velo Posted April 24, 2007 Posted April 24, 2007 How far do you go to limit your impact on the environment ?
KLB Posted April 29, 2007 Posted April 29, 2007 I work from home; I live in town in a small apartment; I bought the most fuel efficient car I could that suited my needs and am conscious of how much I drive; I have swapped out all of the most used incandescent lights in my apartment for compact florescent lights; I've reduced my electric usages as much as I can (including plugging electronic devices like DVD and VCR into switches so that they can be really turned off); I am in the process of acquiring carbon offset credits for the webserver that runs my website; I will also be getting carbon offset credits for my car in the near future; In the next month or so I will be switching my electric supplier to one that generate 100% renewable energy locally (certified low impact hydroelectric); I'm careful with how I use water/hot water; I try to buy durable products that will last (for instance I buy cars on a ten year cycle); I use reusable shopping bags; I use cloth napkins (to save on paper napkins); I try to be conscious of the packaging waste from the things I buy; and I try to reduce the waste we throw away. I know there is a lot more I could do, and I am always striving to do more to reduce my impact. My long term goal is to get my carbon footprint to as close to zero as I can.
velo Posted April 29, 2007 Author Posted April 29, 2007 Wow KLB you are a good un, i have felt guilty for using plastic shopping bags when i go to the super market, so i have switched to home shopping, everything comes in reusable boxes, and it voids the use of my car, my car is one of the most fuel efficient i could find within my price range, it is a 1400cc diesel 60+ mpg driven with care.
KLB Posted April 29, 2007 Posted April 29, 2007 60 mpg diesel? I'm jealous You obviously don't live in the United States. Without buying a Toyota Prius, which I couldn't afford (and has a dubious "cradle to grave" environmental benefit) the best I could buy last spring in a small (not sub-compact) car was the Huyndi Elantra, which was rated for 34mpg highway. Based on all the research I did, it was the most fuel efficient car sold in the U.S. in its class other than the Prius. With careful non-interstate driving I can get 40mpg with my Elantra.
bascule Posted May 3, 2007 Posted May 3, 2007 While I don't work from home, I ride my bike to work, and anywhere where I don't have to transport anything decently heavy
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