap water instead of bottled water so as to reduce waste.

2. Reduce your trips on the road. Greenhouse gas emissions can be substantially reduced by limiting your trips for even just one day per week. Combine your errands. This will save you both gas and time.

3. Use your legs. Walk or ride a bike to school, office or just anywhere you can. It not only reduces greenhouse gas emissions, it can be also a good way to burn calories and improve your health.
4. Recycle. Put empty soda cans, plastic bottles and other recyclable items to reduce pollution. These can be transported to recycling facilities to become useful again. Try recycling things in your home. You may even find it enjoyable.

5. Compost. Reduce waste going to landfills. Practice throwing rotten dishes and other biodegradable items in your compost pit. It does not only contribute to the reduction of pollution, it can also be good fertilizer.

6. Switch your standard light bulbs to Compact Flourescent Light bulbs (CFLs). They not only last 10 times longer, CFLs use only 2/3 of the energy used in the standard bulb.

7. Make your home energy efficient by cleaning your air filters regularly so your system doesn’t work overtime. Get a programmable thermostat so that when you are not home, your system does not waste energy.

8. Under-inflated tires can increase tire wear and greenhouse gas emissions by decreasing fuel saving by three percent. Check your tires regularly. You can find the correct tire pressure for your car listed either on the door to the glove compartment or on the driver’s side door pillar.

9. Tune your car. Follow the manufacturer’s maintenance schedule, keep it well-tuned and use the correct grade of motor oil. A well-maintained car can be fuel efficient, safe and less harmful to the environment.

10. Turning off lights and appliances when not in use can also positively impact the environment.

Care for your environment now and reap benefits in the future. Save Earth.

Author: Arzel Ariosa

Do you have any tips on how to save the environment? Perhaps there are a few little changes you’ve made in your own life that – if more people got involved – could really make a big difference. Why not leave a comment and share them here?

 
 

May

Posted at 20 May, 2010 by Oliver

At times it must seem as if adverts for buying back old mobile phones pepper all the popular TV programs. We’ve everything from cute animated mobile characters trying to persuade you that they’ll be happy to be sold for money and recycled off to a growing economy elsewhere to blondes trying to buy their new hat by handing their now-not-fashionable mobile over to the shop assistant.

What started out as a niche, populated by new starts and unknown brands has become very competitive. This competition has attributed to two trends;

  1. Bigger brands are now involved. Heck. Even Boots is in on the act.
  2. There’s less focus on the environmental and more emphasis on the cash.

Is that a good thing? Surely those brands which took the green angle might want to keep it to help differentiate themselves from larger competitors moving into the space?

This is a green blog. We think it’s a good thing to keep the emphasis on the green side of mobile phone recycling.

Other, wiser and more gadget friendly blogs – like In Pure Spirit and TreeHugger – will know which mobile phone companies also offer phone recycling but the very fact the mobile operators are moving into this sphere is another warning sign for the original companies?

 
 

February

Posted at 19 February, 2010 by Oliver

Orange Peel.
Image by T . J . M via Flickr

Henry Daniell, a scientist from the University of Central Florida has developed a method of using household waste materials to produce ethanol.
Sources claim his approach could be greener and less expensive than current methods used to fuel vehicles which are powered by the substance.

The Engineer reports Daniell’s method has been used on products such as orange peel and newspaper, but can also be applied to products such as sugarcane, straw and switchgrass.

The method uses plant-derived enzymes to break down materials into sugar which can then be fermented into ethanol. Currently corn starch is used in the fermentation process and conversion into ethanol but this method is believed to produce more greenhouse gas emissions than petrol.

200 million gallons of ethanol could be produced from the discarded orange peels of Florida state alone, said Daniell.

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February

Posted at 16 February, 2010 by Oliver

Boeing 737-500 registered G-GFFD of British Ai...
Image via Wikipedia

British Airways have revealed a plan to create Europe’s first sustainable jet fuel plant which will convert household waste into environmentally-friendly aviation fuel.

In a partnership with US bioenergy group solena, British Airways will set up the new plant in east London claims eTravel and hope to be able to power part of its fleet by 2014 with the greener, low-carbon fuel.

The plant will convert roughly 500,000 tonnes of waste materials from households into some 16 million gallons of green jet fuel via a process that offers lifecycle greenhouse gas savings of up to 95 per cent compared to fossil-fuel derived jet kerosene.

The environmental savings would see the equivalent of 48,000 cars being removed from the roads each year.

In addition to the fuel conversion, using household waste would also lessen the impact on the volume of waste sent to landfill sites, as well as cutting down on the production of methane. The project will also see 20MW of electricity generated each year.

Willie Walsh, British Airways’ chief executive, said: “This unique partnership with Solena will pave the way for realising our ambitious goal of reducing net carbon emissions by 50 per cent by 2050. We believe it will lead to the production of a real sustainable alternative to jet kerosene. We are absolutely determined to reduce our impact on climate change and are proud to lead the way on aviation’s environmental initiatives.”

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February

Posted at 9 February, 2010 by Oliver

Logo
Image via Wikipedia

Anti-whaling activists and Japanese whalers have exchanged hostile water cannon fire in the Antarctic Ocean as two activists’ boats tailed the Japanese whaling fleet in an attempt to foil the killing of any whales.

Wales Online report that the Sea Shepherd conservation group said its ships – the Steve Irwin and the Bob Barker – had surprised the Japanese factory ship Nisshin Maru early yesterday.

Each year, the US-based activist group sends vessels to confront the Japanese whaling fleet and two collisions have already occurred this year alone.

Japan’s hunt for whales is allowed under world whaling regulations as a scientific expedition even though commercial whaling is banned.

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February

Posted at 5 February, 2010 by Oliver

LONDON - AUGUST 05:  A man holds a pint glass ...
Image by Getty Images via Daylife

The government has unveiled a new shatterproof pint glass which it hopes will help to save billions of pounds in healthcare costs says the Huffington Post.

The glasses are designed to prevent them being used as weapons when smashed and the government has developed two prototypes of the new barware. The government plans to introduce the new glasses for use on a voluntary basis in pubs, providing tests show the glasses’ durability, safety and cost-effectiveness.

With around 87,000 alcohol-related glass attacks each year, the new glasses have been met with a positive reaction by alcohol concern charities and groups with healthcare costs incurred by attacks resulting in hospital treatment being estimated at around £2.7 billion.

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February

Posted at 1 February, 2010 by Oliver

Emma Watson at the premiere of Harry Potter an...
Image via Wikipedia

Harry Potter star Emma Watson – Hermione Grainger in the films based on the books by JK Rowling – has launched a fashion range in collaboration with People Tree, a sustainable fashion label to produce environmentally friendly clothes and accessories reports Edie.

The range is scheduled to launch next week (February 8th) and Emma acted as creative advisor on the designs which includes jerseys, t-shirts, dresses and trousers among others. The range will be available to both men and women.

Emma previously also fronted advertising campaigns for Burberry.

The People Tree line will use 100% organic and fair-trade cotton, and will be made entirely by hand by fair-trade groups in India, Bangladesh and Nepal.

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February

Posted at 1 February, 2010 by Oliver

Wasabi growing on the Izu Peninsula.
Image via Wikipedia

A Japanese company has developed a fire alarm that alerts hearing-impaired people by emitting the odour of WASABI!

The pungent foodstuff was chosen from a host of different scents during tests to determine which odour would cause people to wake the fastest from their slumber. It was found that wasabi – Japanese horseradish – acted quickest with almost all the test subjects waking within 2-and-a-half minutes of first exposure.

Wasabi contains a substance called allyl isothiocyanate – the same substance as found in mustard – and further tests were required to find the appropriate amount of odour release required without causing people’s eyes to water – which could hinder peoples’ attempts to escape a fire.

The alarm, which measures 21cm by 8cm and weighs just half-a- kilogram was developed by the Japanese fire extinguisher company Air Water Safety Services and has already been sold to residential homes for the elderly as well as hotels says the Daily Telegraph online.

It wouldn’t work for this writer, however, as the scent of wasabi is likely to lead to the kitchen rather than any escape point!

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January

Posted at 29 January, 2010 by Oliver

‘Apprentice’ star Howard Ebison is in training to run Derby’s 10k run in memory of a fellow contestant’s mum, who died of cancer; he also hopes to run in the London Marathon.

Ebison finished sixth in 2009’s edition of the BBC series, becoming a casualty of Sir Alan Sugar’s boardroom after choosing low-risk products as product manager in his team’s shopping channel challenge.

But Ebison, who moved to Derby in 2008 to live with his partner is aiming now to be a hit and raise £3,000 by running both the Derby race and the London Marathon in aid of the MacMillan Cancer Support charity and in memory of the mother of his fellow Apprentice rival James McQuillan.

Both James and Yasmin Siadatan – the series’ eventual winner – will join Howard in the Derby run.

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January

Posted at 22 January, 2010 by Oliver

Blue Circle Southern Cement works is near Berrima.
Image via Wikipedia

Edie.net reports that a Peterhead firm have been fined following an explosion in May 2008, which sent cement powder into the air and falling onto homes and businesses up to two kilometres away.

The firm, CEBO UK, has pled guilty to a charge of breaching its Pollution Prevention and Control (PPC) permit and ordered by Peterhead Sheriff Court to pay court costs plus a fine of £14,000.

The explosion was caused when a silo broke due to poor maintenance. It was found that the silo’s hatch lid retaining brackets were badly corroded during a SEPA investigation. It also found silo maintenance records weren’t up to date and the silo should not have been in use.

Cement, although in common use, is an abrasive powder which can cause damage and harm to the environment, human health and property, said SEPA’s investigating officer Martyn Howie.

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