Archive for Climate Change

Poudre School District - Greening Leader in 2007

If you are in need of a model school district for a greening initiative in your state, look no further. Poudre School District is leading the charge on greening initatives. With an energy conservation plan dating back to 1994, Poudre School District in Fort Collins, Colorado has paved the way for like-minded schools.

A few stats about Poudre School District (PSD):

1. PSD is located in Fort Collins, Colorado, 40 miles north of Denver.

2. PSD covers 1,800 square miles, 48 schools and 3 charter schools and 24,500 students.

A few stats to wow you:
1. PSD has completed 139 energy efficiency projects since 1994.
2. PSD has completed Energy Star benchmarking of all schools and adminstrative offices.
3. Ongoing yearly savings from these projects is $400,000 per year.
4. PSD has recycled over 300 tons of paper, cardboard, magazines, aluminum, plastic, glass, technology and wood in fiscal year 2007 alone.
5. PSD is one of the first to have Silver and Gold LEED certified schools built in their school district.

For more information, go to Poudre School District.

Written by Allie, Reporting Green at We Can Live Green

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Auld Lang Syne…and Going Green in 2008

Who doesn’t love the sweet, reminiscent sound of Auld Lang Syne at the stroke of midnight to ring in the new year?

And who doesn’t love the promise of starting fresh in the new year?

I’ve always been a fan of the song (which roughly translated means “times gone by” - more directly, “old long since”) and I’ve been an even bigger fan of the prospect of starting fresh on January 1.

What will 2008 bring to America and the planet? My hope is a renewed commitment to our home, planet Earth. I encourage everyone out there, in whatever capacity is possible for you, to make ‘going green’ (or ‘going greener’ for those of you well on the path to a greener lifestyle) your New Year’s Resolution.

At We Can Live Green, we’ve devised a 365 Day Pledge to Go Green. You don’t have to start it at the beginning of a new year. But if you’re searching for a New Year’s Resolution, why not try it? You can find the pledge at 365 Day Pledge.

Good luck!

Chase the Die Hard Greenie, We Can Live Green

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Our Quest for a New Vehicle - Week Three

We’ve been scouring the California countryside for the perfect hybrid car. Last week, we drove the Toyota Prius and the Toyota Highlander Hybrid. This week, the Honda Civic hybrid.

Marina: The Honda Civic hybrid is gorgeous and drives so well! With a reported
40 mpg city and 45 mpg highway, the Civic is comparable to the Prius, except it is roomier and feels safer.

Jim: The Honda Civic has a 5 star crash rating for frontal and side-impact crash testing. Safety is my number one concern and Honda definitely passes the test.

Marina: The mpg is great! Fuel efficiency is my biggest concern.

Jim: At first glance, it seems that Honda might be our car.

Marina: Except the Civic isn’t roomy enough for our trips to the mountains and to the oceans.

Jim: We need clearance for the snow and the ability to get where we need to get in the mountains. For our days at the ocean, we need room to store our surfboards.

We found a great document to review that gives the scorecards on all 2008 hybrid vehicles. It also breaks down the different rating systems for the hybrid vehicles. Take a look.

While we are excited about the Honda’s mpg, safety and track record, we are still looking for just the right fit for us. We both secretly have our preferred vehicle but we will keep looking. We only have a few more cars we are considering. We’ll keep you posted!

Jim and Marina - We Can Live Green

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California Does It Again…the Green Schools Summit

Green Technology, in conjunction with the state of California, held the first California Green Schools Summit last week. The Summit, aimed at furthering Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger’s green building initiatives in California schools, brought together state officials, environmental leaders, green products and services companies and a host of celebrities in a three day summit held December 4-6, 2007 in Pasadena, California.

The summit featured:

  • 75 educational workshops and sessions
  • an exhibition floor complete with a model green school building and more than 200 companies offering green products and services
  • a special “Student Summit” featuring green-school projects for California high school students
  • keynote speakers
  • an awards ceremony to celebrate sustainable schools throughout the state.

As Secretary Rosario Marin and State Architect David Thorman wrote in a recent commentary for the Summit, ” A school is not just a building, as any parent or teacher can tell you. Our schools provide an environment that fosters learning and provides young people with knowledge and experience that enable them to imagine their futures.” Indeed, it is no minor task to create a school that facilitates learning and provides a safe and healthy environment for students to learn. Add in the moral mandate we all have to build in an ethical, sustainable and socially responsible fashion, and one can quickly ascertain that the task set before Californians for greener schools is an immense challenge.

But it is not an impossible challenge, as evidenced by the tremendous number of exhibitors, state officials, educators, students and community members who participated in this event. California has set the pace for other states in recent legislation titled Proposition 1D, which allocated $100 million to assist the process of greening California’s K-12 schools.

Never one to shy away from leading the rest of the country, California is setting the pace once again.

For more information on the Green Schools Summit, please go to Green Technology.

Allie - Reporting Green for We Can Live Green

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Our Quest for a New Vehicle - Week Two

We drove a few hybrid models this week. We focused this week on Toyota - so we tried the Prius and the new Highlander Hybrid. We had mixed reviews on both based upon our goals of fuel efficiency (Marina) and safety (Jim). Following are a few of our thoughts:

Jim: The Prius gets great gas mileage, but when driving in it, I felt a bit like it is a deathtrap on wheels. You’d have to drive the Southern California freeways to get what I mean here. Any one out there that does knows that safety is always a concern when driving on the freeways. Speaking of safety, the crash test ratings are great for the vehicle. However, these crash tests are always measured as a straight on or direct side collision with one object stationary. Accidents don’t happen that way and the laws of physics will definitely be in the favor of a larger vehicle if this Prius gets hit on the road. There’s got to be a safer option out there.

Marina: Yes, it is a smaller car. I happen to think they are cute. And I love what they stand for. Freedom from the gas pump. I like feeling like I am making a strong statement every time I get in my car. The Prius feels like a taller vehicle inside than I imagined. The only thing I really didn’t like was that I felt very vulnerable in the event of a side crash. There’s not much between the occupants of the car and the world outside. I don’t like that. Also, no more trips to the mountains (snowboarding) or oceans (surfing) with this car.

Jim: Now the Highlander Hybrid is a different story for me. It’s safe - all five star crash test ratings except for the passenger side which received a four star crash test rating. It’s a little bulkier. Due to its size, it should survive a crash better, and there are front and side curtain airbags. It would fit our lifestyle, Marina’s interest in fuel efficiency and my goal of safety.

Marina: I liked the way the Highlander Hybrid drove. Very smooth. It has a great feature where I can monitor my fuel efficiency as I drive. The Highlander Hybrid is an SULEV which means it is 90% more fuel efficient than an average vehicle. The Prius has a PZEV rating and it is 95%plus more efficient than an average vehicle. I don’t know how much difference that 5%plus makes. I’m looking that up this week. The Highlander Hybrid does feel safer and it fits our lifestyle. I think we are both interested in the Highlander, but I want to explore all options first.

Until next week -

Jim and Marina, Newly Married and Newly Green, writing for We Can Live Green

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Our Quest for a New Vehicle - Week One

We’re relative newcomers to the world of green. So, we’ve been spending a lot of time trying to find the ‘perfect’ solution to our transportation needs. A little about us…we are married couple in our thirties, with two careers, a dog, student loans and a mortgage. We love the outdoors and spend a lot of time in the mountains and in the water. We are looking for a more energy-efficient vehicle that can support our outdoors lifestyle.

We have spent the last nine months or so researching vehicle options and have settled on a hybrid as our next choice. Jim will be ready for another car in a couple of years, and we hope there will be better options for electric, hydrogen or biodiesel. We are excited about the prospect of electric vehicles, but as of December 2007, there are no affordable ($30,000 or less) highway-worthy (drive 60 mph or above) vehicles. If any electric car manufacturers are out there reading, we are ready and waiting! Until then, a hybrid is the choice for us. The next question is, which hybrid?

Jim: My number one issue is safety. I want a vehicle that is safe for my wife and for our future family. We also need a car that can take us to the mountains or ocean.

Marina: My number one concern is fuel-efficiency and smog emissions. I can’t stand paying so much for gas and I hate being a part of the climate change problem!

Jim: I appreciate Marina’s concern about fuel-efficiency. I feel the same way except I don’t want to compromise safety in this process. Car accidents are so common here in Southern California where we live, and I want to make sure we are as safe as we can be when we drive.

Marina: I know safety is important. But I just feel guilty not doing as much as I can to help our planet.

This week, we’ll start test driving hybrids. We’ll keep you posted. Wish us luck!

Jim and Marina, We Can Live Green at http://www.wecanlivegreen.com

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Tom Jones: A Man, A Paddleboard and a Mission

Tom Jones is anything but your average guy. He is an extreme athlete, but extreme might not be a strong enough word for what this man is capable of doing for a cause he believes in. Tom has committed his life to furthering causes through his athletic skills, his most recent endeavor taking him down the coast of California, one paddle at a time. Armed with a paddleboard and a conviction to raise public awareness about the disturbing trend of increasing levels of plastic pollution in our oceans, Jones set out to fight this problem by paddling the entire 1,250 mile coastline of California.

His journey started on August 7 at California’s northern most tip and concluded on November 9, at Border Fields State Park, south of San Diego at the south-western most part of the United States. During his world record-making endeavor as the first human being to ever paddle the entire coastline of California, Tom endured winds over 50 mph, the rugged, sharky waters of Northern California, swells that took his board and smoke from the Southern California wildfires, not to mention the grueling physical exhaustion from such an extreme athletic challenge.

He was supported along the way by local beachgoers, lifeguards, the coast guard, and perhaps most appropriately, a host of oceanic creatures including pods of killer whales, elephant seals and schools of dolphin.

His mission received significant media attention as news spread of Tom’s journey. Following is an interview with Tom Jones, who We Can Live Green honors as our Green Pioneer for November 2007.

WCLG: Tell us a bit about yourself.

Tom: I try to be a good father, husband and humanitarian.

WCLG: What do you do and how did you start doing it?

Tom: I am an extreme endurance athlete. That means I take athletic sports like running, biking, paddleboarding, and fighting to extreme levels.

WCLG: When did you begin to ‘go green’?

Tom: I think that I’ve been pretty “green” most of my life by instinct.

WCLG: Was there a turning point for you in your life that started you on the path you are on now?

Tom: Yes, I started to paddle board in harbors and the ocean so that I could get better at surfing. When I started to paddle, I noticed an unacceptable amount of trash in our water and decided to do something extraordinary to bring attention to scientific facts that I discovered while doing some casual investigation on plastic content in the water.

WCLG: What do you see as the biggest priorities of your generation?

Tom: Making a change in the way that we co-exist with nature. We must be much more in harmony with nature that we currently are, I believe.

WCLG: What three things do you think all people must learn to do?

Tom: Respect, Research and Restore the environment.

WCLG: Do you have any advice for our readers?

Tom: Go to www.CaliforniaPaddle.com and join the “Campaign for a plastic free ocean”. Help me continue to get the word out. When people find out and investigate the facts, they tend to get involved.

WCLG: Is there anything you would like to add about yourself?

Tom: No…….Just a good guy trying to make a positive difference in the world around us.

WCLG: Who inspires you and why?

Tom: Everyone, because everyone that I come in contact with teaches me something about myself.

WCLG: Where do you see yourself ten years from now?

Tom: Doing the same thing, just getting better at it hopefully.

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Retail Therapy and the Holidays

With the holidays comes the usual onslaught of ’shop till you drop’ pressure from retailers, shopping centers and the media at large. With this much pressure to just buy, buy, buy!, how can a girl stay green?

The question begs that we first delve a little deeper into the history and psyche of the American shopper…

The notion of retail therapy originated in an article written by the Chicago Tribune in 1986 in which the writer wrote: “We’ve become a nation measuring out our lives in shopping bags and nursing our psychic ills through retail therapy.” (Wikipedia) Retail therapy is a phrase Americans throw about casually (often even comically) in conversations, without really thinking about the meaning behind the phrase. How many times have you said you needed to go shopping after a long day or a particularly bad workweek? (Be honest with yourself here!) If you have said it or acted on it, you’re guilty of retail therapy.

The thought of having to buy ’stuff’ to feel better is really just crazy if you think about it. Add to that feeling the intense pressure to buy, buy, buy! for the holidays…and no wonder people are ramming each other with shopping carts at the local Target and sheriffs are called to Best Buys across the nation for crowd control on ‘Black Friday’.

As a staffer here at We Can Live Green, I need to first say that I am not promoting consumerism (See Stop Keeping Up With the Joneses‘! ). But to be fair, I realize that we no longer live in a world where we can walk to the local artisan for a loaf of bread, or barter a bar of soap for a gallon of milk. We live in a world in which we must purchase products from stores, whether in our city or town or online. I also realize trying to convince little Tommy that Santa isn’t coming this year because we live in a consumer-driven society where the dollar is king probably isn’t realistic either. I accept these facts and call on consumers to use their consumer voice for change.

But how do you use your consumer voice for change? Here are a few quick ideas to think about this holiday season.

1. What about giving the gift of time to someone you love? Time together, time apart, time to work on a project together or just to sit and visit with one another. Time is perhaps the most cherished gift of all…and it doesn’t cost you a thing.

2. What about making gifts for the holidays? A few years ago, our family tried out a new holiday rule - No store-bought gifts. The new rule brought with it some of the most memorable gifts of our lives, as well as some of our most touching moments and the best laughs during gift-giving time.

If you are purchasing gifts this season, keep in mind that you cast your consumer vote every time you spend a dollar. When you cast your consumer vote and exchange your hard-earned dollar for a product, you are in essence stating, “I approve of this product. I believe in what it stands for.”

Here’s the deal. You can use your consumer voice for change this holiday season. You can be green this holiday season. You can. And the great thing is, there are varying degrees on just how green you want to be. If you purchase products this holiday season, please take a look at this green directory.

I personally challenge you to be sure that the products you purchase stand for what you personally believe in…Who knows, we might just start a whole new kind of retail therapy. Happy Holidays!

Penelope - the Newbie and Staffer at We Can Live Green

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Presidential Forum on Global Warming and Renewable Energy - Lots of Hoorah, But Was There Enough Substance?

I have to admit that attending the 1st ever Presidential Forum on Global Warming and Renewable Energy was a bit exciting, even for a jaded die hard greenie like myself. Seeing presidential candidates (Dennis Kucinich, Hillary Clinton and John Edwards) debate on the environment was encouraging. In fact, it was downright exhilarating. And the level of enthusiasm emanating from a completely packed house at the Wadsworth Theatre in Los Angeles helped to amp up the evening even more. Sitting there, listening to the speakers and looking around, I kept thinking, ‘Yes, we can do it. We can, and will, fix our planet.’

Excitement and optimism aside, trying to get down to the nitty-gritty of each candidate’s specific policy on global warming and renewable energy was a little more difficult than I had hoped. Perhaps it was the timed ten minute speech accompanied by the three to five questions from the panelists. Perhaps it was simply that this issue is too big and too complex to address thoroughly in a half-hour time slot. Whatever the reason, I left wanting to know more.

For those of you not in attendance and curious to know the outcome of the speeches, here’s a brief rundown:

Dennis Kucinich

  • The U.S. must abolish all nuclear weapons.
  • The U.S. must participate in all global treaties such as the Landmine Treaty, Small Arms Treaty.
  • The U.S. will institute the ‘Works Green Administration’ which will infuse ‘green living’ in all aspects of the administration. A few examples he cited are as follows:
  • The creation of a new Department of Energy which would provide disincentives for oil, coal and nuclear energy and incentivize wind and solar technologies.
  • The creation of a new Department of Health which would create not-for-profit healthcare for the masses with an emphasis on preventative healthcare for all.
  • Spending money into circulation to create the infrastructure for these new initiatives.

Hillary Clinton

  • Reduce greenhouse gas emissions by 90% by 2050.
  • Cut foreign oil by 2/3 by 2030.
  • Move from a carbon-based economy to a fuel efficient economy.
  • Create 5 million ‘green collar’ jobs.
  • Create US Bonds (a similar strategy as what was utilized during World War II through War Bonds) for green initiatives nationwide.
  • When asked how she would address increasing climate change-related disasters in poverty stricken areas, Senator Clinton stated that her foreign policy would likely include the following:
  • 1. Create a process where the U.S. can take a leadership role globally.
  • 2. Convene international meetings on a three month basis with the global contributors to climate change.
  • 3. Create a forum (composed of scientists, American government officials and more) to address the issues related to climate change and renewable energy.
  • 4. Encourage countries like India and China to jumpstart their development by moving to renewable energy technologies.

John Edwards

  • Reduce greenhouse gas emissions by 20% by 2020 and 80% by 2050.
  • Create the New Energy economy and 1 million new ‘green collar’ jobs.
  • Create a New Energy Economy Fund ($13 billion fund for new energy technologies).
  • Invest in renewable energy (25% of energy will be alternative, renewable energy by 2025).
  • Give automakers $1 billion a year to create new alternatively fueled vehicles. Reduce oil consumption by 7.5 million barrels of oil daily by 2025.
  • Open the electricity grid to innovation through inventions like ‘Smart Grids’, allowing local communities and homes to develop better, more energy-efficient power.
  • Achieve zero growth in electricity demand with efficiency for the next decade.
  • Cut carbon subsidies to raise money for alternative technologies.
  • Provide seed innovation for green small businesses and homeowners who want to make changes to their homes to improve energy efficiency, etc.
  • Call on states to separate energy profits from energy sales.
  • When asked about his foreign policy on climate change and countries affected by climate change, John Edwards stated “The world has to see us (the United States) as a force for good again.” And then, “To be worthy of leadership, the world must see us as meeting not only our selfish needs, but also the needs of humanity.”
  • He also stated that our foreign policy must include not only policy regarding climate change, but other large scale global issues so that these issues might be approached in a more cohesive manner.

Maybe not as many specifics on environmental policies as I’d like from each candidate, but it’s a start. And I’m happy to report that at least someone is talking about it on the campaign trail.

Chase - Die Hard Greenie and Staffer

http://www.wecanlivegreen.com

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Welcome to We Can Live Green’s Weblog

Welcome to We Can Live Green’s Weblog.   The staff of WeCanLiveGreen.com has decided to join the blog community to share their thoughts, struggles, reviews, events, products and ideas for going green via the blogosphere. Each blog entry will be signed by the staffer from WeCanLiveGreen.com. 

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