How to buy and live green
By John Raleigh
Today the
Green movement is still in transition but many elements have become mainstream,
primarily due to global warming. Ironically, in the 1970's environmentalists
were more concerned about global cooling from pollution and not global warming
from CO2.
It is popular
to ask these days: "Do you believe in Global Warming?" This is as
provocative question, like asking do you believe in God. It is a polarizing
question. Implying that you are either an environmentalist or not. Or you
either believe man made pollution can affect the climate or not. Unfortunately
there is misinformation and hypocrisy on both sides of the issue. There is a
religious type zeal on both sides that has alienated a lot of the general
public.
Whether you
believe the Earth is warming or not, there are major governmental plans to
increase the cost of energy use, control fossil fuel use, and promote
alternative energy. In fact, in the Bay Area, we are already penalized, with
extra fees or fines, for over use. Water rates are 5 times higher for large
users compared to basic. In fact a house with a irrigated half acre lot will
cost 10 times more for water (in the summer) than for a house in Sacramento
(they have no meters) and a thousand times more than an Agricultural user for
the same size area. PGE rates for electricity are $.36/KWH for the higher tier
user and only $.11KWH for the basic user. Indiana electricity users pay
$.06/KWH (one sixth of what a homeowner in a 3000sf home would pay in the Bay
Area and half of what a basic users pays/KWH). We also pay about 10% more for
gasoline and diesel and about 50% more for natural gas than the lower cost
areas, like Texas. Nationally, a carbon tax or a cap and trade tax is proposed
in Congress. In the Bay Area we already pay a tax because our rates are more
than double the National rates. If the carbon tax is fair, the coal burning
states like Indiana would pay more and we would pay less. More than likely,
Congress will come up with a plan that makes us all pay more.
What can YOU do to reduce global warming and live
GREEN?
There are
voluntary plans of action that will save energy, decrease use of foreign oil,
and save you money.
Below, I'm
providing a list of things you can do to reduce your carbon footprint, live
greener, and make you feel good about helping save the planet or just ways to
save money. One list shows inexpensive things you can do, and the other shows
more expensive ways. If you just try some of the inexpensive suggestions, you
can save 20% of your energy and water usage. A 75% reduction in you energy and
water usage is possible if you try all of these suggestions.
Carbonfootprint.com will help you measure your usage of energy and water. Using
their calculator will help you figure out what are the most effective ways to
save resources and money.
Inexpensive things you can do:
Here are some
inexpensive ways, some specific to the Bay Area, to save energy, water and
money:
- Use CFL light bulbs, motion sensors, unplug energy vampires like TV's,
computers and chargers;
- Buy local, sustainable, green products, shop with your own cloth bag, only
buy what you need;
- Recycle, buy recycled or used products, support Community Supported
Agriculture (CSA) and/or support your local farmers markets;
- Buy a programmable thermostat set it at 68 in winter, 78 in summer. Turn the
heat/AC off when you are sleeping;
- Cut down on unnecessary car trips. When you get to your destination, park in
the first spot you find. Don't drive forever to find a closer parking space;
- Use public transportation, use a rental car service like Zipcar and you can
eliminate one or all the cars you own. Even an inexpensive car can cost
$5,000/year to own and maintain.
- Walk or bike to school or work. Live near your job.
- Live in a concentrated dense urban area (Most Europeans live in cities and
use half the energy we do)
- Use less water, drink tap water not bottled, plant local drought resistant
plants instead of lawns, or let your lawn dry out in the summer. Pumping water
uses massive amounts of energy.
- Vacation locally. Take 1 long vacation instead of several short ones and save
a lot of driving.
- Use low VOC paints. Paint your roof white with special roof paint http://articles.latimes.com/2009/jul/15/business/fi-cool-roof15
- Chalk and seal your house
- Buy or rent a smaller house
- Use regular instead of premium gas (try it, if the engine doesn't ping it'll
run fine). Don't wait to warm up your engine. Modern cars don't need a warm up.
- Change your oil every 15,000 miles, like the manufacturer says, not every
3,000 miles -- like in the old days
- Set your pool pump to run at night--7 hours a night in the summer and 1 hour
in the winter. Buy a pool cover
- If you have a new PGE smart meter, do your laundry at night, and use only
cold water. Lower your hot water heater temperature to 110 degrees.
TRUE “GREENY” ways to save the Planet
Now, if you
are a TRUE and dedicated "Greeny", dry your laundry on a clothesline
and try the following things:
- Plant your own vegetables, herbs, and fruit trees. In a smaller garden only
plant lettuces, herbs, tomatoes, eggplant, peppers and dwarf fruit trees. Many
vegetables can be planted that grow in the winter rainy season that will
require little or no watering. Examples are lettuces, broccoli, cauliflower,
kale, cabbage, spinach. Because domestic water is so expensive, squash, corn,
melons, potatoes, cucumbers, beans and other water hungry plants are more
efficiently grown commercially and are not cost effective in a home garden.
- Compost, buy organic food (conventional fertilizer and pesticides use a lot
of energy), raise your own chickens, put in a beehive.
- Eat less meat. Beef takes 2500 gal of water/pound to produce. Animals produce
methane and use more water and energy than plants to produce the same amount of
calories.
- Use gray water for yard irrigation. Take 2 min. showers. Share bath water.
Turn your pool into a water retention cistern.
- Use energy saving tips from the Government
http://www1.eere.energy.gov/consumer/tips/pdfs/energy_savers.pdf
- Measure your carbon footprint: http://www.carbonfootprint.com/calculator.aspx or http://www.nature.org/initiatives/climatechange/calculator/
- Sustainable living info http://www.recycleworks.org/greenbuilding/index.html
Somewhat expensive things you can do to help the Planet
- Buy a hybrid
or electric car (Pay off time is 10 years - probably longer than the car will
last)
- Buy or build a passive solar house or install Photovoltaic active solar
panels (Pay off time is 8-10 years);
- Replace your windows with dual pane or better (Pay off time is 10-25 years);
- Insulate more or put in a thermo barrier in attic (Pay off time is 3-5
years);
- Attic fan for cooling, Reversible ceiling fans can help heat and cool (Pay
off time is 1-3 years);
- Remodel with "Green" certified products (Pay off time is 10-20
years);
- Solar and/or on demand hot water (Pay off time is 5-10 years);
- Solar pool heater (Pay off time is 3-5 years);
- Buy "Green" appliances, plumbing fixtures and HVAC (Pay off time is
3-8 years);
- Replace your lawn with an artificial lawn (Pay off time is 5-10 years);
- Invest in new clean technology companies;
- Buy carbon credits