Showing posts with label list. Show all posts
Showing posts with label list. Show all posts

2016 Corporate Sustainability Leaders

A bevy of iconic brands have been singled out as the world's leading sustainability companies. The results of the 2016 GlobeScan/SustainAbility survey of corporate sustainability leaders were released on June 7th 2016. The list is formally known as the The 2016 Sustainability Leaders and his year it was produced in partnership with Sustainable Brands,

The Sustainability Leaders Survey tracks expert opinions on the evolution of sustainability. These experts are now saying that values and purpose are "top drivers" of change. Leaders in sustainability excel at integrating social and environmental purpose into their core business. Leading companies also model innovation and set ambitious goals.

Mark Lee, Executive Director at SustainAbility commented: “Sustainability experts now believe that national governments and the private sector must take equal responsibility for advancing sustainable development over the next two decades, with 34% of experts rating each as vital to progress. Expectations for governments to lead have gradually decreased in recent years, while those for the private sector have been rising. Multi-sectoral partnerships are also seen as playing a central role.”

This year Unilever, Patagonia, Interface, IKEA, Tesla, Nestlé and Natura are among the top-rated global leaders on sustainability. Tesla is the only new addition in the top 13 this year.

The survey sampled 900 experts in 84 countries were asked to identify three companies that are leaders in integrating sustainability into their business strategy. Four in ten experts singled out Unilever as a global leader on sustainability. This is the sixth year in a row that Unilever has made the list. A feat not accomplished by any other company in the survey's almost two decade long history.

North America is the most competitive when it comes to sustainability: Patagonia leads with 16 percent followed by Nike at 10 percent, Interface at 8 percent and at Walmart 7 percent.

To see the full results of the survey click here.

Related
2016 Green Business Award Winners
Green Business Award Winners in 2016 (Guardian and Environmental Leader)
2015-2016 Awards for Reporting on the Environment (SEJ)
The Best and the Worst Sustainability and Climate Stories in 2015 
2015 Global Corporate Sustainability Leaders 
The Best of Green in 2015: Products, Projects, Leaders, Corporations, CEOs and Chemistry
The Top Sustainability Focused Innovations of 2015

Glaxo­SmithKline Doing Well by Doing Good

Glaxo­SmithKline (GSK) is at the top of Fortune's 2016 Change the World list. They are being recognized for their exemplary corporate citizenship. In an age of rampant profiteering in the pharmaceutical industry, Glaxo­SmithKline (GSK) has stood out by making it their business to give back.

The practices of GSK stand in stark contrast to other recent pharmaceutical news. Martin Shkreli bought the rights to a life saving HIV drug called Daraprim,then he hiked up the price by 5,000 percent. CEO of Mylan Pharmaceuticals Heather Bresch raised the price of an EpiPen pack to more than $600.

As reviewed in Fortune, Glaxo­SmithKline is a 300 year old company that built its name with products like baby formula and penicillin. The company made almost $16 billion in 2015 and they use their wealth to do good. They are working on vaccines for malaria and the Zika virus and they support HIV treatment programs in places like Botswana. The prices they charge are a function of people's means and the company reinvests 20 percent of the profits to local health care infrastructure and worker training.

Sustainability is part of Glaxo. As they say on the website GSK is focused on, "improving the quality of human life." They are committed to reducing the environmental impacts of their products and they have set ambitious goals to reduce carbon, water and waste. They are leaders in green chemistry.

In 2014 Glaxo was recognised for outstanding sustainable business practices at the Singapore Environmental Achievement Awards 2014 and in 2010 they recieved the Environmental Stewardship Award from Nalco.

Glaxo is number one on Fortune's annual Change the World list. This list of 50 companies are leading efforts to address major societal problems, reducing damage to the environment, strengthening communities, serving the underserved, and significantly improving lives. They are also generating a profit. The average return on publicly traded stocks in last year’s list was 16.6 percent which was even better than the S&P 500.

For the complete Change the World 2016 list of companies click here.

Related
2016 Green Business Award Winners
2016 Corporate Sustainability Leaders
Green Business Award Winners in 2016 (Guardian and Environmental Leader)
2015-2016 Awards for Reporting on the Environment (SEJ)
The Best and the Worst Sustainability and Climate Stories in 2015 
2015 Global Corporate Sustainability Leaders 
The Best of Green in 2015: Products, Projects, Leaders, Corporations, CEOs and Chemistry
The Top Sustainability Focused Innovations of 2015

Green Business Award Winners in 2016 (Guardian and Environmental Leader)

Here is a summary of sustainable businesses, projects and individuals that are leading the way forward. As we teeter on the brink of tipping points, sustainability leadership is more important than ever. Awards that recognize the best companies, projects and individuals lead by example and serve as valuable models. In addition to well deserved recognition these efforts put sustainability on display, showcasing achievements that other businesses can follow. Here is a summary of green awards that have been handed out to businesses and individuals in the first half of 2016. This list includes Guardian's Sustainable Business Awards as well as Environmental Leaders Product and Project of the year awards.


Guardian 2016 Sustainable Business Awards

The sixth annual Guardian Sustainable Business Awards celebrate those organizations and individuals going above and beyond to tackle the global challenges we face. As explained by Environmental Leader:

"In the wake of the Paris climate talks and the launch of the global goals, 2016 is the year that businesses are ramping up their engagement with sustainability."

Bold move
Winner - Páramo
Runner up - Southern Water

Waste
Winner - Winnow
Runner up - Interface

Water
Winner - Innocent drinks

Finance for good
Winner - Social Stock Exchange
Runner up - Carbon Tracker Initiative

Supply chain
Winner - SABMiller
Runner up - Pennine Pack Ltd

Social impact
Winner - The University of Manchester
Runners up - Shared Interest Society and Neighbourly

Diversity and inclusion
Winner - Marcatus QED
Runner up - Microlink PC (UK) Ltd

Net positive
Winner - IKEA UK and Ireland
Runner up - Good Energy

Communicating sustainability
Winner - Climate-KIC
Runner up - CTC and Diva Creative Ltd

Collaboration
Winner - Edinburgh Centre for Carbon Innovation
Runner up - Falcon Coffees Limited

Carbon and energy management
Winner - Wyke Farms
Runner up - ENWORKS

Built environment
Winner - The Enterprise Centre, University of East Anglia
Runner up - XCO2 Energy

Startup of the year 
Winner - Winnow
Runner up - Guru Systems

Sustainable business leader of the year 
Paul Corcoran

Unsung sustainability hero of the year
Rachel Bradley

Click here for the full list.

Environmental Leader's 2016 Product & Project Awards

The fourth annual Environmental Leader Product & Project Awards, recognizes excellence in the fields of environmental sustainability and energy management. As explained by Environmental Leader:

"Each year since the inception of the Environmental Leader Product and Project Awards program, the range and quality of the entries has risen... The community of providers continues to address the rising demand for cost-effective solutions to address complex environmental, sustainability, and energy management challenges. And end-user organizations are becoming more creative in applying the available solutions to get real results."

Product of the Year Award winners:

3M: 3M Petrifilm Plates
AkzoNobel's Marine Coatings Business, International: Carbon Credits
Big Ass Solutions: Essence
Big Ass Solutions: Haiku Light
Bloomberg LP, The Water Risk Valuation Tool: Lee Ballin
DePuy Synthes, Companies of Johnson & Johnson: ATTUNE Knee System LOGICLOCK tibial Base
DePuy Synthes, Companies of Johnson & Johnson: Attune Knee INTUITION
Ecometrica: the Ecometrica Platform
Enablon: The Enablon Enterprise-Class Platform
FoundationFootprint: FoundationFootprint
GridPoint: GridPoint Energy Management System
Hilton Worldwide: LightStay
IHS: Repsol EMISphere
Lakeshore Recycling Systems: Lakeshore Recycling Systems Sustainable Business Model
Leidos: AMPLIFY Application Management Platform for Energy Efficiency Programs
Panasonic Industrial Devices Sales Co. of America: Panasonic Vacuum Insulation Panel
Petro-Canada Lubricants Inc: HYDREX XV
Quantis: Life Cycle Perceptions Game
Rapport: Rapport
Source Intelligence: Supply Chain Compliance Tool
SunPower Corporation: Cradle to Cradle Certified SunPower E and X Series DC Panels
Thermo King, a brand of Ingersoll Rand: Thermo King Truck and Trailer Refrigeration Units in Europe
Thinkstep Compliance Limited: EC4P
Thinkstep Compliance Limited: BOMcheck Substances Declarations Web Database
Trane, a brand of Ingersoll Rand: CenTraVac Water Chiller Models CVHH and CDHH
Trane, a brand of Ingersoll Rand: Sintesis
UL EHS Sustainability: cr360
Urjanet: Urjanet Utility Data Service
Waste to Energy Partners: Bolder Black
WeNow: WeNowBox

Top Project of the Year Award winners:

ALDI Inc: ALDI Energy Management Systems, Siemens Rollout
AMD: 25 x 20 Energy Efficiency Initiative
Ameresco: Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport
Arby's, Ecova, Powerhouse Dynamics and Weathermatic: How Arby's Leveraged Ecova and a Partnered Water Meter Solution to Save over 7M Gallons of Water
Caesars Entertainment: Enterprise Waste Diversion Project
Consumer Technology Association and National Cable & Telecommunications Association: Voluntary Agreement for Ongoing Improvement to the Energy Efficiency of Set-Top Boxes
Domtar: Plymouth K-Lime
Dow Water & Process Solutions: Camp de Tarragona DEMOWARE Municipal Wastewater Reuse Project
General Motors: Chevrolet Volt Battery Secondary Reuse Project
Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport: Energy Management Program
IHS: Repsol EMISphere
Jackson Family Wines: Tesla Stationary Energy Storage System
Leidos: Hawaii Energy Conservation and Efficiency Program
MillerCoors: MillerCoors Irwindale Brewery Solar Array
Timberland: Empowering Haitian Farmers through Tree Planting
United States Business Council for Sustainable Development: United States Materials Marketplace

Click here to download the full Awards Report.

Related
2016 Green Business Award Winners
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The Top Sustainability Focused Innovations of 2015

The Top Sustainability Focused Innovations of 2015

Innovation is more than a buzzword, it is an absolutely essential component of the required efforts needed to address the environmental and climate crisis we are facing. Here is a summary of some of the best sustainability focused innovations of 2015 from Sustainia.

On December 6th, 2015 the fourth Sustainia awards celebrated a number of groundbreaking sustainability solutions, technologies and projects from around the world. In honor of COP21 the awards took place in Paris, home to the COP21 climate talks.

The Sustania Award Committee is composed of Arnold Schwarzenegger, Honorary Chair of Sustainia, Chair of Regions20 and Former Governor of California; Christiana Figueres, Executive Secretary of the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change, UNFCCC; Connie Hedegaard, Chair, KR Foundation, Former European Commissioner for Climate Action and Dr. Rajendra Pachauri Former Chair of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, IPCC.

Sustania's top ten finalists for the most sustainable innovations of 2015 are:

Buildings: Archiblox (Australia) - energy-positive prefabricated houses.
Food: SunCulture (US) - solar-powered drip irrigation for smallholders.
Fashion: Vigga.us (Denmark) - leasing organic kids-wear.
IT: Mapdwell, Massachusetts Institute of Technology (US) - 3D solar potential mapping tool.
Education: Seoul Metropolitan Government (South Korea) - citizen engagement for voluntary behaviour change.
Energy: Mobisol (Germany) - micro-financed off-grid solar power.
Health: Solar Ear (Brazil) - solar-powered hearing aids with open source design.
Cities: City of Johannesburg (South Africa) - green bonds finance city climate action.

The winner of the 2015 Sustania Award

In 2015 the Sustania Award went to a transportation redesign for the Indian city Chennai. This innovation was created by the Corporation of Chennai, Institute for Transportation & Development Policy and Chennai City Connect Foundation (India). The redesign is focused on creating streets for walking and biking as a solution to the city’s air pollution and traffic casualties.

The solution requires at least 60 per cent of the city’s transport budget to be allocated to a full-scale redesign including expanded footpaths, safe pedestrian crossings, protected cycle tracks, properly scaled carriageways, conveniently placed bus stops and clearly designated on-street parking.

Smart transport adaptations will reduce air pollution which is Chennai’s (and many other cities) top health risk. Given that motorized transport in cities are a leading source of greenhouse gas emissions, this is a solution with far-reaching health and environmental benefits. It is also designed to reduce the 10,000 traffic accidents and resulting deaths and injuries in Chennai.

Sustainia Community Award

The people's choice award known as the Sustainia Community Award went to resources finalist for a project called Social Plastic. It was designed by the: Plastic Bank (Canada) and it turns plastic waste into currency. This innovative solution to resource management offers communities a way to collect waste plastic and repurpose it as a form of currency. While removing plastic waste from the environment, it also gives individuals the chance to improve their livelihoods and encourages companies to purchase and use this recycled material. With as much as 12.7 tons of plastic washes into the ocean every year, this innovation is a way to save all the animals that are killed by plastic each year, it will also help protect human health from the toxins that leach from the plastic into the food chain.

The Plastic Bank (TPB) offers a concrete solution encouraging the behaviour change needed to meet this systemic challenge. Operating as a social enterprise , TPB removes plastic litter from beaches and oceans by offering local communities the opportunity to bring collected waste to a plastic bank facility, where it can be repurposed. In exchange, they receive basic goods and tools, in addition to access to 3D printers enabling them to create items for themselves and to sell within the community. Furthermore, TPB also encourages businesses to take part in the initiative by buying social plastic.

Over 400 people representing more than 70 different countries have already applied to operate a Social Plastic Recycling Market in their region. In 2015, meetings were held at the home offices of Unilever, Seventh Generation, Method Home and various other global brands to discuss the process for the ongoing purchase and promotion of Social Plastic®.. TPB was awarded the Recycling Council of British Columbia’s Innovation Award in May 2014 for developing 3D printing technology. Their open source 3D printing filament extruder can create the source stock for 3D printers using recycled Social Plastic®.

TPB’s Vancouver Lab is successfully producing recycled 3D printable filament for 30 cents per pound. This same filament can be used to create products that are worth $ 5, $ 10 or even $ 100 per pound, according to the organization. Repurposing at scale: Marine plastic waste can wash up on any shore, in any part of the world, as freely as the wind blows and the tides turn.

Click here for the complete list of Sutainia's 100 sustainable innovations for 2015.

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2015 Global Corporate Sustainability Leaders 
The Best of Green in 2015: Products, Projects, Leaders, Corporations, CEOs and Chemistry

The Best of Green in 2015: Products, Projects, Leaders, Corporations, CEOs and Chemistry

Here are some of the best of the best in the green economy from 2015. This includes the best products and projects of the year, the top sustainability leaders and corporate citizens, leading innovative bioeconomy CEOs and the best green chemistry companies. These lists are derived from Energy Manager Today, edie, Corporate Responsiblity (CR) Magazine, Il Bioeconomista and the EPA.

Products

In alphabetical order here are the inaugural Energy Manager Today Product and Project Award winners for 2015:

Adobe - Stem Energy Storage
Big Ass Solutions, Haiku with SenseME
Blue Pillar, Aurora
EnergyCAP, Inc., EnergyCAP
Green Charge Networks, Energy Storage Platform
GridPoint, GridPoint Energy Manager
Hyster Company, PSI Industrial Lift Truck Engines Featuring Hyster Variable Power Technology
JLL, IntelliCommand Smart Building Solutions
Lennox International, Energence Ultra Rooftop Units
Lucid BuildingOS
Meazon SA, Zi-Clamp
NexRev Inc., DrivePak HVAC Efficiency Retrofit
Panoramic Power, Device Level Energy Management
Schneider Electric, Altivar Process
Schneider Electric, EcoBreeze AirEconomizer
Schneider Electric, Resource Advisor’s, Performance Analytics and Energy Performance Services
Urjanet, Urjanet Utility Data

Projects
 
ABM, Wright State University Building and Energy Solutions
ABM Government  ServicesGSA LA ESPC GS-09P- 12-KS-C-0023
Big Ass Solutions, Cassidy Elementary School, Lexington, KY
Bueno Crown Casino - Energy and Operational Savings across a multi-use entertainment complex
Cascades, Heat Recovery Steam Generator
Caterpillar, Thinking Outside AND Inside the Box to Reduce CO2 Emissions
Daintree Networks, Universal Music Group Energy Efficiency Project
Digital Lumens, Atlas Box Deploys
Digital Lumens to Achieve Energy Intelligence
Ensight Pty. Ltd., Energy Leadership, Program, Richards Bay Minerals
FirstFuel Software E.ON UK Energy Toolkit for SME (Small and Medium Enterprise) Customers
Powerhouse Dynamics, Saving the Bottom Line at Bertucci’s
Saint-Gobain Corporation
Vancouver Impact Mill, Heat Recovery
STV, Mother Clara Hale Bus Depot

UK Sustainability Leaders

The ninth edie Sustainability Leaders Awards celebrated a number of individuals and organizations in 2015. These people and companies setting the standard for more responsible business. 

Opening the awards, edie editor Luke Nicholls said: "The Sustainability Leaders Awards have become a shining example of how the green industrial revolution is entering the corporate mainstream. All of this year's finalists have shifted from talking about ambitious sustainability initiatives to delivering them at scale and at pace. And in many cases, they’re already seeing a huge return on investment."

Sustainable Business of the Year - Willmott Dixon
Sustainability Leader - Estelle Brachlianoff, Veolia
Carbon Management - National Grid
Energy Management - Heathrow Airport
Employee Engagement & Behaviour Change - Tesco with Global Action Plan
Sustainability Product Innovation - Genesis Biosciences
Sustainability Product Innovation: Energy Efficiency - Lontra
Sustainability Professional - Anthony Kingsley, Vacherin
Sustainable Business Models - Mud Jeans
Sustainability Reporting - Marks & Spencer
Sustainable Packaging - LINPAC Packaging
Sustainable Supply Chains - KPMG
Waste & Resource Management - DS Smith
Water Management - Southern Water

Best Corporate Citizens

The fifth annual ranking of Corporate Responsiblity Magazine's best corporate citizens including the top performers in the following sectors: business services, consumer items, consumer staples, energy, financial, healthcare, information technology, materials, media and entertainment, and utilities.

By industry, the best corporate citizens for 2015 are:

Business Services — Ecolab
Consumer Items — Hasbro
Consumer Staples — Campbell Soup Co.
Energy — Hess
Financials/Insurance/Real Estate — Jones Lang LaSalle
Healthcare — Johnson & Johnson
Information Technology — Microsoft
Materials — Sigma-Aldrich
Media & Entertainment — Walt Disney Co.
Utilities — Entergy

Innovative Bioeconomy CEOs

Here is Il Bioeconomista's inaugural list of the most innovative bioeconomy CEOs for 2015:

Vincent Chornet, Ceo of Enerkem (Canada)
Carlos Fadigas, Ceo of Braskem (Brazil)
Benjamin Gonzalez, Ceo of Metabolix Explorer (France)
Ilkka Hämälä, Ceo of Metsä Fibre (Finland)
Jennifer Holmgren, Ceo of Lanzatech (New Zealand/USA)
Maxim Katinov, Ceo of GFBiochemicals (Italy)
Hariolf Kottmann, Ceo of Clariant (Switzerland)
Jussi Pesonen, Ceo of UPM (Finland)
Marc Simmers, Ceo of Celtic Renewables (Scotland)
Tom van Aken, Ceo of Avantium (The Netherlands)

Green Chemistry

Here are the EPA's winning companies in the 2015 Presidential Green Chemistry Challenge:

Algenol in Fort Myers, Florida, was recognized for developing a blue-green algae to produce ethanol and other fuels. The algae uses CO2 from air or industrial emitters with sunlight and saltwater to create fuel while reducing the carbon footprint, costs and water usage, with no reliance on food crops as feedstocks.

Hybrid Coating Technologies/Nanotech Industries of Daly City, California, was recognized for developing a safer, plant-based polyurethane for use on floors, furniture and in foam insulation. The technology eliminates the use of isocyanates, the top cause of workplace asthma.

LanzaTech in Skokie, Illinois, was recognized for the development of a process that uses waste gas to produce fuels and chemicals, reducing companies’ carbon footprint. LanzaTech has partnered with Global Fortune 500 Companies and others to use this technology, including facilities that can each produce 100,000 gallons per year of ethanol, and a number of chemical ingredients for the manufacture of plastics.

SOLTEX (Synthetic Oils and Lubricants of Texas) in Houston, Texas, was recognized for developing a new chemical reaction process that eliminates the use of water and reduces hazardous chemicals in the production of additives for lubricants and gasoline. If widely used, this technology has the potential to eliminate millions of gallons of wastewater per year and reduce the use of a hazardous chemical by 50 percent.

Renmatix in King of Prussia, Pennsylvania, was recognized for developing a process using supercritical water to more cost effectively break down plant material into sugars used as building blocks for renewable chemicals and fuels. This low-cost process could result in a sizeable increase in the production of plant-based chemicals and fuels, and reduce the dependence on petroleum fuels.

Professor Eugene Chen of Colorado State University was recognized for developing a process that uses plant-based materials in the production of renewable chemicals and liquid fuels. This new technology is waste-free and metal-free.

Related
2016 Green Business Award Winners
2016 Corporate Sustainability Leaders
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2015-2016 Awards for Reporting on the Environment (SEJ)
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2015 Global Corporate Sustainability Leaders 
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Greenbizbook: Canadian Directory for Green Business

In the Greenbizbook directory you will find listings and reviews of Businesses that provide organic food, natural health products and holistic health services, eco friendly house items, clean energy and a lot more. Greenbizbook makes it simple to find the best businesses and worthy organizations committed to shaping a more environmentally and socially responsible society.

They continually update their Business listing and product and service category. You can also add a business that you strongly recommend or provide a review.

To Go to the Greenbizbook Green Directory click here.

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Canadian Green Direction Business Directory

Green Direction's Canadian Green Business Directory is a paperless guide that will help you to locate green companies in your area. Shopping local is your first step to shopping green. By clicking on the directory you will launch their green search tool, where you will be able to locate the type of green business that you are looking for, that is as close to home as possible. Their green businesses directory includes organic products, locally grown produce, sustainable products, fair trade products, and environmentally friendly products.

If you are a green business that would like to be added to their directory, just drop them a line by clicking on the “add a listing” tab. If you would like to recommend a company that deserves recognition, just send them an e-mail.

To access the Canadian Green Direction Business Directory click here.

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Green Collar Research B2B Directory

With over 250 Green Categories and close to 7000 companies listed, Green Collar Research claims to have the largest B2B Green Directory on the web.

Use their directory to find the companies and products your business needs to become more sustainable.

 Click here to search the directory which can be found on the upper right hand side of the page.

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Green Business Directory from the Carbon Trust

While an ever increasing number of organizations want to make their operations greener, finding suppliers they can trust is not always easy. To help address this concern the UK based Carbon Trust announced the launch of its Green Business Directory. This directory is ideally suited to assist organizations with their green initiatives in the UK and Europe. This database of accredited suppliers helps firms with the procurement of energy efficient and low and renewable technology suppliers.

Carbon Trust provides independent validation and recognition of a supplier's skills and services which "must meet or exceed criteria set by the Carbon Trust designed to examine their capability to deliver thoughtful, well-designed energy efficient and renewable energy systems."

The directory currently has 46 accredited suppliers in areas like: AM&T (automatic metering & targeting), compressed air, controls, energy efficient UPS (uninterruptible power supplies), HVAC systems (heating, ventilation and air conditioning), IT, lighting, and solar PV.

The search function is organized by region and technology. Users can even locate suppliers offering Energy Efficient Financing through the Carbon Trust’s scheme run in partnership with Siemens Financial Services.

The accreditation process requires applicants to submit case studies of their work and answer a number of questions –including several on insurance and whether the company holds recognised qualifications for quality assurance, environmental management and health and safety. A credit check may be carried out as part of the accreditation process.

Click here to access the Carbon Trust's Green Business Directory.

Those looking to be featured in the directory can download a copy of the application form here. Accreditation by the scheme costs £1,499 a year (plus VAT).

© 2013, Richard Matthews. All rights reserved.

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Green Schools Design Essentials

This PDF document was published by Green Charter Schools Network. Their goals involve the promotion the identification, connection and development of innovative Green Schools through partnerships across the United States. Here are four components of their "Green School Design Essentials."

Component 1: Standards-based integrated environmental learning and Green career education

-Solid emphasis on outdoor/hands-on learning Constructivist pedagogy driven by a school wide ‘Green’ culture.
-Engaged autonomous learners with the confidence and skills to pursue the widest range of post-secondary Green careers with STEM emphasis.
-Individual/group learning complimented by research based environment focused models: ex; project-based, expeditionary, and interdisciplinary units.
- All models incorporate place-based education approach.

Component 2: Implement Green and Healthy school practices and develop Green School facilities

-Schools that work towards implementation of green facilities with LEED facility design components.
-Incorporating green practices around energy, waste and water reduction in your school.
- Implement the use of healthy eco-friendly supplies and materials in your school and on school grounds. -Conduct research on the relationship of Green and Healthy Schools to improve student learning and reducing environmental impact.

Component 3:(Stewardship) Student developed sustainable Earth solutions

-Developing Leopold’s Land Ethic. Respect for one’s immediate place, land stewardship, gives one respect for all places. (We may take natural resources for granted but ultimately it is the land that sustains us).
-Apply integrated environmental learning skills and capacity for students to develop sustainable Earth solutions.
-Practice the role of active environmental stewardship by developing peace gardens and organic gardens on school sites.
-Restoration of school and community land to develop natural ecosystems through service learning projects.

Component 4:Partnerships and networks –locally, statewide, bio-regionally and nationally

-Incorporate the community as an explicit partner for environmental learning.
- Develop a statewide and bio-regional capacity to support field learning, internships, conferences, and symposiums.
-Contribute to the development connection and sustainability of a national network to support Green Schools.
-Utilize dissemination resources to help with a sustainable state and national Green School Movement.

Click here to download Green Schools Design Essentials (PDF).

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Princeton Review 2013 Green Honor Roll Ranking of US Colleges

In this years Princeton Honor Roll, 21 colleges earned the highest score (99). The Princeton Review's fifth annual "Green Ratings" of colleges is a measure of how environmentally friendly the institutions are on a scale of 60 to 99. The Company tallied the rating for 806 institutions based on its institutional surveys of colleges in 2011-12 concerning their environmentally related practices, policies and academic offerings.

The "Green Rating" scores appear in the Princeton Review profiles of the colleges on www.PrincetonReview.com and in the new 2013 editions of two Princeton Review guidebooks published by Random House, Inc: "The Complete Book of Colleges" published August 7, and "The Best 377 Colleges" which went on sale August 21 in a print edition and a new enhanced eBook edition.

Here is an alphabetical listing of the twenty-one top ranked colleges that earned a place on the "2013 Green Rating Honor Roll." The list, which appears on www.PrincetonReview.com and in "The Best 377 Colleges" includes:

American University (Washington DC)
Arizona State University (Tempe)
California Institute of Technology (Pasadena)
California State University, Chico*
Catawba College (Salisbury, NC)
Chatham University* (Pittsburgh, PA)
College of the Atlantic (Bar Harbor, ME)
Columbia University (New York, NY)
Georgia Institute of Technology (Atlanta)
Goucher College (Baltimore, MD)
Green Mountain College (Poultney, VT)
Harvard College (Cambridge, MA)
Northeastern University (Boston, MA)
San Francisco State University* (San Francisco, CA)
University of California – Santa Cruz
University of South Carolina – Columbia
University of Washington (Seattle) University of Wisconsin – Oshkosh*
University of Wisconsin – Stevens Point*
Vanderbilt University (Nashville, TN)
Warren Wilson College (Asheville NC)

*Schools with an asterisk are not profiled in "The Best 377 Colleges," but they are profiled in The Princeton Review's "The Complete Book of Colleges" and/or its website.

Robert Franek, Princeton Review Senior VP / Publisher noted the rising interest among students in attending "green" colleges. Among 7,445 college applicants Princeton Review surveyed in 2012 for its "College Hopes & Worries Survey," 68% said having information about a college's commitment to the environment would impact their decision to apply to or attend a school.

Criteria for Princeton Review's Green Rating cover three areas: 1/ whether the school's students have a campus quality of life that is healthy and sustainable, 2/ how well the school is preparing its students for employment and citizenship in a world defined by environmental challenges, and 3/ the school's overall commitment to environmental issues.

The institutional survey for the rating included questions on energy use, recycling, food, buildings, and transportation as well as academic offerings and action plans for reducing greenhouse gas emissions. (See list below.) The Princeton Review developed its Green Rating with ecoAmerica (www.ecoamerica.org), a non-profit environmental organization, in 2007-08.

The Princeton Review dedicated a resource area on its site www.princetonreview.com/green for students interested in attending a green college. There, users can also download "The Princeton Review's Guide to 322 Green Colleges: 2012 Edition" – the only free, comprehensive guidebook to the nation's most environmentally responsible colleges. The 230-page guide is a project The Princeton Review has done for three years in partnership with the U.S. Green Building Council (www.usgbc.org). Published April 20, 2012, it has profiles of schools that received scores of 83 or higher in the Company's 2012 tallies for its Green Ratings. The guide can be downloaded at www.princetonreview.com/green-guide.aspx or at www.centerforgreenschools.org/greenguide.

Criteria for The Princeton Review's "Green Rating"

The Princeton Review tallied the "Green Rating "scores based on data it obtained in 2011-2012 from the colleges in response to an institutional survey. The survey included questions asking the schools to report:

1) The percentage of food expenditures that goes toward local, organic or otherwise environmentally preferable food 2) Whether the school offers programs including free bus passes, universal access transit passes, bike sharing/renting, car sharing, carpool parking, vanpooling or guaranteed rides home to encourage alternatives to single-passenger automobile use for students 3) Whether the school has a formal committee with participation from students that is devoted to advancing sustainability on campus 4) Whether new buildings are required to be LEED (environmental certification of equipment/appliances) Silver certified or comparable 5) The school's overall waste diversion rate 6) Whether the school has an environmental studies major, minor or concentration 7) Whether the school has an environmental literacy requirement for all of its graduates 8) Whether the school has produced a publicly available greenhouse gas emissions inventory and adopted a climate action plan consistent with 80 percent greenhouse gas reductions by 2050 targets 9) What percentage of the school's energy consumption is derived from renewable resources 10) Whether the school employs a dedicated full-time sustainability officer.  

About The Princeton Review College Ratings and College Rankings

The Princeton Review college ratings are scores on a scale of 60 to 99 that the Company annually tallies for hundreds of colleges in eight categories including Academics, Admissions Selectivity, Financial Aid, Fire Safety, and Green. The scores appear on college profiles on its site and in its college guidebooks. The ratings are based primarily on institutional data.

The Princeton Review college rankings are lists of schools in 62 categories (in rank order: 1 to 20) based entirely on the Company's surveys of 122,000 students attending the schools in its book, "The Best 377 Colleges." The survey asks students to rate their own schools on dozens of topics and report on their campus experiences at them. About The Princeton Review

Founded in 1981, The Princeton Review is a privately held education services company headquartered in Framingham, MA. The Company has long been a leader in helping college and graduate school–bound students achieve their education and career goals through its test preparation services, tutoring and admissions resources, online courses, and more than 150 print and digital books published by Random House, Inc. The Princeton Review delivers its programs via a network of more than 5,000 teachers and tutors in the U.S.A., Canada, and international franchises. The Company also partners with schools and guidance counselors worldwide to provide students with college readiness, test preparation and career planning services. The Princeton Review is not a magazine, and the Company is not affiliated with Princeton University.

For more information go to the Priceton Review Website

To see the Princeton Review Guide to Green Colleges click here.

To see the full list of schools click here.

To see the full list of schools by state click here

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EPA's Green Power Partnerships Top 20 Colleges & Universities

The Green Power Partnership works with a wide variety of leading organizations — from Fortune 500® companies to local, state and federal governments, and a growing number of colleges and universities. The following Top Partner Rankings highlight the annual green power use of leading organizations within the United States and across individual industry sectors.

Using green power helps reduce the environmental impacts of electricity use and supports the development of new renewable generation capacity nationwide. Usage amounts reflect U.S. operations only and are sourced from U.S.-based green power resources. Organizations can meet EPA Partnership requirements using any combination of three different product options: (1) Renewable Energy Certificates, (2) On-site generation, and (3) Utility green power products.

Usage figures are based on annualized Partner contract amounts (kilowatt-hours), not calendar year totals. These rankings are updated on a quarterly schedule. Find out how your organization can partner with EPA today!

For more information click here.

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Top 25 Movies about the Environment

There are a number of excellent films that address the issues associated with environmental degradation. This post is a directory of the best movies and films with an environmental theme. From the Arctic to waste here is a list of the 25 best films on the subjects of the environment and sustainability:

1. The 11th Hour: Turn Mankind’s Darkest Hour Into It’s Finest

2. An Inconvenient Truth

3. No Impact Man

4. The Corporation

5. The Age of Stupid

6. Home

7. Patagonia Rising

8. Arctic Tale

9. Zeitgeist: Moving Forward

10. Gasland

11. The Story of Stuff

12. Flow: For Love Of Water

13. King Corn

14. Tapped

15. Earth Days

16. Crude

17. The Garden

18. Be The Change

19. Who Killed The Electric Car?

20. Koyaanisqatsi

21. Baraka

22. Trashed

23. Waste Land

19. Food Inc

24. Supersize Me

25. Fresh

© 2012, Richard Matthews. All rights reserved.

The Best Books on Green and Sustainability

"He cannot live without a world."
-Ralph Waldo Emerson


Ignorance is the greatest obstacle preventing the world from collectively engaging the crisis of climate change. That is why information is the most important tool we have to combat climate change. Large scale collective action will only come once people understand the issues and the concomitant solutions. No one epitomized the effort to educate the business community on the subject of sustainability more than the late Ray Anderson who died in 2011. Anderson tirelessly promoted the idea that sustainability is good for business. He advocated an approach that “takes nothing from the earth that cannot be replaced by the earth.” As the founder and chairman of the commercial carpet company Interface, Anderson cut the company's greenhouse gas emissions by 94 percent, cut fossil fuel consumption by 60 percent, cut waste by 80 percent, increased sales, doubled earnings and re-invented the way carpets are made, sold and recycled. That is why Anderson's books are on the top of the list of the 100 most sustainable books in the world.

Business Lessons from a Radical Industrialist by Ray Anderson

Confessions of a Radical Industrialist: Profits, People, Purpose–Doing Business by Respecting the Earth by Ray Anderson

Mid-Course Correction: Toward a Sustainable Enterprise by Ray Anderson

Cradle to Cradle: Remaking the Way We Make Things by William McDonough

Natural Capitalism by Paul Hawken, Amory Lovins and Hunter Lovins

The Ecology of Commerce by Paul Hawken

Blessed Unrest – How the Largest Movement in the World Came into Being and Why No One Saw it Coming by Paul Hawken

Strategy for sustainability: A Business Manifesto by Adam Werbach

Whole Earth Discipline: An Ecopragmatist Manifesto by Steward Brand

The Green Collar Economy: How One Solution Can Solve Our Two Biggest Problems by Van Jones

The Responsible Business by Carol Sanford

The Sustainable MBA: The Manager’s Guide to Green Business by Giselle Weybrecht

Climate Capitalism: Global Warming and the Transformation of the Global Economy by Peter Newell and Matthew Paterson

Strategies for the Green Economy: Opportunities and Challenges in the New World of Business by Joel Makower

The Business Guide to Sustainability: Practical Strategies and Tools for Organizations by Darcy Hitchcock and Marsha Willard

Green Outcomes in a Real World by Peter McManners

Mindfully Green: A Personal and Spiritual Guide to Whole Earth Thinking By Stephanie Kaza

Sustainable Value: How the World’s Leading Companies Are Doing Well by Doing Good by Chris Laszlo

Making Sustainability Work: Best Practices in Managing and Measuring Corporate Social, Environmental, and Economic Impacts by Marc Epstein

Sustainable Excellence – The Future of Business in a Fast-Changing World by Aron Cramer and Zachary Karabell

Strategy for Sustainability – A Business Manifesto by Adam Werbach

Green Recovery by Andrew Winston

The Next Sustainability Wave: Building Boardroom Buy-in by Bob Willard, Hunter Lovins

Biomimicry: Innovation Inspired by Nature by Janine Benyus

Green to Gold Daniel Esty, Daniel and Andrew Winston

The Green to Gold Business Playbook by Daniel Esty and PJ Simmons

Thinking in Systems: A Primer by Donella H. Meadows

Deep Economy: The Wealth of Communities and the Durable Future by Bill McKibben

Eaarth – Making a Life on a Tough New Planet by Bill McKibben

The Great Turning: From Empire to Earth Community by David C. Korten

The Civil Corporation: The New Economy of Corporate Citizenship by Simon Zadek

Making Sustainability Work: Best Practices in Managing and Measuring Corporate Social, Environmental and Economic Impacts by Marc J. Epstein

The Necessary Revolution: How individuals and organizations are working together to create a sustainable world by Peter Senge et al.

The Triple Bottom Line: How Today’s Best Run Companies are Achieving Economic, Social and Environmental Succes–And How You Can, Too by Andrew Savitz

The Sustainability Advantage: Seven Business Case Benefits of a Triple Bottom Line by Bob Willard

The Triple Bottom Line – How Today’s Best-Run Companies are Achieving Economic, Social, and Environmental Success by Andrew Savitz

The Sustainability Revolution – Portrait of a Paradigm Shift by Andres R. Edwards

Supercapitalism: The Transformation of Business, Democracy, and Everyday Life by Robert Reich

Natural Capitalism: Creating the Next Industrial Revolution by L. Hunter Lovins

Climate Capitalism by Hunter Lovins & Boyd Cohen

Reinventing Fire by Amory Lovins

Strategies for the Green Economy : Opportunities and Challenges in the New World of Business by Joel Makower - McGraw-Hill (October 5, 2008)

Strategy for Sustainability: A Business Manifesto by Adam Werbach - Harvard Business Press

Next Generation Business Strategies for the Base of the Pyramid: New Approaches for Building Mutual Value by Ted Landon

Building Social Business: The New Kind of Capitalism That Serves Humanity's Most Pressing Needs by Muhammad Yunus

Banker to the Poor by Muhammad Yunus

The Crisis of Global Capitalism by George Soros

Factor Four by Ernst von Weizsäcker, Amory B. Lovins and L. Hunter Lovins

Managing for Stakeholders: Survival, Reputation, and Success by R. Edward Freeman

The HIP Investor: Make Bigger Profits by Building a Better World by Paul Herman

Leading Change Toward Sustainability by Bob Doppelt

Investing in a Sustainable World: Why Green is the New Color of Money on
Wall Street by Matt Kiernan, Ph.D

Leading Change by John P. Kotter

Confessions of an Economic Hit Man by John Perkins

Getting Green Done: Hard Truths from the Front Lines of the Sustainability Revolution by Auden Schendler

Now or Never – Why We Must Act Now to End Climate Change and Create a Sustainable Future by Tim Flannery

Ecological Economic: Principles and Applications by Herman E. Daly and Joshua Farley

The Clean Tech Revolution by Ron Parnick and Clint Wilder

Ethical Markets – Creating the Green Economy by Hazel Henderson

Plan B 4.0 – Rescuing a Planet Under Stress and a Civilization in Trouble by Lester R. Brown

The Fifth Discipline: The Art and Practice of a Learning Organization, by Peter Senge

The Necessary Revolution – How Individuals and Organizations are Working Together to Create a Sustainable World by Peter Senge

Getting Green Done – Hard Truths from the Front Lines of the Sustainability Revolution by Auden Schendler

Let My People Go Surfing: The Education of a Reluctant Businessman by Yvon Chouinard

Permaculture: A Designers’ Manual by Bill Mollison and Reny Mia Slay

Design Is the Problem: The Future of Design Must be Sustainable by Nathan Shedroff

The Philosophy of Sustainable Design by Jason E Mclennan

Silent Spring by Rachel Carson

Collapse: How Societies Choose to Fail or Succeed by Jared Diamond

Dark Age Ahead by Jane Jacobs

Ecotopia by Ernest Callenbach

Stirring It Up: How to Make Money and Save the World by Gary Hirschberg

Values Driven Business: How You Change the World, Make Money, and Have Fun by Ben Cohen and Mal Warwick

The SmallMart Revolution: How Local Businesses are Beating the Global Competition by Michael Shuman

Greed to Green by David Gottfried

75 Green Businesses You Can Start to Make Money and Make a Difference by Glenn Croston, Ph.D.

Build a Green Small Business: Profitable Ways to Become an Ecopreneur by scott cooney

The Economics of Climate Change by Nicholas Stern

Value Shift: Why Companies Must Merge Social and Financial Imperatives to Achieve Superior Performance by Lynn Sharp Paine

The Moral Underground: How Ordinary Americans Subvert an Unfair Economy by Lisa Dodson

The Age of Empathy: Nature's Lessons for a Kinder Society by Frans De Waal

The Market for Virtue: The Potential And Limits of Corporate Social Responsibility by David Vogel

Social Intelligence: The New Science of Human Relationships by Daniel Goleman

What Matters Most by Jeff Hollender and Stephen Fenichell.

Good to Great by Jim Collins

The Soul in a Computer by Barbara Waugh

Operating Manual for Spaceship Earth by R. Buckminster Fuller

The Truth About Green Business by Gil Friend

The Sustainability Handbook – The Complete Management Guide to Achieving Social, Economic, and Environmental Responsibility by William Blackburn.

The Responsibility Revolution – How the Next Generation of Business Will Win by Jeffrey Hollender

Blue Covenant – The Global Water Crisis and the Coming Battle for the Right to Water, Maude Barlow

Citizen Engineer, A Handbook for Socially Responsible Engineering by Dave Douglas and Dave Papadopoulos,

Let My People Go Surfing: The Education of a Reluctant Businessman, by Yvon Chouinard

Hometown Money: How to Enrich Your Community with Local Currency by Paul Glover.

Climb the Green Ladder: Make Your Company and Career More Sustainable by Amy V. Fetzer and Shari Aaron

Designing Sustainable Packaging by Steve Serling

Green Building and Remodeling for Dummies! by Eric Corey Freed

Cannibals With Forks: 21st Century of Triple Bottom Line Business by John Elkington

The Compassionate Carnivore: Or, How to Keep Animals Happy, Save Old MacDonald’s Farm, Reduce Your Hoofprint, and Still Eat Meat by Catherine Frien

Diet for a New America by John Robbins

In Defense of Food: An Eater’s Manifesto by Michael Pollen

Inquiries into the Nature of Slow Money: Investing as if Food, Farms, and Fertility Mattered by Woody Tasch

Omnivore's Dilemma by Michael Pollan

Switch by Chip and Dan Heath,

SuperCorp by Rosabeth Kanter

Here Comes Everybody by Clay Shirky,

Hot, Flat and Crowded by Thomas Friedman

A Sand County Almanac by Aldo Leopold

Silent Spring by Rachel Carson

Unsafe At Any Speed by Ralph Nader

The Population Bomb by Paul L. Ehrlich

Operating Manual for Spaceship Earth by R. Buckminster Fuller

The Limits to Growth by Donella H. Meadows, Dennis L. Meadows, Jørgen Randers and William W. Behrens III

Small Is Beautiful by E.F. Schumacher

Gaia by James Lovelock

The Turning Point by Fritjof Capra

Our Common Future (‘The Brundtland Report’) by the World Commission on Environment and Development

The Dream of the Earth by Thomas Berry

A Fate Worse Than Debt by Susan George

Staying Alive by Vandana Shiva

Blueprint for a Green Economy by David Pearce, Anil Markandya and Edward B. Barbier

For the Common Good by Herman Daly and John B. Cobb Jr

Human Scale Development by Manfred Max-Neef

Changing Course by Stephan Schmidheiny and Business Council for Sustainable Development (BCSD)

Maverick by Ricardo Semler

When Corporations Rule the World by David C. Korten

Biomimicry by Janine M. Benyus

Cannibals with Forks by John Elkington

The Hungry Spirit by Charles Handy

False Dawn by John Gray

Development as Freedom by Amartya Sen

No Logo by Naomi Klein

The Skeptical Environmentalist by Bjørn Lomborg

Globalization and its Discontents by Joseph E. Stiglitz

The Corporation by Joel Bakan

Presence by Peter Senge, C. Otto Scharmer, Joseph Jaworski and Betty Sue Flowers

The Fortune at the Bottom of the Pyramid by C.K. Prahalad

The River Runs Black by Elizabeth C. Economy

Capitalism as if the World Matters by Jonathon Porritt

Capitalism at the Crossroads by Stuart L. Hart

Collapse Jared Diamond

The End of Poverty Jeffrey D. Sachs

The Chaos Point by Ervin Laszlo

Heat by George by Monbiot

An Inconvenient Truth by Al Gore

When the Rivers Run Dry by Fred Pearce

The End of Money and the Future of Civilization by Thomas Greco

My Footprint by Jeff Garlin

Sustainable Event Management by Meegan Jones

The Blue Economy by Gunter Pauli - the 2010 report of the Club of Rome

Leading Change Toward Sustainability by Bob Doppelt (foreward by the aforementioned William McDonough)

Ishmael by Daniel Quinn

Delivering Tomorrow - Towards a Sustainable Future published by DHL

The Moneyless Man by Mark Boyle

Bicycle Diaries by David Byrne

GrassRoutes Northern California Wine Country: Green Road Trips by Serena Bartlett

Boiling Point by K.L. Dionne

Off the Grid: Inside the Movement for More Space, Less Government, and True Independence in Modern America by Nick Rosen

The Dirty Life: A Memoir of Farming, Food and Love by Kristin Kimball - Scribner

The Wave: In Pursuit of the Rogues, Freaks and Giants of the Ocean by Susan Casey - Anchor

The Bucolic Plague: How Two Manhattanites Became Gentlemen Farmers: An Unconventional Memoir (P.S.) by Josh Kilmer-Purcell

Eco-Resorts: Planning and Design for the Tropics by Zbigniew Bromberek

© 2012, Richard Matthews. All rights reserved.

50 Common Eco-Crimes Committed By College Students

Here is a list of 50 Common Eco-Crimes Committed By College Students from "Best Colleges Online."

  1. Boiling unnecessary water: Overfilling your teakettle or boiling without a lid wastes energy and takes more time to get going.
  2. Buying new books: Instead of buying new books, it’s more eco-friendly to buy used ones, or even rent or check out books from the library instead.
  3. Throwing away pens: Cheap bulk bag pens are convenient, but wasteful. Get a refillable pen instead, and throw away just a small refill rather than an entire pen.
  4. Wasting paper: Unlimited printing at the library doesn’t mean you should go crazy — print only what you absolutely need to have on paper.
  5. Forgetting to turn off the tap: Turn off the tap when you’re brushing your teeth or washing dishes.
  6. Recycle the way they say: Recycling doesn’t work if you don’t do it right. Remove caps, put the right item in the right bin so it can be processed correctly.
  7. Wash full loads: Load the dishwasher and washing machine with full loads instead of half or less.
  8. Writing inside the margins: You’ve probably been taught to stay neatly within the margins of your paper, but that is a wasteful practice when you’re just taking notes. Write all the way to the edge, and you may be surprised how much you can fit on each page.
  9. Dumping unwanted items: When the semester’s over and students move on, students often leave behind items that they don’t really want to take with them.
  10. Leaving your TV on in an empty room: If you’re not watching your TV or listening to the radio, turn them off.
  11. Buying more dorm stuff than necessary: Chances are, you’ll have a roommate in the dorms, and that roommate will be bringing lots of stuff with them. Instead of buying and loading up lots of your own stuff, check with your roommate to see if you can split items.
  12. Disposing electronic waste improperly: When you’re done with your laptop or cell phone, donate it or drop it in a recycling box designated for electronic waste.
  13. Forgetting to recycle: College campuses often have excellent recycling and even composting programs, but college students don’t always take advantage of them. Pay attention to what’s available, and use it.
  14. Forgetting what you have already: Remember to take inventory to avoid duplicates when you’re headed off to college.
  15. Unnecessary driving: College campuses are usually pedestrian friendly, so walk, bike, and avoid using your car unless you need to.
  16. Idling your car: Leaving the motor running when parked waiting for a friend wastes gas. It’s better to shut it off if you’ll be sitting for 10 seconds or longer.
  17. Buying notebooks: If you don’t fill your notebook each semester, you’re wasting paper. Use a refillable binder, or even a laptop instead.
  18. Buying bottled water: Buy a refillable bottle and wash it instead of buying disposable bottles.
  19. Buying cheap supplies: Buying a new backpack is wasteful — just buy a great one to start with, and you won’t have to get a new one later.
  20. Using incandescent light bulbs: If you’re renting or living in a dorm, you’re probably just going to use the bulbs provided, but switching them out for compact fluorescent light bulbs can save energy.
  21. Shipping your stuff everywhere: Instead of shipping your stuff back and forth, look into local storage options.
  22. Using disposables: It’s easy to clean up disposable plates and cups, but they’re terrible for the environment. Stick to inexpensive plates you can wash instead.
  23. Drinking bottled beer: Beer on tap doesn’t create nearly as much waste as bottled beer.
  24. Buying brand new supplies: Save your supplies from semester to semester and avoid having to buy them over again.
  25. Buying highly packaged food: Instead of buying processed foods, get fresh items that come with less packaging.
  26. Cooking with inefficient appliances: Instead of using outdated appliances, use efficient ones like microwaves and toaster ovens.
  27. Using the dryer: Invest in a clothes drying rack to hang dry your clothes instead of using the dryer.
  28. Replacing instead of upgrading: Before buying a new item, find out if you can upgrade first.
  29. Using wasteful beauty products: Look for natural and organic personal care brands to make sure your clean is really clean.
  30. Sleeping with the TV on: Set a timer for your TV to turn off once you’re asleep so it’s not on all night.
  31. Reading the school newspaper: Find out if your school’s newspaper offers an online edition instead of picking up a paper copy.
  32. Working out in the gym: Gym equipment like treadmills put out lots of carbon emissions. Save the earth while you work out by doing it outside.
  33. Don’t take more than you’ll eat: Be careful not to overly fill your plate at the cafeteria — just take what you need.
  34. Leaving your air conditioner on: College students spend lots of time out of their dorms and apartments but may not remember to program their thermostat to go down when they’re not at home.
  35. Printing on one side: There’s no excuse for printing on just one side — learn how to do double-sided printing.
  36. Leaving electronics on: Leaving on your laptop, TV, and other electronics can drain energy without you noticing it-plug your electronics into powerstrips and turn them all off at once.
  37. Eating mini packs: Pack your lunch in reusable bags instead of mini packs of chips and other items.
  38. Using paper napkins: If you’re eating fast food, chances are you’ve gotten napkins. Limit your use — you probably just need one.
  39. Spring breaking: Instead of flying to a far-flung destination, take an eco-friendly spring break trip.
  40. Forgetting to bring reusable shopping bags: Reusable bags are easy — if you actually remember to bring them to the store. Use keychain bags or ones that fold up to fit in your backpack so you won’t forget.
  41. Waiting for the hot water: Let the cool water fill up a bucket to use on your plants and other items while you’re waiting for the hot water to come in.
  42. Eating takeout: Take out is often in wasteful packaging-find restaurants that use less packaging, or just make food for yourself at home.
  43. Throwing away old clothes: Updating your wardrobe doesn’t have to mean being wasteful — donate your old clothes to a charity a homeless shelter.
  44. Letting lint build up: Whether you’re using community dryers or your own at home, always remember to clean the lint filter for a more efficient dryer.
  45. Using unnecessary kitchen items: Tin foil, plastic wrap, disposable cleaning cloths, and more can be switched for reusable items.
  46. Buying new clothing: Buy used clothing, or swap with friends to save resources and money.
  47. Paper statements: Switch to paperless billing for your bank, credit cards, utilities, and more.
  48. Driving alone: On a college campus, you should be able to find someone to share rides with — rideshare home to visit family and friends, or just go to the store together.
  49. Leaving lights on: It doesn’t have to be day-bright in your room all of the time. Dim your lights or turn them off completely unless you really need them.
  50. Throwing away paper: Students deal with lots of paper, and it’s important to dispose of it correctly. Remember to recycle instead of throwing away paper.
© 2011, Richard Matthews. All rights reserved.

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Sierra's Top 5 Insider Reader Stories from 2010

Sierra Club Insider, is a twice-monthly e-newsletter that gives readers the inside scoop on the latest environmental news, green living tips and urgent action alerts on important environmental issues. Here are the most interesting stories of 2010 from Sierra Insider readers.

1. Just Say No - to Oil: In April, the explosion on the Deepwater Horizon in the Gulf of Mexico made it clearer than ever that we must transition to clean energy sources ASAP. The Sierra Club's Beyond Oil campaign challenged President Obama to develop a plan for getting our nation off of oil in the next 20 years.

2. Rush Gets His Backpack: In May radio talk-show host Rush Limbaugh put his foot firmly in his mouth by suggesting that the Sierra Club that was to blame for the oil disaster in the Gulf of Mexico, his absurd rant turned into a major fund-raising opportunity for the Club. Thousands of indignant "greeniacs" (Rush's mocking nickname) made donations to Sierra in response to his ridiculous allegations. The Sierra Club ended up sending Rush a giant thank you card signed by all the donors, as well as a complimentary Sierra Club backpack.

3. "Fracking: It Even Sounds Dirty": Many Americans first heard about fracking, the destructive method of extracting natural gas in 2010. Sierra Club Executive Director Michael Brune visited Pennsylvania to meet with people who've been affected by reckless drilling, and he blogged about how the industry is "exempt from the Safe Drinking Water Act, the Clean Air Act, parts of the Clean Water Act, the National Environmental Policy Act, as well as hazardous waste and cleanup laws."

4. Too-Cool Schools: Sierra magazine's annual Cool Schools survey is a report card for sustainability initiatives at colleges and universities around the country. It once again generated lots of interest and heated debate. Most people simply wanted to know whether their school made the Top 100 list, but the Cool Schools also includes the green dream team of all-star teachers and the profiles of several standout students who've made big differences at their schools.

5. The Best Internship on Earth: Announced early in 2010, The Best Internship on Earth was won by NYU film grad Evan Geary. He was given the dream assignment of creating a video blog documenting his experience with Sierra. The winning intern spent the summer traveling on different Sierra Club outings and creating numerous interesting and educational videos.


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