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.

 

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Green Right Now Articles

Getting Water Wise By Catching The Rain




May 19th, 2008 · No Comments

By Barbara Kessler

Rainwater: It comes to us clean, “green” and free; literally a gift from heaven. The fountain of life.

And yet, we haven’t done a great job of conserving it. We Westerners, in particular, let billions of gallons of rainwater wash fladmarkraincistern.JPGaway, sliding off our concrete surfaces and roofs into storm sewers with every downpour. Some of us, however, are waking up to that drumbeat on our roof and reviving the ancient practice of capturing rainwater, though not in shallow pools like our forebears, but by connecting barrels to our suburban home downspouts. Cutting edge rainwater advocates are installing large steel tanks to store captured water for irrigation, washing clothes, bathing, even drinking.

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With droughts hitting vast areas of the earth every year, population stresses on the planet and water sanitation becoming increasingly difficult, it makes sense to adjust our thinking about water. Here’s a finite resource, like oil or coal, that people gulp almost without restraint. The logical solution: Rainwater capture.

Michael Fladmark of Tool, Texas started thinking about rainwater as he planned a new “green” house near Cedar Creek Lake. He wanted the house – where he and his wife expect to spend their retirement years – to be built for the ages with the most efficient heating and cooling systems, the best use of light and the most earth-friendly materials. It naturally made sense to also install a mechanism for catching and storing rainwater.

An oil and gas industry engineer, Fladmark noodled over his house ideas, including the rainwater system, for many months. At first he envisioned eight 55-gallon barrels collecting the water that would roll off the metal roof; eventually he realized that was underplaying his opportunity. He hired rainwater catchment expert Greg Whitfield, of The Rainwell, to install two 1,000-gallon rain catchment tanks.

Together they designed the above-ground, gravity-propelled system. Fladmark chose the visible tanks over buried tanks because he sees his house as a demonstration in eco-friendly practices and didn’t mind their appearance. Whitfield installed the system, hooking it into the house downspouts. Ironically, it was a “difficult install” because of extensive rainfall last December, Fladmark said. But going large was the right decision, he says. Since moving into the house earlier this spring, he’s been amazed to watch the tanks fill up.

Melanie Grimes, another customer of Whitfield’s, had a similar experience after she and home co-owner Mychele Lord, installed first a couple of 80-gallon rain barrels, then added three 300-gallon cisterns, tucked under the eaves and disguised by shrubbery, and finally, a 2,500 gallon cistern (behind the garage) at their 1950s-vintage home in East Dallas. The collection units just kept filling up with rainwater – Grimes estimates they will collect some 30,000 gallons a year — and with the help of a few hoses and a $120 pump, it easily supplies water for the home’s large lawn and various gardens.

Pages: 1 2 3 4 5

Tags: Energy/Water · Green Enthusiasts/Researchers · Greener Businesses · Model Projects

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Using A Weed to Help Other Plants Grow

September 5th, 2008

By John DeFore

It may rank among the “Least Wanted” plants in North America (the state of Washington describes it as noxious for its ability to crowd out all other vegetation), but the Japanese knotweed may be good for something after all.

Dr. Pam Marrone, founder of Marrone Organic Innovations announced at a recent meeting of the American Chemical Society the development of a new biopesticide made from knotweed extract, one that will be appropriate for use by organic farmers who shun conventional pesticides. [Read more →]

 

Phoenix Suns Tap The Phoenix Sun

September 5th, 2008

By Barbara Kessler

Some things just make sense, like the Phoenix Suns using the desert sun to help power the US Airways Center where they play.

The basketball team, electricity provider APS and the city of Phoenix announced Thursday that the utility and the team have teamed up to install a 194 kilowatt photo-voltaic system on the fifth level of the US Airways parking garage. The system will cover about 18,000 square feet and produce more than 330,000 kilowatt-hours each year - enough to meet about one-quarter of the Casino Arizona Pavilion’s power needs. The  Pavilion encompasses the 50-high glassy grand entrance to the arena; its escalators, ticket windows and the Starbucks. [Read more →]

 

Sierra Mag Lauds Ten Universities That "Get It"

September 4th, 2008

By Barbara Kessler

College-bound high schoolers looking for an environmentally conscientious college should have no shortage of guidance this year. The Sierra Club has joined the Princeton Review in assessing the green creds of U.S. universities.

Actually, the venerable environmental group was first out with the idea, launching a “Cool Schools” rundown in 2007. Their second annual review, in the group’s Sept./Oct.Sierra magazine, settles on list of the top ten campuses — Ten That Get It — that includes colleges of all sizes from the East to the West. [Read more →]

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