Green is more than just a color on St Patrick’s Day!

Happy St Patrick’s Day everyone! Being an Irish-American myself, St Patrick’s Day really evokes a lot of pride in my Irish heritage and thoughts of my ancestors who paved the way for so much of what I enjoy about this world today.  Thinking of them, I realize that Green is truly more than just a color that represents St Patrick’s Day and I am inspired to reduce, reuse, and recycle.  Hope the Green Beer Tastes Great!  Check out what a few others are saying this St Patty’s Day:

Change now, change often, think simple and go green!

So how’s that 2010 new years resolution going? Well, if you’re like many or even most of us, you may have already given up.  It can be extremely difficult to change one habit.  In fact, we may go year after year making the same promise to ourselves to break a bad habit.  Then we break the promise of breaking that habit (sound familiar smokers, habitual soda drinkers, or fast-food eaters?).  It’s a vicious cycle! How do we break it?

I propose we adopt a strategy of changing a variety of simple and easy things in our lives, right now, instead of having just one goal for change.  What if changing in just one way is not enough? As we make decisions to change, even in small ways, we gain momentum and confidence in our ability to make positive changes regarding some of the more difficult things like working out regularly and finally losing that extra weight.  So let’s start building that confidence!

I see two simple yet significant ways I can change our planet and myself.  First, I’ll use eco friendly reusable or recycled shopping bags instead of plastic and paper bags when I shop.  Secondly, I’ll remember to use stainless steel water bottles. You may be surprised by what a positive influence these two easy habits can have on the world.

These habits are simple, easy and affordable.  Furthermore, contrary to popular belief, plastic containers and bags are not addictive (we promise, no withdrawals or cravings)!  Many aren’t mindful of how our usage of these products affect our planet’s health.  Once upon a time not long ago, we weren’t mindful of the harmful effects of cigarettes.  We accepted cigarette smoke as the status quo.  Some of us still smoke or live in communities where smoking is allowed in public indoor spaces.  Using reusable grocery bags and reusable water bottles can be new healthy habits and so easy compared to something like quitting caffeine, high fructose corn syrup or eliminating fast food from our diets.  Keep a stash of eco friendly recycled bags in your car, backpack, or shoulder bag.  Make a small investment in a stainless steel reusable water bottle and bring it with you everywhere you go.  You will not only reduce the harmful affects of disposable bag and disposable bottle waste in our environment, you will also inspire others to make these simple changes in their lives as well.

The best part is how you will feel about yourself when you realize you’re now part of the solution, rather than the problem.  Check out the stats and facts:

Disposable bag usage:

Plastic bottle usage:

We all dream of a day when we finally break loose of our bad habits:  quitting smoking, eliminating fast food in our diet, or just getting off the couch and working out!  You know you can do it!  Determine what you can easily change now, and act on it.  So make a simple change in your life today: Adopt a reusable shopping bags and stainless steel water bottle habit and start building momentum for greater changes that are beginning in your life right now!

Lower your bills and live off the grid with Agua-Luna!

In today’s society, more and more people are searching for ways to become more self-sufficient.  What are they searching for?  Some are looking for ways to live more independently, while others are just looking for ways to lower their energy costs.  Some just want to live a simpler life, saving money and learning how to be more stable in these unstable times.  Agua-Luna.com is here to help with all of this.

Agua-Luna’s owners have lived off the grid for more than ten years. They not only believe in the premise of being self-sufficient, they live it.  They have the experience and knowledge to help you become less dependent on the large utility companies.   They can also help you learn to live more independent and how to get back to basics.

Agua-Luna has taken the time and funds to rebuild homes from recycled materials.

Agua-Luna has taken the time and funds to rebuild homes from recycled materials.

Agua-Luna.com offers consultation services and workshops worldwide.  They are dedicated to helping people live as they do.  Their consultation services will help you look at all the aspects of building a home off-grid, while helping you obtain the best end product to fit all your needs.  If you would like to host them for a workshop, please contact them via their website for more details.

Agua-Luna has taken the time and funds to rebuild homes from recycled materials.  Some of these homes use renewable energies making them energy efficient.  Some are made to be completely off grid.  The sale of these homes allows the company to repeat the process and help make more of these homes.

Not ready to build a home?  Looking for other ways to go green?  Check out the how-to books and the plans in the product section.   Agua-Luna has books for those interested in building green machines.  They also have books for those looking for hints, tips and tricks on going green and living off the grid.  All of the books and plans sold on Agua-Luna have been written, compile and/or tested by themselves.

Agua-Luna enjoys helping others realize their dreams of lowering energy consumption.  They also enjoy helping around the world in a variety of cultures to gain energy they may not have had otherwise.  They do this through The Green Fund.  This fund helps Agua-Luna with projects such as the Amazon Project or the Haiti Project. For every dollar you use to purchase their books, t-shirts or other re-usable items on their website, they will place a dollar into this fund.

On their website, Agua-luna.com, you will find a photogallery detailing this work.  There you will find pictures of their Amazon project, Recycle Material projects, homes they have made and their current home.  Lucy and Dan Martin are incredible people. They are not afraid to share all their knowledge with you, as they truly enjoy giving back to society.

Take your business or home Off-Grid with Oasis Montana!

It is my pleasure to welcome Christine Daum, President of Oasis Montana Inc, and her entire team to our Eco Friendly Community.  It’s wonderful to learn about a company with the experience and know-how to literally guide you and your business or home to go “Off the grid” with their custom-designed renewable energy power systems.  I’ll let them speak for themselves:

Celebrating our 11th year in business, Oasis Montana Inc. is a Montana owned and operated business that specializes in renewable energy power systems, offering equipment for remote homes, grid-tied, RV, marine, UPS, emergency back-up, telecommunications, and solar water pumping systems. We also offer a line of efficient energy star AC/DC appliances, and non-electric propane or natural gas refrigerators, freezers, cooktops and stoves. While most of our business is in the U.S. we do have happy customers with power systems (and related equipment) all over the world.

Our goal is to help people enjoy the benefits of clean, green power systems; the custom design of our systems is part of every power project, with technical support for the lifetime of your system. We customize each system for your project needs to help achieve your solar dream for home or business.

Save energy with LED lights!

I’m happy to welcome Frank from www.PlasmaLED.com to our eco community.  Since 1999, PlasmaLED has been a premier source for LED lights and home lighting products.  PlasmaLED manufactures all of its high quality (always ready to ship) LED lights to exact specifications and offers the largest selection of colors on the web.  No matter if its neon tubes or household bulbs, PlasmaLED’s light products offer you long lasting light and reduced power consumption. LED’s present many advantages over incandescent light sources including lower energy consumption, longer lifetime, improved robustness, smaller size, faster switching, and greater durability and reliability.

Maximize your Flushes, Save Water

We are excited to welcome Patrick from One2products to our eco community.  One2products is on the cutting edge of simple ways to help everyday people and families save thousands of gallons of water per year, just by making slight adjustments to, for example, the toilets we use every day.  Take it away Patrick:

One2products, www.one2products.com is in the business of transferring green ideas to retail. In less than one year we have taken an unknown dual flush adaptor through branding, package design, manufacturing representation, warehouse placement, and in-store distribution, into the homes of thousands of Americans. Along the way our One2flush dual flush adaptor, www.one2flush.com , was named the Retailer’s Choice award winner at the 2009 National Hardware Show and a Top 10 Hardware item for 2009.

The One2flush is an easy-to-install replacement for the water wasting toilet flapper valve. Simply replace the flush valve and handle and begin saving water immediately.  A family of 4 will save about 10,000 gallons of water a year. That’s about 10% off their water bill each month. Just by changing the way they flush a toilet. Simply push the handle one way for “one,” the other way for the “other.” Pushing the handle to the left releases about half a tank of water – enough to rinse out liquid wastes and toilet paper.  Push the handle to the right and a full flush is released.  Because we use the half flush many more times than the full flush the savings add up.

The One2flush has been tested and certified by the IAPMO for more than 75,000 flushes. It is used in private households, public housing programs and student housing apartments across the United States.  It is the official toilet valve on Highway 2000 across Jamaica. And it is now distributed inPuerto Rico, Columbia and Chile. The early adaptors were the folks most desperate for water, now it’s spreading to households even around the water-rich Great Lakes. At One2products we call this “easy environmentalism.”  Once people become aware of the amount of water they were previously wasting, they take the initiative to change. From March 15-21 the EPA is trying to get folks to think about how much water is wasted in toilets.  www.Fixaleakweek.com is our response. Instead of just replacing the old flapper with a new flapper – why not save even more water at the same time?  Put a One2flush in its place.

One2products has many more items to introduce at this year’s National Hardware Show in May. From VOC-Free caulks and adhesives, to plastic additives that turn any plastic into compost in just a few years. This is a great time for green inventors and One2products is positioned to help get their ideas to store shelves.

Patrick Hanna

President

Now is the time for BYOB

It is time for BYOB! Yes, bring your own shopping bag!  As we continue our journey through a busy 2010, it’s crazy to think about how much shopping we historically do here in America and world-wide. Whether it be frequent trips to the grocery store as we keep our kitchen’s stocked for wonderful meals and tasty treats or those sometimes dreaded (yet skillful) “6 bags on each arm” walks through the local mall, it all adds up to so much unnecessary waste.  One of the most blatant examples of this waste is disposable shopping bags.

An estimated 100 billion plastic shopping bags are consumed each year in the USA, according to the Wall-Street Journal.  Most plastic bags end up in landfills and the rest often end up in rivers, ponds, lakes, streams or in the sea, where animals can ingest or become entangled in them.  Considering how many shopping bags are consumed and wasted each year, the time is now to spread the word about the positive benefits of eco-friendly reusable shopping bags.  After all, most of us want to give back to our families, friends and communities as often as possible.

Adopting a BYOB strategy in our individual shopping habits is a simple way to do just that.  If we can raise awareness at this time, the positive impact for the environment is incalculable for 2010 and well into the future.  Several cities have already made gradual but significant progress in promoting the use of eco friendly reusable bags in recent years.  Motivating consumers with plastic and paper bag bans, discounts at the register for reusable bag usage and tax motivations are a few to speak of.

Right here in America, the San Jose City Council recently passed one of the nation’s strictest bans on plastic and paper shopping bags.   This is a big victory for the Bay Area, which has 1 million plastic bags per year accumulating in and along the San Francisco Bay.  San Jose becomes the latest bay area city to enact some type of ban on disposable shopping bags; others include San Francisco and Palo Alto. Tracy Seipel of the San Jose Mercury News reported that it was actually ONE man who really jump-started the ban, another great example of the power of one person.  Here’s a an excerpt:

“While visiting his sister-in-law in Taipei, (Kansen) Chu (elected to San Jose city council in 2007) went grocery shopping and was surprised to get charged for plastic grocery bags. The next day, he brought his own cloth bags back to the store.  “I guess the question,” said Chu, “was, ‘Why not San Jose?’ ” He began a conversation with the city’s environmental services staff, which later moved to council committee discussions.

Save the Bay’s 4th annual report on the most garbage-strewn sites in the region further demonstrates the need for BYOB.  The 50-year-old environmental advocacy group focused on 10 specific bay-area sites where almost 15,000 plastic bags were retrieved in one day last year in their report.   Here’s an excerpt of an article in the San Francisco Chronicle by Kelly Zito.

According to (Save the Bay’s) research, Californians use about 19 billion plastic bags each year, 3.8 million in the Bay Area. The average use time for the bags – made using about 12 million barrels of oil each year in the United States – is about 12 minutes. In addition to the hundreds of years it can take for a plastic bag to decompose in a landfill, the bags also force downtime when fed into traditional recycling equipment. Typically, the bags get wound into conveyor belts or gears and must be cut out by hand.

Ten US cities have banned plastic bags so far, five within the past year. Even Mexico City enacted a ban on plastic shopping bags, which went into effect in August.  The city of 20 million now faces the realities of effective enforcement, which is not easy when the Mexico City Chamber of Commerce estimates there are 35,000 vendors in Mexico City’s downtown area alone.

Bans on plastic bags aren’t the only effective way to reduce harmful waste caused by disposable bags.  PlasTaxes, which tax consumers at the register for using plastic bags when shopping, were first introduced by the Irish.  John Roach of National Geographic reported in 2008 on the worldwide momentum that’s been building since Ireland instituted a PlasTax in 2003.  The Irish showed they could reduce plastic bag consumption by 90% or more.   Momentum is growing across the world, particularly in America.  From Washington, DC to Edmonds, WA to North Pole, AK, communities and governments are spurring an international trend to reduce the harmful environmental effects of disposable shopping bags.  In the great state of Hawaii, the legislature is currently considering a bill to ban single-use plastic bags (SUP), or to establish a small fee to use SUP bags.

Even major retail stores like Target and CVS Pharmacy are taking action by enacting discounts at the register for customers who choose to BYOB or just carry-out their items without a bag.  For the naysayers, it’s convenient to ignore recent momentum in reducing disposable bag waste.  But to some, the wide-spread adoption of eco-friendly reusable bags is inevitable.   Look at the way smoking is becoming taboo in America.  Indoor smoking bans have caught on like wild-fire.  In the same way, who is to say the use of disposable bags won’t become taboo at some point in the (hopefully near) future?  The use of eco-friendly reusable grocery bags is definitely gaining steam.  Our individual choices to bring our reusable bags can go a lot farther than we think.  That’s what BYOB is all about.

Of course, plastic and paper bags should be recycled and it’s important to remember most large retailers including Albertsons and Wal-Mart will recycle plastic bags for you (just need to bring them your accumulated stash).  That being said, a BYOB shopping strategy can make your life so much easier because there is no longer a need to accumulate that cupboard full of plastic bags or figure out what and when to do something about it.  Keeping a few non woven bags in your car or backpack is a good way to ensure you have them when needed. So give back this holiday season by remembering to BYOB!   Whether it be at a convenience store, the mall, or while grocery shopping, we can make a difference for the environment and help raise awareness one transaction at a time.  In the fight to eliminate disposable shopping bag waste, 2010 is our moment.   Have a great rest of the year!