Greenfieldsite ([info]greenfieldsite) wrote,
@ 2006-12-31 23:08:00
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Environmental New Year Resolutions
I think I will divide these into resolutions that I will commit to making efforts to achieve and some more aspirational ideas.



Firm Aims

(1) Order a regular organic vegetable box from a local supplier. This should reduce the amount of packaging I consume and is a good way to encourage me to ...

(2) ... Reduce the meat in my diet. I recognise the merits of becoming vegetarian (one of the key advantages is reducing methane emissions from farmed livestock), but will find it a struggle while I enjoy meat. My goal instead for 2007 is to avoid meat completely on one day each week. If I can achieve this then I'll consider how I can take it forward from there.

(3) Use less gas when cooking. I believe I overcook food unnecessarily. I will conscientiously try to avoid this in 2007.

(4) Reduce my gas and electricity use. This will be fairly challenging as I feel I am relatively frugal already, but I recognise that there is still waste and the aim will be to try to eliminate as much of this as possible.

(5) Avoid flying if possible. To some extent this is an easy resolution as I will find it easy to avoid in my personal life. However, it extends to trying to avoid flying if I am asked to do so at work. If (as a result of any potential work reorganisation) I am offered a job where travelling would normally be expected my aim is to try to negotiate a working practice that keeps flying to the absolute minimum necessary. (If successful, I feel this is not a bad thing, because it sets an example of good working practice and if I weren't doing the job then someone else would be and flying more than I would.)

(6) Cut my carbon footprint at work. I feel that whereas I make several conscious efforts to try to avoid waste at home I do not yet have the same attitude at work. This is in part because of loyalty to my employer - for example, if I have to study a document, I do so more effectively if I have printed it out rather than reading it on the screen. However, I think there are small changes I can immediately make:

- always challenging myself as to whether printing out a document is necessary
- taking in a mug each day to use instead of using a plastic cup from the machine

(7) Enquiring at work about setting up an environmental committee. The remit of such a committee would be to consider ways in which the company could reduce its carbon footprint and make proposals to management. I feel that a group of motivated staff could reduce the company's carbon footprint and save the company money. I may have to wait until the organisational structure settles down, but I hope to have pursued this by the end of the year.

(8) Buy some environmentally-friendly clothing. I am not sure yet what this entails, but I am sure people I know will be able to make recommendations. I haven't spent much on clothing in 2007 and some is looking a bit shabby so the time is right for this.

(9) Recycle as much plastic as possible. This will depend on what facilities are provided in the area as the council develops its facilities. However, I will seek to avoid sending to landfill anything that can be recycled fairly easily, even if that means storing it in my sitting room for a few months. It may be a good thing to do so in that it will probably help me understand more about my eco-footprint to do so. I will also try to reduce plastic usage, although I haven't stated that as a resolution as it is more difficult to measure.

(10) Make a donation to buy some rainforest. This was an idea suggested by the Independent. One charity, that I will investigate further is Rainforest Concern.

Aspirations

I have listed the following as aspirations as I feel it may be difficult to achieve these.

(11) Buy a bike and learn to cycle. I am a fast walker, so I feel this is low priority. Do I have the time to put in to clear the shed, select the right bike, and learn to ride it with confidence? This probably wouldn't significantly affect my carbon footprint, but I recognise the advantage that it might buy me more time to pursue other activities.

(12) Arrange for a water meter to be installed. I feel this is unnecssary if I try to cut water use anyway. Probably a better resolution would be to try to default to taking an (uncomfortable) shower each day. (I don't actually have a shower, but can kneel in the bath and connect a rubber tube to the sink taps.) However, installing the water meter would allow me to measure progress and provide some incentive to cut water usage.

(13) Grow more vegetables and herbs in my back garden, and collect more apples from my tree. I meant to do this last year, but didn't have enough time. I shall try again ...

(14) Avoid using ant powder. I tried last year, but was eventually forced to in order to prevent an invasion. I have a plan this year though. I shall provide a sugar supply in the middle of my lawn and hope they take that rather than search for food in my house. Meanwhile I shall try to grow plants they don't like near to my house. I am not convinced that this is a long-term solution, but we shall see.




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[info]greenfieldsite
2007-01-27 01:46 pm UTC (link)
An update on the first four weeks, commenting only on those resolutions where there is something to say.

(2) Reduce the meat in my diet
So far, I have managed to have a vegetarian day each week and, surprisingly, I have enjoyed the evening meal on each occasion. The only problem is that three of the four evening meals were ready-meals. I acknowledge that isn't good (because of the packaging), but I feel that it is higher priority to moderate my meat-eating habits so at this stage I am prepared to tolerate it.

I don't want to encourage people to buy ready meals if they don't already, but for those who have a lifestyle which already leads them to make this choice and want to eat more vegetarian food, Sainsbury's have a good selection at their moment.

However, I have found a great environmentally-friendly home-made ready-"desert". All you do is buy an English apple from your local shop and defrost some of the blackberries you picked over the Summer. Then just eat them together raw! The blackberries may be a bit soggy, but that actually works well because it has about 80%+ of the taste and texture of an apple and blackberry crumble, with no effort or cooking required!

(3) Use less gas when cooking and
(4) Reduce my gas and electricity use
I believe I have done so to a limited extent, but this can only be quantified when I get billed.

(6) Cut my carbon footprint at work
Here I have found a win. In the past I had generally used only one plastic cup each day (refilling it from the tap). However, on all but two working days this year so far I have remembered to take my own mug into work. It may not seem much, but imagine about 17 plastic cups stacked up together - in one month already a non-trivial amount of plastic has been saved.

I have also been trying to think before printing out any document, and have probably reduced my paper consumption slightly, but there is still much more I can do.

(10) Make a donation to buy some rainforest
I have now done so, and I chose Rainforest Concern (as linked above). I would have liked to have been able to read a copy of their accounts on their website, but eventually decided they were probably reputable based on some cursory internet research.

A resolution ought really to have some ongoing effect, so I will keep this one open to think about further donations (to other charities working on projects with environmental benefits) during the year.

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[info]greenfieldsite
2007-01-28 04:30 pm UTC (link)
I might add that with regards to electricity use, I have found the 30 degree washing program on my washing machine. Obviously this will need less energy to heat the water, but it also seems to take about only half as long as the program I had previously been using.

I'm not sure yet if it will be suitable for everything, but it seems clear that it should be suitable for over half my regular washing.

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[info]greenfieldsite
2007-04-06 04:36 pm UTC (link)
The first quarter's update.

(1) No progress yet. It has been difficult to prioritise, but watch this space.

(2) I have continued having a meat-free date each week (usually Fridays).

(3) Difficult to measure, and regrettably I don't think I can even estimate that I have made any significant reduction yet this year.

(4) Difficult to measure until the end of the year.

(5) Succeeded so far, but it hasn't been hard!

(6) I need to re-invigorate my efforts to minimise the amount I print. The exercise to take a mug into work has proved interesting. I have been keeping a tally. Out of 64 opportunities I recorded what I did on 59 of those days and managed to remember to bring my own mug in on 51 of them so at least 51 plastic cups have been saved. This feels not trivial when you imagine them all stacked together. The only problem was that on one day I dropped the mug on my walk into work, breaking it. I have so many mugs I haven't needed to replace it, but I will have to be more careful in future to make the exercise worthwhile.

(7) Not yet actioned. I am waiting for things to settle at work after the take-over.

(8) Not yet actioned.

(9) I am still saving all my bottles and haven't yet used my car enough this year to be able to visit the nearest recycling point in Letchworth "in passing".

(10) This has been done, some time ago.

So I suppose I am on my way to achieving 4 out of 10. Given we are only a quarter of the way through the year hopefully I can still achieve them all.

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[info]greenfieldsite
2008-01-01 08:15 pm UTC (link)
Time for the end-of-year audit:

(1) Order a regular organic vegetable box from a local supplier.
Not actioned. I considered ordering one, but felt that while busy at work (as I have been for most of the year) it would be difficult to make good use of the box. I still intend to try this sometime.

(2) Reduce the meat in my diet.
Achieved. I went vegetarian one day (usually Friday) every week. The food I found was surprisingly enjoyable actually. The only downside was that I relied on vegetarian ready meals a fair amount, but you have to start somewhere!

(3) Use less gas when cooking.
Probably not achieved. However, I do now have a firm plan for 2008 which will include turning the oven off five minutes before the end of cooking time.

(4) Reduce my gas and electricity use.
Having looked at my bills, and estimating the position for the unbilled final part of the year, it looks as though I may have significantly reduced my gas consumption (by about 25%) and marginally reduced my electricity consumption (by about 5%). If this is correct, then it is probably because I have experimented in finding the minimum time I need to heat water and have also tended to keep the central heating off, and when cold switching it on for only an hour at a time (unless needed for longer).

(5) Avoid flying if possible.
As I was not tested at work, this was easy to achieve.

(6) Cut my carbon footprint at work.
I regard this as having been achieved, in a small way. I managed, on nearly every day, to take a mug into work so as to avoid having to use a plastic cup. I also was pro-active in checking whether the air conditioning in a meeting room had been turned off in the evening, and was able to switch it off on a few occasions. I probably marginally reduced the amount of paper I printed (through seeking to print more than one page to a side and use double-siding), although I found that I sometimes need a printout of a document in order to be able to review it effectively.

(7) Enquiring at work about setting up an environmental committee.
Unfortunately I was too busy at work to pursue this.

(8) Buy some environmentally-friendly clothing.
I did not get round to this, although as it happened I did not buy much clothing this year anyway.

(9) Recycle as much plastic as possible.
Once the council provided bring banks in October I recycled all the bottles I used.

(10) Make a donation to buy some rainforest.
I did so twice, once in January and once in December.

With regards to the aspirations, I didn't get round to buying a bike or installing a water meter (although I did change my behaviour to flush the loo less often this year than previously). I barely grew any vegetables (just a single runner bean plant) and my apple tree produced hardly any fruit. However, I was able to avoid using much ant powder, just needing it once.

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[info]greenfieldsite
2008-01-01 08:30 pm UTC (link)
I thought I'd also post information here about a few other steps forward I made in 2007.

Reduction in household products
I've significantly reduced my use of kitchen towels my hanging a tea towel on a hook and using that to dry my hands instead. Also, since October, prompted by the council's move to alternate weekly collection and because there is now space, I now only empty my kitchen bin once every two weeks meaning I use half as many bin liners.

Less electricity for laundry
I now mostly set the washing machine to the short 30 degree cycle rather than the longer 40 degree cycle. This uses substantially less electricity and may help explain the reduction above.

Campaigning
I put a lot of effort into helping the Green Party for the May 2007 elections. We managed to field a record number of candidates (as many in Hitchin as the average of the three other major parties) and I was active campaigning in my own ward and one other.

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