How to reduce your carbon footprint - top 10 tips

co2 footprintCarbon offsetting is the green buzz-word of the moment.  But many critics of carbon offsetting suggest that before people even consider CO2 offsetting as a green option, they need to get their personal carbon dioxide production in check and massively reduce their carbon footprint.....

 

Here?s our top 10 tips on how to reduce your carbon footprint:

 

  1. Green Energy
    Sign up to a green energy supplier that supplies energy generated by wind or hydro power.  It won't cost you much more that your current supplier and might actually save you money.

  2. Fly Less
    Yes, we agree that it?s tricky when you so look forward to that summer sun, but for shorter domestic journeys, like when your need to travel between London and Glasgow, why not take the train.

  3. Public Transport on Holiday
    When you arrive at your holiday destination, try to stick to public transport rather than making use of a taxi or care hire.  Most major cities have fantastically easy to use and good value public transport networks ? use them. 

  4. Boil Only What You Need
    Only boil the water that you are going to use.  One of the biggest wastes of electricity in the home is a result of boiling a nearly full kettle to make just one cup of tea or coffee.
     
  5. Turn Your Central Heating Down by One Degree. 
    Each degree that you turn your heating down by will save you around 10% energy ? with the cost of fuel the way that it is, you?ll save a fair bit of cash too.
     
  6. Do Your Shopping in Just a Single Trip
    Better still, where you have the choice of local produce, buy local.  The transportation of food is one of the biggest contributors to co2 so always make careful choices in the supermarket.  Buy UK produced fruit and veg rather than those apples that have travelled half way around the world to make it to the supermarket shelf.  Do the same with wine and beer ? Europe produces some fantastic wine and the UK brews the best beer in the world ? food and drink tastes better when it has small carbon miles!  (why not even try your hand at making home-made wine or homebrew?)

  7. Get Your House Insulated
    Cavity wall insulation for a three bed semi will cost you around ?300 and will save about ?100 on your heating bills ? for this return on your money; this has to be one of the best investments that you can possibly make.

  8. Stop Using The Car So Much
    Stop using the car for work or the school run.  Lift share instead ? take it in turns with a friend to do the school run ? as well as reducing emissions, it?ll give you more free time for yourself.  Start catching the train or bus to work ? it?s less stressful with someone else doing the driving and will give you time to relax reading the paper or a book.
     
  9. Swich-Off
    Don?t leave your electrical appliances on stand-by.  It?s often publicised that if everyone in the UK completely switched off their TV, DVD, stereo or computer, one less power station would be needed.

  10. A Green Workplace
    Don?t forget about being green at work too.  Just because it?s someone else paying for electricity and heating don?t waste it.  Get your employer to write a green policy to raise their awareness.  A company that operates with green principles in mind is likely to save money and therefore be more profitable.

 

Did we miss something that you think should be in the top 10?  Please post your comments.


Tags:  co2 energy carbon footprint save tips guide

 
Natural Collection has the lot!

Natural CollectionOrganic cotton, fair-trade cotton, organic wool, hemp and bamboo.  When it comes to green and ethical clothing the Natural Collection website has got the lot!

 

And when you see the huge range of clothing that is available from their online shop, not to mention the massive range of gifts, accessories, books and household products, you really can see why they were one of the winners of last years Ethical Awards.

 

If you want to be the first to be notified about similar offers, then subscribe to the Ecotivity Newsletter. 

 

 


Tags:  organic cotton wool hemp bamboo clothes fairtrade

 
Wood burning stoves in smokeless zones

wood-burning stoveWhen it comes to installing alternative energy in your home, for most people some of the options available are simply not very practical and also far too expensive.  Adding a wind-turbine or solar panels to your roof could mean having to take out a second mortgage to cover the cost, and with the energy saving payback-time could run into several decades. 

 

For an economical and practical solution to meeting at least some of your home?s energy needs you should get back to basics and make serious considerations for wood fuelled heating.  Wood sourced from a re-newable and correctly managed source can be considered to be 100% carbon neutral. Wood differs from fossil fuels such as coal, gas or oil because it is part of the carbon/carbon neutral cycle. Although the fuels produce CO2, trees absorb CO2 and store it as carbon which makes up half the weight of the tree.  When the wood is burned it releases only the same amount back into the atmosphere, exactly the same as if the tree was left to rot.

 

You can pick-up a really efficient stove (that will run at about 80% efficiency) fo around ?1000 and are probably looking at up to the same again for installation costs, but cost savings can be seen within a couple of years.

 

In the UK many towns and cities are classed as ?smokeless zones?.  This has meant that in the past, wood-burning was an exclusive pastime for country folk.  For those of us who lived in towns and cities if we wanted a real fire it had to be smokeless, meaning burning smokeless coal or coke - not very environmentally friendly.   Today many stoves now incorporation the latest clean-burn air-wash technologies, more of the volatile by-products burn, causing double combustion and reduced emissions.  This means is that many stove models are suitable for using in smokeless zoned towns and cities.  With the huge choice of traditional and contempory designs available, there really isn?t any excuse for not having a wood-burning stove whether you live in a cottage in the countryside or flat in the city.  For  a complete list of the stoves that are  authorised  for use in smoke control areas please take a look at  The Smoke Control Areas (Exempted Fireplaces) Order.

 

If you are still not convinced about wood, take a look at the National Energy Foundation?s wood fuel website

 

And now that you are convinced, the two wood-burning stove manufactures that set the standard in the UK are Charnwood and Clearview .


Tags:  wood home energy

 
Ain?t milk brilliant - recycled milk bottle lights

recycled milk bottle light shadesEco Homestore completely dispels the image that a green shop is just about selling lentils to beardy-weirdies.  Their products include some of the best looking and funkiest recycled and green home accessories that we?ve seen!

 

Our favourite product has to be the milk bottle light shades complete with their original 1980s advertisement.  With a couple of these lighting-up your kitchen you will add a real eco design statement to your kitchen, as well as create some 80s chique.


Tags:  recycled design home shop

 
Neal?s Yard - organic skincare

Neals YardSixty per cent of what you put on your skin ends up in your blood stream, so it's really important to be fully aware of what's in the products you use.  By using organic ingredients on your body, you are reducing the amount of chemicals residues that are absorbed by your skin.


Neal?s Yard aim to make their products as effective and as organic as possible - making them by hand from ingredients with proven properties.  They are designed to be as natural, biodegradable, and environmentally friendly as they can make them.   With more than 25 years of commitment to organic farming and organic products, they were the first company in the UK to sell certified organic essential oils.


And there?s more; Neal?s Yard products support of Fairtrade by the company maintaining equitable and respectful relationship with all their suppliers as well as supporting specific fairtrade projects; Neem Soaps are from a fairtrade project in Tanzania, hand-made soaps support a local artisan in France, and a fairtrade project in Timil Nadu to produce organic cotton bags.

 

Heal's highstreet and online store carry a huge range of Neal's Yard products.


Tags:  organic fairtrade skin hand-made organic cotton essential oils

 
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