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 »





 


Green Right Now Articles

Pull The Drapes To Use (Not Hide From) The Sun




July 2nd, 2008 · No Comments

By John DeFore

In the future, employing solar energy won’t necessarily mean mounting big black panels on your roof or buying from a utility with a solar farm. It might just mean pulling the curtains shut for a while.

Sheila Kennedy, a Boston architect currently teaching at MIT, is in the vanguard of designers envisioning a future in which electricity production grows more and more decentralized, with energy-gathering fixtures surrounding us, either storing electricity for later use or plugging directly into appliances and lighting.

One of her highest-profile projects, a Soft House shown at Germany’s Vitra Design Museum, used a type of photovoltaic cell that can be produced in bendable, textile-like form; its curtains harvested sunlight for domestic use.

Kennedy has said that her calculations suggest 15 square meters of solar-collecting textile would be sufficient to meet most of an average household’s needs, and she envisions all sorts of unconventional structures (like a quickly assembled “zip room”) that would be built around solar curtains and similar materials.

While the architect admits that the “organic photovoltaics” currently lag behind more familiar glass-panel solar cells in terms of efficiency, their more adaptable form make them useful in ways conventional cells aren’t. And at any rate, researchers are bound to improve their efficiency if the idea catches on — with Kennedy actively looking for partners serious enough to bring these ideas into the retail mainstream, that might happen sooner than the sci-fi-sounding premise suggests.

Copyright © 2008 | Distributed by Noofangle Media

Tags: Briefs · Dress/Decor · Energy/Water

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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 →]

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