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Archive for the ‘Environmental issues’ Category

Top GREEN Eating Tips

Aug-23-2010 By zahnyx

Eat healthy

Top GREEN Eating Tips

Indulge in the Big O

When you eat organic, don’t just picture the healthy food you are putting in your body, picture the healthy ecosystems which produced that food, the workers who are safer from chemicals, the land, water, and air that is being protected, and the wildlife that is being allowed to thrive. Organic vegetables, fruits, grains, and juice, (and don’t forget the organic wine and beer), are grown and processed in ways that support healthy people and a healthy planet.

(While you may not be able to find or afford organic options for everything you need, certain fruits and vegetables are more pesticidy than others.) For details on the meaning of organic, see the USDA Organics homepage.

Feast on Fair Trade fare

Fair trade certified food ensures a proper wage and working conditions for those who harvest and handle it. But fair trade is green for the environment as well. TransFair, the only fair trade certifier in the U.S., has strong environmental standards built into its certification process that protect watersheds and virgin forests, help prevent erosion, promote natural soil fertility and water conservation, and prohibit GMOs and many synthetic chemicals. TransFair claims that their environmental standards are the most stringent in the industry, second only to USDA organic certification.

Go local

Buying seasonal, local food is a boon for the environment for a lot of reasons. Since most food travels many miles to reach your table (1,500 miles, on average), locally sourced food cuts back on the climate-change impacts of transportation. Local food also generally uses less packaging, is fresher and tastier, and comes in more varieties. It also supports small local growers and lets them get more for their produce by not having to spend so much on packing, processing, refrigeration, marketing, and shipping. The best way to track down local food is at farmers markets or through community supported agriculture (CSA), which often offer home delivery.

30 percent: Increase in both fuel consumption and greenhouse gas emissions caused from shipping a pound of apples from a farm in Iowa to a market in Washington, compared to shipping those apples to a local market in Iowa.

5: Number of countries the average U.S. meal comes from.

1500 to 2500: Number of miles food travels between farm and market. That’s 25 percent farther than it traveled two decades ago.

958: Liters of water it takes to make one liter of orange juice; 958 liters of water for irrigation, 2 liters of fuel for tractors, water-pumping, pesticide spraying, and the occasional electric heater to ward off frost.

8000: Kilometers worth of travel required to gather all the ingredients to make strawberry yogurt in Germany.

Don’t follow the pack

Instead of buying foods that come in extensive packaging (most of which is petroleum-based plastics) look for unpackaged or minimally packaged foods, experiment with bringing your own containers and buying in bulk, or pick brands that use bio-based plastic packing. And of course try and recycle or reuse any packaging you end up with.

Compost the leftovers

Greening your meals isn’t just about the food that winds up on the plate: it’s the entire process, the whole lifecycle shebang. Composting leftovers will ease the burden on the landfill, give you great soil, and keep your kitchen waste basket from smelling. Apartment dwellers and yardless wonders can do it too! And yes, a composting toilet can be part of the miraculous cycle as well.

Grow your own

In the garden, in the greenhouse, in the window box, or something fancier. Even urbanites can get quite a bit of good eats from not much space.

To and from

Just as buying locally grown food cuts on “miles per calorie,” buying from local sellers cuts back on emissions, fuel consumption, and unnecessary traffic.

Just enough

Put some extra planning into the amount of food you cook will cut back on waste. If it’s something that will spoil quickly, try to avoid making more than you or your family can eat. If you’ve got extra, make a friend happy with a home cooked surprise. If it’s a bigger affair, give the leftovers to those who may need it more.

Eat it Raw

Many people swear by the benefits of eating raw. Whatever the health advantages may be, preparing raw food consumes less energy and because raw food is usually fresh by definition, it is more likely to be locally grown.

Stop eating meat

Stop consumption of meat can be the single most green move a person makes. Producing meat requires huge amounts of water, grain, land, and other inputs including hormones and antibiotics, and leads to pollution of soil, air, and water. A pound of beef requires around 12,000 gallons of water to produce, compared to 60 gallons for a pound of potatoes. Going vegetarian or vegan is a profoundly meaningful environmental choice.

From Treehuggers, edited, graphics added.

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January 15, 2009

Dear readers,

 

 

Ask Congress to make restoring public lands a stimulus priority!

 

 

 

 

Take action now!

Within days, the new administration and Congress will begin crafting a stimulus package designed to put Americans back to work and get our ailing economy back on track. We need your help today.

Let your Senators and Representative know that you support a stimulus plan that not only will create new U.S. jobs in the places that need them most but also will make a critical difference in protecting our treasured public lands – lands that belong to all Americans.

Take action today! This package is on a very fast track.

A program that invests in green jobs to restore the land is desperately needed – and will benefit Americans from coast to coast. Modeled after the far-sighted Civilian Conservation Corps created by Franklin D. Roosevelt, such a program will put Americans to work in jobs that cannot be shipped overseas, restoring the ecosystems of our national parks, wildlife refuges, forests, and other public lands and open spaces.

Because these lands are our first and best defense against the impacts of global warming on our communities, this investment can help address two of the most serious issues facing Washington’s new leaders: the economy and climate change.

Won’t you take a few moments to ask Congress to create a green jobs program aimed at restoring America’s public lands?

Best wishes,

 

Kathy Kilmer
The Wilderness Society

 


The Wilderness Society’s mission is to protect wilderness and inspire Americans to care for our wild places. As a subscriber to WildAlert, you join more than 310,000 Wilderness Society members and supporters in protecting and restoring America’s wild places.
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From Environmental Defense Fund

Dear readers,

Today’s climate action blueprint opens the door for legislation in 2009.

Check out Climate 411 for more on today’s events.

Barack Obama has not yet been inaugurated, but climate legislation buzz is already building in Washington. Take that as a good sign!

On Capitol Hill today, the United States Climate Action Partnership (USCAP) – a coalition of industry and environmental groups co-founded by EDF – unveiled a detailed blueprint for climate action to jumpstart economic recovery with a cap on global warming pollution.

This breakthrough agreement opens the door for global warming legislation in 2009.

In a press statement, EDF President Fred Krupp celebrated the USCAP announcement:

“This is an Obama Era blueprint — business and environmentalists working together for a bold, practical solution, and that solution is cap and trade.”

Two years in the making, the USCAP blueprint represents a consensus agreement among a diverse group of American companies and leading national environmental groups on the design of comprehensive climate legislation.

The centerpiece of the USCAP blueprint is a mandatory and declining economy-wide cap on global warming pollution from electric utilities, transportation fuels and industrial facilities. It calls for aggressive greenhouse gas emissions reductions with targets and timelines consistent with President-elect Barack Obama‘s proposals.

The global warming pollution cap is the key. It sets a hard limit and guarantees reductions in global warming emissions. And it mobilizes private capital to build the clean energy technologies here in the U.S. that will solve climate change.

Moments after the blueprint was released, Congressman Henry Waxman (D-CA), chairman of the House Energy and Commerce Committee, convened the first major climate hearing of the year.

Fred Krupp joined CEOs of the USCAP coalition to deliver testimony and offer details about the blueprint.

You can get the latest news and updates of today’s events on our Climate 411 blog.

Your support is making a difference. Today’s announcement brings us one giant step closer to winning climate action this year.

Thank you for all you help make possible,

David Yarnold
Executive Director

 

 

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Florida Forever?

Jan-18-2009 By zahnyx

 

Wildlife Alert

Florida Forever?

Green Sea Turtle (Photo: David Burdick, NOAA)

Protecting habitat for sea turtles and other imperiled wildlife will be put on hold if drastic cuts are made to Florida Forever.

Please take action now to urge our state leaders to stand by their commitment by funding Florida Forever. 

Help Save Florida Forever, Take Action Button

The final vote is tomorrow.   Please forward this message to at least 5 friends who care about conserving Florida’s natural heritage.

Dear friends,

Is Florida Forever history?  Tomorrow, the state legislature could cut 80% of the funding for this landmark conservation program in an unbalanced, short-sighted effort to axe state spending.  Take action to help save Florida Forever.

Florida Forever is the largest public land buying program in the nation and has helped protect more than one million acres of land and safeguard irreplaceable habitat for nearly 200 endangered speciesfrom sea turtles to gopher tortoises, to Florida panthers and black bears.

The fate of Florida Forever — and the endangered wildlife it helps protect — hangs in the balance.  Send a message to Governor Crist and your legislators right now and let them know you want our state’s proud land conservation legacy to continue.

Florida Forever was established to safeguard vital wildlife habitat and environmentally sensitive land — but it also makes Florida a better place to live by protecting our water resources, saving our coasts, preserving cultural and historical sites, and providing us with more parks and recreation areas

Despite the amazing success of this landmark program, the legislature is poised to slash funding for this landmark program tomorrow.  

The legislature made this decision with little advance notice and may not realize how important Florida Forever is to Floridians like you and me.  That’s why it’s so urgent that our state leaders hear from us today. 

Florida is one of the fastest growing states in the nation. That means that land conservation efforts are crucial to preserving the wild lands we have left for future generationsAnd with the price of land at record lows, now is not the time to cut this vital program — and its investment in local real estate markets — off at the knees. 

Defenders of Wildlife and our allies in the Florida Forever Coalition are working overtime to protect Florida Forever.  But we need your support to succeed. 

Join us in calling on our state leaders to find a better way to deal with budget deficits than making drastically disproportionate cuts that shortchange Florida’s future. 

The final vote will happen tomorrow, so please take action now to let your legislators know you support giving Florida Forever the funding it needs to continue to protect our special places and the imperiled animals that depend on them.

Thank you for taking urgent action to save Florida Forever,

Laurie MacDonald, Defenders of Wildlife Laurie Macdonald
Florida Program Director
Defenders of Wildlife

Why we need to support Florida Forever now more than ever:

  • Times are hard, and we all need to shoulder responsibility, but that doesn’t mean we should cut our conservation programs off at the knees.  
  • Other programs should share equally in budget reductions. An 80% budget cut is not fair and fails to recognize that the state’s economy relies on a healthy environment.     
  • Floridians strongly support land conservation and wildlife protection programs, even when times are tough.  
  • Breaking land acquisition contracts with landowners now will make them less likely to undertake the lengthy process required to sell land to the state in the future. Willing landowners are essential partners in conservation efforts across the state. 
  • Land acquisition projects help fuel the state and local economy, providing jobs to local workers and invigorating ecotourism across the state. 

Home Privacy Policy Contact Us Donate Now

© Copyright 2009 Defenders of Wildlife.

Defenders of Wildlife is a national, nonprofit membership organization dedicated to the protection of all native wild animals and plants in their natural communities.

Defenders of Wildlife can be contacted at:
1130 17th Street, NW
Washington, DC 20036

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care2 petitionsite actionAlert

Dear friends,

I know you’ve heard about Bush’s terrifying cuts to the Endangered Species Act. I know you’re angry. So let’s do something about it.

Sign this petition to make sure these rule changes are NEVER implemented. >>

Here’s the overview: the Bush Administration enacted a last-minute ruling, which cuts U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service scientists out of the review process for determining if new mining, logging and construction projects pose a threat to endangered animals.

What this really means is that political appointees, not scientists, will determine what poses a risk to endangered animals. Do you think these politicians will choose endangered species over new projects that will make them money? Not a chance.

This could be disastrous for our endangered species. Please act now, and add a personal comment! >>

Thank you for protecting our wild creatures.

Sincerely,

Emily
Care2 and ThePetitionSite Team

Don’t Let The Bush Administration Condemn More Species to Extinction
polar bears
Take Action!
Make sure the recent changes to the Endangered Species Act are never implemented. Sign today.

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Defending U.S. Waters at Supreme Court

Earthjustice
Lower Slate Lake
Lower Slate Lake, at the center of the case, after surrounding trees were cut down and access roads built.

 

The first case before the U.S. Supreme Court in 2009 will be argued on Monday by Earthjustice as we oppose a combined attack on our nation’s waterways by the Bush administration and Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin.

We are sending out this news alert to our supporters because of the issue’s great significance.

Bush and Palin are jointly asking the Supreme Court to re-interpret the Clean Water Act so that the mining industry can dump its wastes in streams, rivers and lakes throughout America. They want permission to kill every fish and organism in a particular waterway if necessary.

The only obstacle to achieving their ambitions is Earthjustice.

Arguing the case is Earthjustice attorney Tom Waldo, whose appearance before the Supreme Court climaxes a successful, years-long battle in lower courts to prevent a mining company from killing a pristine Alaska lake with chemically treated waste. It’s this case the high court is hearing on Monday.

Tom Waldo, Earthjustice attorney
Tom Waldo, Earthjustice attorney

But, as Tom knows all too well, the stakes are much higher than one small lake. An adverse decision would make a shambles of the Clean Water Act and the waters it is supposed to protect.

The threat is especially imminent in Alaska, whose governor openly promotes unrestrained dumping of mine tailings because of the mining boom it could ignite. The first venture to benefit would be the proposed Pebble Mine—a monster gold mine planned to operate above Alaska’s remarkable Bristol Bay, home to the world’s richest sockeye salmon fishery. Dumping mine wastes into its waters could be disastrous.

As a supporter of Earthjustice, you have the opportunity to read a live report from the Supreme Court on Monday through our blog, unEarthed. The case will be heard at 10 a.m. (EST), and we expect to have our first blog report shortly after noon.

Regards,

Trip Van Noppen

Trip Van Noppen
President, Earthjustice

P.S. As you can imagine, the costs of preparing for this historic case—and the many critical cases we’re working on right now—are staggering, and we rely on your support to succeed. Won’t you please consider making a special tax-deductible gift today to help support our legal work on behalf of the environment?

©2009 Earthjustice | 426 17th Street, 6th Floor, Oakland, CA 94612 | 510-550-6700 | action@earthjustice.org

 

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America could put nearly 60,000 people to work within 90-180 days by funding important conservation projects on public lands — projects like restoring wetlands, reconnecting habitat across highways, removing invasive species, rehabilitating native forests and prairies, and making facilities and buildings on public lands more energy efficient.

Projects like these projects would have tangible benefits for imperiled wildlife, could keep local construction, electrical, landscape and other companies working throughout 2009 and would provide the next generation of workers with the skills they need to lead a green revolution in our economy.

Grey Wolf ~endangered Pictures, Images and Photos

Learn more about Green Jobs for Wildlife and Lands (PDF file).

Speak out for creating green jobs to protect lands and wildlife. Urge President-elect Obama and your U.S. Representative and Senators to help create jobs that will protect our wildlife and our environment.


Send Your Message Today!


 

 

Defenders of Wildlife! Pictures, Images and Photos

Thank you!
Romina

 


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