JC Penney dumps big book, saving money and forests
November 19th, 2009
Green Right Now Reports
If anything makes as big a thud on your doorstep as the Yellow Pages books, it has been the JC Penney semi-annual “big book.”

The 2009 Big Book - Collector's item?
But the retailer has decided that that thud has outlived its impressiveness and is taking a heavy toll on marketing costs and forests, announcing today that it would stop sending the giant catalog in order to dedicate resources to specialty catalogs and online services.
Related Topics: · Big Book, Catalogs, corporate consumption, forest conservation, J.C. Penney, marketing, Paper reduction, saving paper, sustainable practices
Stores find a cool path to sustainability with GreenChill program
November 6th, 2009
From Green Right Now Reports
Star Market at Chestnut Hill in Newton, Mass., recently became the first grocery store in the nation to receive US Environmental Protection Agency’s GreenChill Partnership platinum store award. The advanced refrigeration technology in the new store, which is part of the Shaw’s line of supermarkets, significantly reduces its impact on climate change and the stratospheric ozone layer by cutting the use of refrigerants by 85 percent compared with the typical supermarket.
Gina McCarthy, assistant administrator for EPA’s Office of Air and Radiation, called the store’s efforts “wicked cool.”
Related Topics: · Environmental Protection Agency, Gina McCarthy, GreenChill Partnership, Hill Phoenix, Sprouts Farmers Market, Star Market at Chestnut Hill, Whole Foods
Give your shoes a new life
October 13th, 2009
By Ashley Phillips
Green Right Now

Photo: Nike
In just one year, 300 million pairs of shoes are thrown away. These shoes end up in landfills across the US. Not only do these shoes not easily break down, the glue that holds a shoe together is toxic. So instead of adding to the growing trash problem, give your shoes a new life. What’s old to you, could be a playground for someone else thanks to Nike.
Related Topics: · Container Recycling Institute, Nike, Nike Grind Rubber, Nike Reuse-A-Shoe program, Recycle & Reuse, recycled athletic surfaces, recycled shoes
Cobb County, Kohler and Lowe’s recognized for water conservation
October 8th, 2009
Green Right Now Reports
The Cobb County Water System in Marietta, Ga., and Kohler, maker of water faucets and other plumbing supplies, have won government recognition for their water-conserving ways.
The EPA named them among its “WaterSense” Partners of the Year. The program highlights the many ways in which organizations can advocate for saving water:
- Cobb County water officials teamed up with Kohler, Lowe’s Home Improvement stores and others, to promote Georgia’s tax holiday for WaterSense products. WaterSense products include such things as water sensors for sprinkler systems to stop needless watering; low-flow shower heads and faucets, and toilets that use less water.
Related Topics: · Cobb County, EPA, Kohler, Lowe's Home Improvement Stores, Water Conservation, WaterSense
Online textbook rental site reaches a million trees planted
October 2nd, 2009
From Green Right Now Reports
Chegg.com, the online textbook rental site, has been helping the environment by planting a tree for every book rented, sold or bought this tear. The company announced today that it has reached more than one million trees planted in 2009 through a partnership with the American Forests’ Global ReLeaf program.
Chegg is celebrating the milestone by having its one-millionth renter, Jarrett Crisp, a junior from Hill College in Burleson, Texas, plant the tree at a wildfire restoration project in the Tahoe National Forest near South Lake Tahoe, Calif., next spring.
By some estimates, more than 20 million trees are cut each year to make new books, so Chegg has built a brand that encourages students to help replenish and protect the environment by renting, reusing and recycling their textbooks. Since 2007 when the partnership with American Forests began, Chegg has planted more than 3,000 acres of forests.
Related Topics: · American Forests Global ReLeaf program, Chegg
West Coast Green conference Oct. 1-3
September 28th, 2009
Green Right Now Reports
West Coast Green, a gathering that‘s part expo, part trade show and part thought conference, will be showcasing leading edge green projects when it opens at the Fort Mason Center in San Francisco this coming weekend.
One of the largest conferences devoted to the “built environment,” the event attracts speakers with architectural, design and construction expertise from around the nation.
Visitors to the 2009 conference, Oct. 1-3, will be able to see demos of hundreds of products, as well as examples of green design, such as a large hanging garden constructed on a bamboo framework that will be suspended over the bay. The installation aims to show how green can be beautiful and useful, using vegetation to mitigate heat, sequester carbon and improve water and air quality.
Related Topics: · Architecture for Humanity, Ecostrategies, green building, Integrative Design Collaborative, PG&E, sustainable design, The Watchman's Rattle, West Coast Green
The luxe life, through green lenses, at NYC show
September 25th, 2009
By John DeFore
Green Right Now
Tesla Roadster
Environmentally-sensitive lifestyles and luxury goods would not, to many of us, seem to go together very well. People who own billion-dollar yachts, for instance, aren’t exactly worrying about their carbon footprint.
But plenty of purveyors of high-end goods hope to fight that assumption. Gathering a few steps from Central Park at Manhattan’s Rouge Tomate restaurant Tuesday, a few dozen companies argued that you can have your lush life and save the planet, too.
Fashion models and a celebrity or two mingled with backpack-toting journalists at the event, but (no offense to the models) the sexiest guest never came in the front door: A Tesla Roadster was parked out front, inviting slack-jawed lust from passersby, right in front of a more modest would-be world-changer, the single-seat NmG from Myers Motors.
Related Topics: · 360 Vodka, Alberto Parada, Bonterra, Celadon & Celery, filtered water, Greenjets, handmade soaps, Korbel, Luxury cars, Luxury green goods, luxury items, No Dirty Gold campaign, reusable water bottles, shea butter, Tesla Roadster, The Water Geeks
Newsweek survey ranks HP greenest company in America
September 21st, 2009
From Green Right Now Reports
Newsweek has launched a ranking of the greenest companies in America and Hewlett-Packard tops the initial list. The Newsweek Green Rankings, based on companies’ environmental footprint, policies and practices, appears in the Sept. 28 issue of the magazine.
The green ranking covers America’s 500 largest publicly traded companies as measured by revenue, market capitalization and number of employees. Companies were ranked based on criteria such as each company’s greenhouse gas emissions, toxic waste emissions and use of other natural resources. Newsweek and its partners also assessed the companies’ management of environmental issues and policies, regulatory compliance and policies concerning climate change. Newsweek said the rankings also factor in the results of a reputational survey of CEOs, corporate social responsibility officers, members of the media, academics and members of key environmental groups.
Related Topics: · 500 largest publicly traded companies, Applied Materials Inc., Bristol-Myers Squibb Company, Dell Inc., Hewlett-Packard Company, IBM, Intel Corporation, Johnson & Johnson, Newsweek Green Rankings, NIKE Inc., Starbucks Corporation, State Street Corporation
Sustainable palm oil? Not so fast…
September 11th, 2009
By Ashley Phillips
Green Right Now
Palm Oil, an ingredient found in most processed food, has been the subject of much environmental debate in recent years over its role in deforestation. It is commonly found in cooking oil and as an ingredient in cosmetics, soaps, detergents, and some plastics. Palm oil also has been considered for use in the production of biodiesel.
There have been many attempts to make palm oil sustainable. The Roundtable on Sustainable Palm Oil (RSPO) was even established in 2003 to do just that. Unfortunately, six years later, there is still no system that can effectively trace palm oil beyond the processor to the plantation level. Companies that manufacture products using palm oil have little way of knowing where the controversial substance originated — which leaves the question of whether and to what degree palm oil is sustainably farmed up in the air.
Related Topics: · Advertising Standards Authority, Borneo, Carbon Emissions, deforestation, Friends of the Earth, Greenhouse Gas Emissions, Malaysia, Malaysian Palm Oil Council, orangutan, palm oil, palm tree plantations, Roundtable of Sustainable Palm Oil, Sumatra, tropical rainforest, United National Environment Programme, World Wildlife Fund
Wine company says one tree will go up for every bottle that goes down
September 3rd, 2009
By Ashley Phillips
Green Right Now
Once, long ago, a winemaker promised to sell no wine before its time. Now, a different company is promising to sell no wine (at least one label of wine anyway) without helping humans atone for past crimes.
The rhyme may not be as good, but the thought is more altruistic.
Related Topics: · Africa, Amazon, Asia, California, global warming, rainforest, tree planting, Trinchero Family Estates, Trinity Oaks, wine
Let your fingers walk over to the opt-out option to cancel your phonebook
August 31st, 2009
By Ashley Phillips
Green Right Now
If it feels like you are finding a new phonebook on your door step every week and yet, you can’t remember the last time you opened one to get a number, listen up. The industry may be walking away, albeit in baby steps, from its paper-wasting ways.
These days there are multiple ways to get a phone number without having to thumb through a directory. With sites like www.yellowpages.com and www.superpages.com many people are turning away from print phone books and using online versions. There are even free phonebook applications for phones such as the iPhone and Blackberrys.
Related Topics: · AT&T, Florida, opt out of phone books, phone books, White Pages, Yellow Pages
Green Grades report gives FedEx Office and Office Depot good marks for paper practices
August 27th, 2009
By Barbara Kessler
Green Right Now
Just in time for the new school year, an environmental watchdog group has issued a report card on paper retailers with forest-friendly policies.
ForestEthics, a Canadian-US non-profit founded in 2000, and the Dogwood Alliance, a defender of Southern US forests based in Asheville, N.C., collaborated on the third annual Green Grades report, which placed FedEx Office and Office Depot at the top of their class.
FedEx Office received an A- and Office Depot a B. Staples got a B- and Office Max a C in the group’s evaluation of the office retail sector.
Related Topics: · Amazon, Asia Pulp & Paper, Boreal Forest, Costco, Dogwood Alliance, FedEx Office, ForestEthics, Forestry Stewardship Council, Green Grades report card, Home Depot, Indonesian tropical forests, International Paper, Office Max, paper sustainability, Staples





