Posts Tagged ‘landfills’

Kudos for Austin Water Quality


Drinking tap water is so much better for the environment than buying bottled water. We all know that creating and disposing of plastic,  shipping of bottled water, and health concerns over toxins introduced into the water by the plastic make it a less than ideal solution for safe and portable water.  Great news for Austinites… our city water is rated 7th best in the nation by Environment Work Group, a non-profit dedicated to researching and reporting on municipal water supply safety.  Go to www.ewg.org/tapwater to read more, and while you’re there, consider a small donation to keep them going in logothis important work!

Our water is of a quality where the biggest concern is the chlorine that is added to prevent the treated water from being contaminated as it goes through the municipal pipes.  Try filling a pitcher with water and letting it sit uncovered overnight- the chlorine will evaporate.  You can cover it and keep it in the fridge- chilled and ready to drink, and it saves energy by helping to regulate the temperature in the fridge.

Now, get yourself a great sturdy, reusable bottle or three, and you broke the habit and have great water to drink.  Did you know scientists say it could take up to 1000 years for a plastic water bottle to break down in a landfill?

Water quality… just one more reason to be grateful that you live in Austin, Texas!!

Austin Energy Green Building-New Requirements


Austin Energy Green Building updated their green building rating requirements to stay ahead of the new energy code, which took effect October 1.

AEGB manager Richard Morgan says, “We’ve raised the bar. We’re looking beyond kilowatt hours and gallons of water saved, because the building community is really starting to get that.”

For homes to earn a 2-star rating under the single family system, builders will have to create a construction waste management plan. gbLogoThis will help the City of Austin reach its Zero Waste Goal of reducing waste sent to the landfill by 90 percent by 2040.

The changes are designed to further advance ambitious City of Austin sustainability goals that include the Zero Energy Capable Homes Plan, the Austin Climate Protection Plan and the Zero Waste Goal.  They include social equity and economic viability aspects and effect multi-family building as well.  Read the full article on the AE website:

http://tinyurl.com/269er96

Dell: Earth Day and Refurb Ink


Earth Day is coming, and Dell has a wonderful program to plant trees to celebrate.  In partnership with Team Earth, Dell’s Facebook® fans will have the opportunity to donate one of 75,000 trees in a friend’s name. Become a fan and keep an eye out on our Facebook page for this special Earth Day event beginning mid-April.

Dell is also offering NextLife refurbished ink cartridges for many popular printer models that print up to 20% more pages than new, reduce waste in our landfills, and reduce resources used to produce new.  EPA estimates in 2003 said we dump 400 million cartridges into landfills each year.  If even 1% of that number was refurbished, it would be the equivalent in CO2 reduction of planting 15,000 trees.  That makes NextLife Ink cartridges a economically AND environmentally good choice!  Go to the Dell site and type in NextLife into the site search.

Green Home Trends


Green Home Trends: Ten Ways to Make your Home Greener…  A nice overview and links for ten new products; smokeless, portable indoor/outdoor fireplace, biodegradable furniture, home composting systems, new light emitting strips, water conserving plant and lawn systems and more.

http://www.realtor.org/rmohome_and_design/articles/2009/0902_househome_greener

Sustainable Living Seven (Part Two)


Buy Less, Buy Conscientiously- Consider Life Cycle of Purchases

 We have become a nation of consumers. We all have so much STUFF we don’t really need, and we are not very aware of the ultimate cost of these habits.  The more STUFF we buy, the more materials are mined, harvested, or otherwise extracted, and the more waste we have to dispose of.   That’s a problem with serious environmental costs on both ends of a process called the Materials Economy, which involves extraction (use of finite natural resources), production (producing pollutants, using energy), distribution (more pollutants, more energy use), consumption (that’s us, and ok, the fun part), and disposal.  You KNOW that last one is a problem…

 Our enthusiastic (and not very well thought out purchasing) strains finite natural resources of water, minerals, oil, forests, animals; contributes billions of tons of unnecessary pollution, and goes quickly (only 1% of what we buy is still in use in six months!) into landfills that pollute water and soil.  We all know the toll that buying all this STUFF on credit has on our financial health, too.

 There is a wonderful, entertaining little video called “The Story of Stuff” that delightfully illustrates this whole idea, and you might even find it appropriate for children to help them understand how it helps the planet to resist the siren call of “more stuff!”

It’s high time we become more conscious in our buying decisions.  We need to reclaim thrift as a value, and be wise about the whole cycle of purchasing.  The next time an ad tempts you to be happier, healthier, sexier, or smarter by buying “whatever”; think twice.  Consider whether this purchase will REALLY deliver on that promise.  Maybe you could: Buy used/refurbished, borrow it from a friend, rent it, repair the one you have, trade or share. 

We have to work to change the paradigm we currently operate in, which has been humorously identified as “The one with the most toys when they die wins”.  Maybe instead of buying YET another pair of shoes to feel better, we call a friend. Or volunteer to clean up a local park.  We can learn to be involved with other people in ways that don’t involve getting in the car and going to the mall and buying things we don’t really need because we saw them on TV.  It can be so satisfying to grow things yourself, make it from scratch, repair, and otherwise be a wise and conservative steward of  dwindling resources.

 If buying is really the only good solution, compare carefully.  Consider the entire life cycle.  Buy products produced as intelligently as possible; minimal packaging, produced as locally as possible.  Consider the extraction part of the cycle.  Fair trade? Animal friendly?  Renewable resources? Read labels for toxic chemicals in the products.  A good one for cosmetics is the Cosmetics Safety Database. Is the same product available without coloring or additives?  Is it sturdy; will it last?  Many products now are intended to be disposable for convenience, but consider the wastefulness of that with each purchase.  Maybe a real razor with refills over plastic disposables.  Buy larger sizes to cut down on wasteful packaging.  Buy in bulk.  Also shop locally, and carry your own bag.  Stanberry has sturdy, reusable tote bags available for the asking!  

Tune in to Stanberry Sustainable Living Seven (3) for the next step in the process, disposing of waste in the best ways possible.

Reuse + Reduce + Recycle = Responsible


The Three R’s for Today!

Protecting and preserving our resources is everybody’s job, and it relies on these R’s…reducing consumption, reusing what we can and recycling what is beyond reuse.

Learning the basics of the new three R’s is simple once you understand the benefits and follow some basic guidelines:

Properly dispose of your recyclable items to insure that they end up in the right place to be recycled, saving the energy and cost required to create a new can, bottle or paper cup. Simple fact: up to 75% of America’s trash can be recycled but current statistics indicate that only 25% is.

When we acquire and consume less, we reduce waste, helping us to become more environmentally conscious as consumers and citizens.

By reusing and recycling we reduce the impact upon our landfills. Which in turn helps to keep our planet safer and cleaner. Simple fact: toxins from garbage in landfills can leak and contaminate our ground water.

Recycling made Simple

      •  No need to remove stickers and labels from bottles, cans,
          jugs and jars
      •  Yes remove tops, metal lids, plastic lids, and caps
      •  No need to wash items clean
      •  Yes empty containers of food waste and no mold

Glass: all types

Metal: most cans, tins and aluminum foil

Paper: envelopes, boxes, magazines, newspapers, copy paper

Plastic: detergent containers, water bottles, milk jugs, food containers, most yogurt containers. For #3-#7 plastic types, check with your local facility.

Simplify by Reducing

Grocery Bags: Whether you chose paper or plastic in the past is not a concern. If you have either around still, reuse them. And for the future say no to both choices. Invest in reusable bags: canvas, mesh, cloth or even homemade bags are all environmentally friendly choices, not to mention more fashionable too.  Any Stanberry agent can give you a FREE reusable tote…

Water Containers: Just say no to disposable! It is recommended we drink 4-16oz bottles of water a day, that adds up to close to 120 disposable bottles per month. Quench your thirst and waste by investing in 3-4 refillable plastic bottles.

Reusable Coffee Mugs: No more double-cup plus a sleeve for the daily grind. Make it personal; purchase a reusable stainless or ceramic option to enjoy your cup-o-joe on the go.

And Lastly, Simply Reuse

Remember that great old saying “one man’s trash is another man’s treasure”? We’ll it certainly still applies today; if you can’t find a place to recycle it, you can always donate it.

For further questions on recycling, the cans and cant’s or to donate specific items, try these sources:

      •  earth911.org
      •  obviously.com/recycle
      •  freecycle.org
      •  craigslist.org

Every act of conservation and caring matters. We hope the three R’s will become second nature in your everyday life.