What Can You Do Right Now?

Set sprinklers to water the lawn or garden only - not the street or sidewalk.

 

Use the microwave to cook small meals. (It uses less power than an oven.)

 

Purchase "Green Power" for your home's electricity. (Contact your power supplier to see where and if it is available.)

 

Scrape, rather than rinse, dishes before loading into the dishwasher; wash only full loads.

 

Cut back on air conditioning and heating use if you can.

 

Turn off appliances and lights when you leave the room.

 

More Tips »





 


Entries Tagged as 'Books/Online Media'

Hungry Planet: The Family Dinner, Here And Abroad




April 28th, 2008 · No Comments

By John DeFore
The sudden explosion of stories about food shortages resulting from diversion of crops to biofuels may prod Westerners to think, likely for the first time in years, about just what and how much people typically eat in other parts of the world.
The recent paperback Hungry Planet, then, is timely: Though stuffed with [...]

[Read more →]

Tags: Books/Online Media · Briefs · Food

One Thousand Pages Of Green Thought




April 17th, 2008 · No Comments

By John DeFore
Standing out in the current wave of books about the environment — dire jeremiads, thoughtful analyses, and green-leaning coffee-table books — is a compact but weighty tome that is largely uninterested in conveying to readers any kind of “the time is now!” urgency. Rather, American Earth: Environmental Writing Since Thoreau released April [...]

[Read more →]

Tags: Activists/Authors · Books/Online Media · Briefs

An Eco-Doc With More Heart Than Finesse




April 7th, 2008 · No Comments

By John DeFore
Tuesday sees the release on DVD of one of the higher-profile entries in the wave of documentaries about the environment, The 11th Hour. Like its big brother An Inconvenient Truth, it lands on retail shelves in slimmed-down packaging — this one replacing the usual bulky plastic case, with a paper sleeve recycled from [...]

[Read more →]

Tags: Books/Online Media · Model Projects

Fighting Goliath, The Story Of How Texans Slowed The Coal Rush




April 4th, 2008 · No Comments

By Shermakaye Bass
It’s no surprise that Big Energy gets the role of Goliath in Mat Hames’ and George Sledge’s Fighting Goliath: The Texas Coal Wars, a documentary produced and narrated by Robert Redford and The Redford Center at Sundance Preserve that follows a recent chain of events in which coal companies tried to fast [...]

[Read more →]

Tags: Battles & Victories · Books/Online Media · Energy/Water

Fields of Fuel: A Film About Getting Off Foreign Oil And Into Homegrown Solutions




March 31st, 2008 · No Comments

By Barbara Kessler
If timing is everything, then premiering a film that champions biofuels at a time when the news media’s aflame with stories about the problems with biofuels must be a tad discouraging.
But Josh Tickell, creator of Fields of Fuel, does not seem discouraged. Determined, but not discouraged. Tickell, who has been been on [...]

[Read more →]

Tags: Books/Online Media · Cars · Green Enthusiasts/Researchers · Other Transport

BIRD: The Definitive Visual Guide Is A Visceral Call To Climate Action




December 13th, 2007 · No Comments

By Barbara Kessler

Measured against green ideals, a glossy new coffee table book can seem a bit indulgent, even anachronistic. Where’s the soy ink and recycled paper?
Those are valid questions, but in some cases, we’d like to think that the educational and aesthetic powers of a truly fine collection of photographs and words can have [...]

[Read more →]

Tags: Books/Online Media · SHOP GREEN

BookMooch: Book Swapping Hits Net Speed




December 3rd, 2007 · 2 Comments

By John DeFore
Living by the reduce/reuse/recycle mantra can be a challenge, a chore, a karmic satisfaction or tangible improvement in lifestyle. But it’s rarely something one participates in avidly, anticipating it eagerly while at work or singing its praises at parties.
Lately, though, I’ve been obsessed with a novel way of reducing the world’s waste [...]

[Read more →]

Tags: Books/Online Media · Cut Consumption

“Manufactured Landscapes” Out On DVD




November 23rd, 2007 · No Comments

By John DeFore
Photographer Edward Burtynsky, the subject of Jennifer Baichwal’s documentary Manufactured Landscapes, makes art out of the modern world’s refuse, traveling the globe to document waste heaps so vast they resemble the ruins of ancient civilizations: building-sized piles of discarded plastic parts, shipyards full of rusting freighter hulls, house-sized piles of rotary-dial [...]

[Read more →]

Tags: Books/Online Media · Briefs

advertising


     
 

Greenpeace Faults Kimberly-Clark for "Iron*E" For Using WALL*E

August 28th, 2008

By John DeFore

For a movie that explicitly addresses the perils of overconsumption, Pixar’s WALL*E is being used to promote an awful lot of consumer products.

One tie-in in particular is rankling Greenpeace. It seems that the lovable robot’s image has popped up on boxes of Kleenex, a product the activist group has criticized with a “Kleercut” campaign that asserts, “it takes 90 years to grow a box of Kleenex” because the product’s manufacturer Kimberly-Clark “all but refuses to use recycled paper in its products.” (Among other things, they’re trying to get parents and teachers to reject the company’s tissues in classrooms.) [Read more →]

 

Mitsubishi To Quadruple Its Solar Cell Production

August 28th, 2008

By John DeFore

Mitsubishi Electric announced Wednesday that it will quadruple its capability to produce solar cells, jumping from the 150 megawatts it currently produces each year to an annual 600MW capacity by 2012 — a more ambitious goal than its previously stated one to get to 500 MW by 2013. Current production levels are already triple what they were four years ago. [Read more →]

 

Texas Paying Cash Toward Cleaner Cars

August 28th, 2008

By Harriet Blake

Residents of the Dallas/Fort Worth metro area will again get a chance to trade in their pollution-emitting old clunker for a newer, less polluting car with the help of state money.

The North Central Texas Council of Governments (NCTCOG) reports that it has about $12 million for the second year of the AirCheckTexas Drive a Clean Machine campaign, which began taking applications in mid-August. [Read more →]