Good Reading

GREEN TIP # 10

EVEN GEEKS AND GEARHEADS CAN BE GREEN!

It’s true! There is a new blog sponsored by The Nature Conservancy that has all kinds of interesting and exciting information about technological advances that may help us preserve our precious planet.

Here’s the Conservancy’s intro to this site:

“Science, technology gadgets and...baby seals. We're in a bit of an eco-mess, but we've got the brains to lick any problem. And that's why EcoGeek.org publishes up to ten stories daily about innovations that are saving the planet.

Technology can be a force for evil, or for awesome. Those who shun technologies that could save the planet are just as guilty as those who ignore the environment. There's a safe balance, where the awesome can help nature as much as it helps us have a good time and live easier lives. EcoGeek devotes its pages to exploring the symbiosis between nature and technology.

And if that sounds interesting to you, then congratulations, you're an EcoGeek.”

You can browse the blog, subscribe for free and keep in touch with the latest goings-on.

Some recent postings:

Ø      Wind turbines for the windy city

Ø      Turn off everything to observe “Earth Hour” worldwide

Ø      Converting a city’s water treatment plant sludge into clean power

Ø      Can a car be green, really?

Ø      New window technology works against heat loss

Ø      Algae based biofuels

And the list goes on! To browse, and be amazed and astounded, go to: http://www.ecogeek.org/

Green Tip # 9

PLASTIC BOTTLES ARE RECYCLABLE, RIGHT?

What’s more Northwest than a wonderful bottle of ‘pure mountain spring water’? Yes, they are lightweight, easy to stash and take with you, part of a healthy lifestyle… BUT

*“Plastic bottles clog landfills, create greenhouse gases and take excess energy to produce... “Nine out of ten plastic water bottles end up as garbage or litter…That adds up to 30 million plastic bottles discarded each day, more than 10 billion in a year.

Every liter of bottled water sold takes roughly 3 liters of water to produce… More than 17 million barrels of oil were use to produce the plastic water bottles used by Americans in 2006, a process which also created 2.5 million tons of carbon dioxide…  *Excerpts from The Seattle Times, Thursday February 28, 2008.

USE TAP WATER OR A WATER FILTRATION SYSTEM Purchase a Nalgene®, polycarbonate, or other refillable hard plastic bottle, or obtain a freebie from your favorite merchant or nonprofit (I have one from Fred Hutchinson, myself). You can fill them over and over, add ice if you like, refrigerate or even freeze them before you slip them in your backpack for your day’s outing. Just think of all the water, oil, and carbon emissions you can save!

Singing a New Song of Hope

“This national Episcopal conference seeks to engage the church in understanding and  actively addressing the crisis of climate change,” said the Rt. Rev. Gregory Rickel, bishop of the Diocese of Olympia about the Apr. 12, 2008 “Healing Our Planet Earth (HOPE): Singing a New Song of Hope” national conference in Bellevue. Bishop Rickel said, “While this conference is hosted by Episcopalians, it welcomes participants from other denominations and faith traditions.”

Conference keynote speakers include: Presiding Bishop Katharine Jefferts Schori, Ph.D., former oceanographer with NOAA, Bishop Steven Charleston, President of the Episcopal Divinity School, Cambridge, MA and a Native American elder, and Dr. Sallie McFague, a Distinguished Theologian in Residence at the Vancouver School of Theology, in Vancouver, B.C.

The day and a half conference kicks off with Presiding Bishop Jefferts Schori speaking at a free public event, 4:30 – 7 p.m. on Fri., April 11 at the Olympic Sculpture Park on the Seattle waterfront. The park represents work done with Superfund monies to restore the once toxic parcel of land for art and enjoyment. It has sweeping views of Puget Sound and the Olympic Mountains.

On Sat., April 12 besides three major addresses, a series of four panels and four workshops will be offered at the SeaTac Hilton. Panels include “Advocacy and Entrepreneurship-Implementation in the Community”, The Genesis Covenant, The Environment and Applied Theology, and Science, Humans and the Environment. For more information visit the HOPE conference website at www.healingourplanetearth.org

Contact: Carl Knirk

Email: hopeinfo@ecww.org

Website: www.healingourplanetearth.org

Green Tip #8

Household Fats, Oil and Grease from Cooking

Your mom taught you to pour your bacon grease and other liquid fats into an empty soup can, right? But sometimes you are in a hurry and pour it down your kitchen drain?

Please don’t!

Just as grease clogs your arteries, it clogs the local sewer district's and County's arteries—our sewer system.

Where does grease come from?

Most of us know grease as a byproduct of cooking. Grease is found in such things as:

Meat fats

Dairy products

Lard

Sauces & gravies

Cooking oil

Baked goods

Shortening

Food scraps

Butter and margarine

Unfortunately, there are currently no recycling options for this material.

Too often, grease is washed into the plumbing system, usually through the kitchen sink. Grease sticks to the inside of sewer pipes (both on your property and in the streets). Over time, the grease can build and block the entire pipe.

Home garbage disposals do not keep grease out of the plumbing system. These units only shred solid material into smaller pieces and do not prevent grease from going down the drain.

Commercial additives, including detergents that claim to dissolve grease, may pass grease down the line and cause problems in other areas.

The results of a grease-blocked sewer pipe can be:

  • Raw sewage overflowing in your home or your neighbor's home
  • An expensive and unpleasant cleanup that often must be paid for by you, the homeowner (the average cleanup cost is about $3,000; this does not include replacing carpets and repairing walls)
  • Potential contact with disease-causing organisms
  • An increase in operation and maintenance costs by the local sewer department and King County, which causes higher sewer bills for customers.

Just look at what happened on the Eastside not too long ago:

Grease-blocked sewer pipe causes overflow in Bellevue

May 18, 2006

News Release - City of Bellevue crews…responded last week to a local sewer overflow that was later found to be caused by a grease blockage in King County's Issaquah Interceptor. The interceptor is a large sewer line that carries wastewater from homes and businesses in the Issaquah and Bellevue areas to the county's regional wastewater plant in Renton for treatment.

Between 5,000 and 15,000 gallons of wastewater overflowed from a manhole near the intersection of S.E. 47th St. and 194th Ave. S.E. into a nearby creek that flows to Lake Sammamish. City of Bellevue staff stopped the leak, cleared the blockage, and began clean-up. To protect public health, they posted a nearby beach as closed, took water samples, and told health and regulatory agencies about the leak

Grease gets into the sewer system from household drains or businesses with poorly maintained grease traps, where it sticks to the insides of pipes. Over time, grease build-up can block an entire pipe and cause sewage overflows.

"One of the best ways people can keep fats and grease out of the sewer is to keep it out of their drains," said King County Wastewater Treatment Division Director Don Theiler. "Not only does it help prevent sewer system overflows, it can help people avoid their own costly plumbing problems.”

So, what to do?

By following a few simple steps, you can help prevent costly sewer spills in the future.

  • Small amounts of cooking oil (this includes salad oil, frying oil and bacon fat) should be poured into an old milk carton, frozen juice container, or other non-recyclable package, and disposed of in the garbage
  • Dishes and pots that are coated with greasy leftovers, should be wiped clean with a disposable towel prior to washing or placing in the dishwasher
  • Instead of placing fat trimmings from meat down the garbage disposal, place them in a trash can

Please do your part to keep fats, oils and greases out of the sewer!

Green Tip #7

HELP! MY MAILBOX IS OVERLOADED WITH CATALOGS!!!

Did you know --

Each year, 19 billion catalogs are mailed to American consumers.

What’s the impact?

  • Number of trees used – 53 million trees
  • Pounds of paper used – 3.6 million tons of paper
  • Energy used to produce this volume of paper – 38 trillion BTUs, enough to power 1.2 million homes per year
  • Contribution to global warming – 5.2 million tons of carbon dioxide emissions, equal to the annual emissions of two million cars
  • Waste water discharges from this volume of paper – 53 billion gallons of water, enough to fill 81,000 Olympic-sized swimming pools

But wait! There is a solution! Catalog Choice is a free service that will let you request that catalogs no longer be sent to you! You simply sign up, designate which catalogs you no longer wish to receive, and within 10 weeks they actually will stop being delivered! A miracle!

Catalog Choice is a sponsored project of the Ecology Center. It is endorsed by the National Wildlife Federation and the Natural Resources Defense Council, and funded by the Overbrook Foundation, the Merck Family Fund, and the Kendeda Fund.

It’s good for you, the merchants, and the environment

The Catalog Choice service is designed to benefit everyone.

  • You benefit by reducing mailbox clutter, and the amount of time you spend sifting through unwanted mail.
  • Your participation benefits merchants, lowering their cost of distribution and helping them better target their market.
  • Your participation as a member of the Catalog Choice community collectively promotes the use of best practices in the direct mailing industry.
  • Your participation as a member of the Catalog Choice community will collectively make a huge positive impact on our environment, as together we reduce the energy consumed, the carbon emissions, and the lost forests resulting from the current annual production and discarding of more than 19 billion paper catalogs.

Finally, these benefits are cost free to you!

To get started, simply go to: http://www.catalogchoice.org/

Green Tip #6

OK, I've finished painting the living room, now what do I do with the leftover paint cans? Store them forever in the garage and let them be a home for spiders? Put a mysterious label on them in order to remember which room I painted this color, so I can do some touch up after the grandkids use crayons on the wall?

King County Solid Waste Division offers this new news on how to properly dispose of latex based paint cans and cans with some leftover latex paint in them in a guilt-free, easy and practical way:

Latex paint is no longer considered hazardous waste. Beginning January 1, 2008 its management is the responsibility of the solid waste utilities.

King County Solid Waste Division and Seattle Public Utilities encourage residents to buy only as much latex paint as is needed for the job at hand and use it up. If you can't use it up, give it away to someone who can

use it.

Beginning on January 1st, 2008, the household hazardous waste facilities in King County (the Bellevue-Factoria Drop-Off Site and the Wastemobile) will no longer accept latex paint. King County Solid Waste Division requests that King County residents who cannot use up latex paint dry it out and then place it in the garbage with the lid off. Household generated oil-based paint must still be managed via the household hazardous waste facilities.

For more information visit

http://www.metrokc.gov/dnrp/swd/facilities/latex-paint-disposal.asp.

This information and related info on Hazardous Waste can be found at:

http://www.govlink.org/hazwaste/index.cfm

From Rachael Black

Green Tip # 4

Think about Green Giving possibilities this Christmas!Ag00176_

We can limit the number of gifts we buy for people. Each family member can draw a single name and give only to that person. Also, suggest a gift theme of earth-friendly gifts that won't harm the environment and wrap them in appropriate recycled or reusable materials (i.e. gift bags and bows). NPR.org gift shop has a list of suggestions for "green gifts." Or it may give you some other ideas. Green gifts include tickets, money, gift certificates and memberships. AND, a gift of time and talent would include baby-sitting, special favors, teaching a special skill or a date to enjoy a meal or an event together.

Green Tip #3

DON'T WASH YOUR OWN CAR.  Commercial car washes use up to 100 less gallons of water to wash a car. They often recycle and reuse rinse water. If everyone who washed his own car chose to go to a professional car wash just once, up to 8.7 billion gallons of water could be saved and some 12 billion gallons of soapy, polluted water could be diverted from rivers, lakes and streams

Green Tip #2

STOP JUNK MAIL. Go to www.dmaconsumers.org/cgi/offmailinglist. There you can register with the Mail Preference Service to reduce the amount of junk mail you get. Each year, the average U.S. household receives about 1.5 trees' worth of junk mail! This costs a dollar, but it's worth it.

REDUCE CREDIT CARD OFFERS: Contact 1-888-5OPT-OUT if you wish to reduce solicitations for credit offers and other financial-related offers you receive in the mail. This is the opt-out number operated by the three major credit reporting agencies (Equifax, Experian, and TransUnion); it is not related to DMA's Mail Preference Service.

Green Tip #1

GREEN TIP

As part of Emmanuel’s effort to be GREEN and respect our God given earth, we will be offering small weekly tips to get us thinking in this vein.  For instance…

Plastic bags seem to pile up at home faster than new second uses can be invented for them; and have a tendency to blow away, making them a prevalent source of litter. 

They are made from nonrenewable petroleum resources and require the use of toxic chemicals during production and processing.  Plastics production produces 14% of toxic air emissions in the U.S. and each plant emits an average of 300 to 500 gallons of contaminated waste-water per minute.

We could go on and on (Read “It’s Easy Being Green” by Crissy Trask) but the bottom line is this suggestion:

LET’S ALL USE DURABLE CLOTH CARRIERS – PREFERABLY ONES MADE FROM ORGANIC FIBERS – FOR EVERYDAY SHOPPING!

“JUST SAY NO’” WHEN ASKED IF YOU WOULD LIKE A PLASTIC BAG!  TRY IT!  IT’S EASY!