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22 Feb 2007, 7:46 pm / Mellow

Time to Go Green 

I just watched Al Gore's, An Inconvienent Truth.  I have taken the initiative to go green.  The environment is one of my serious passions of late! I think the movie is one that everyone should see.  It might be slightly off putting to some of the right wingers out there, but they need to hear the message that Gore is sending.  Our planet is in serious trouble.  All of the scientists are on board, with the exceptions of the one's who are paid to disagree with global warming. I will now get off my high horse and let you discover the movie for yourself.  Here is a link to the site that is tied to the movie so that you can learn how to go green.  Ps, my personal Co2 contribution is 4.7 in the winter and 3.5 in the summer,  per year which is smaller than the national average of over 6 whats yours?

http://www.climatecrisis.net/

Now---How to Go Green

What You Can Do at Home

*****Replace a regular incandescent light bulb with a compact fluorescent light bulb (cfl)
CFLs use 60% less energy than a regular bulb. This simple switch will save about 300 pounds of carbon dioxide a year. If every family in the ..:namespace prefix = st1 ns = "urn:schemas-microsoft-com:office:smarttags">U.S. made the switch, we'd reduce carbon dioxide by more than 90 billion pounds!

Move your thermostat down 2° in winter and up 2° in summer
Heating/cooling accounts for  half of the energy we use in our homes. You could save about 2,000 pounds of carbon dioxide a year with this simple adjustment.

Clean or replace filters on your furnace and air conditioner

Install a programmable thermostat  It will save you money too

Choose energy efficient appliances when making new purchases
Look for the Energy Star

Wrap your water heater in an insulation blanket
You'll save 1,000 pounds of carbon dioxide a year with this simple action.

Use less hot waterIt takes a lot of energy to heat water. Install a low flow showerhead (350 pounds of carbon dioxide saved per year) and washing your clothes in cold or warm water (500 pounds saved per year) instead of hot.

Use a clothesline instead of a dryer whenever possible
You save 700 lbs of carbon dioxide if you air dry your clothes for 6 months
Turn off electronic devices you're not using

Unplug electronics from the wall when you're not using them
Even when turned off, use energy. In fact, the energy used to keep display clocks lit  alone accounts for 5 percent of total domestic energy consumption and spews 18 million tons of carbon into the atmosphere every year!

Only run your dishwasher when there's a full load and use the energy-saving setting
You can save 100 pounds of carbon dioxide per year.

Insulate and weatherize your home

Be sure you're recycling at home
You can save 2,400 pounds of carbon dioxide a year by recycling half of your waste
Buy recycled paper products
It takes less 70 to 90% less energy to make recycled paper

Plant a tree
A single tree will absorb one ton of carbon dioxide over its lifetime.

Switch to green power
The Green Power Network is a good place to start to figure out what's available in your area.

Buy locally grown and produced foods
The average meal in the United States travels 1,200 miles from the farm to your plate.

Buy fresh foods instead of frozen
Frozen food uses 10 times more energy to produce.

Seek out and support local farmers markets
They reduce the amount of energy required to grow and transport the food to you by one fifth. You can find a farmer's market in your area at the USDA website.


Buy organic foods as much as possible
Organic soils capture and store carbon dioxide at much higher levels than soils from conventional farms.

Avoid heavily packaged products
You can save 1,200 pounds of carbon dioxide if you cut down your garbage by 10%.

Eat less meat
Methane is the second most significant greenhouse gas and cows are one of the greatest methane emitters.

REDUCE YOUR IMPACT WHILE ON THE MOVE

Reduce the number of miles you drive by walking, biking, carpooling or taking mass transit wherever possible
Avoiding just 10 miles of driving a wk would eliminate about 500 pounds of carbon dioxide emissions a year!
Keep your car tuned up
When just 1% of car owners properly maintain their cars, nearly a billion pounds of carbon dioxide are kept out of the atmosphere.

Check your tires weekly to make sure they're properly inflated

When it is time for a new car, choose a more fuel efficient vehicle
Fly less
Air travel produces large amounts of emissions so reducing how much you fly by even one or two trips a year can reduce your emissions significantly. You can also offset your air travel by investing in renewable energy projects.



My Comments

01 Mar 2007, 6:33 pm

You two should be on Larry King. Great reading, I'm breathless. Thank you for debating professionally. I saw a similar debate on MySpace where one woman called my friend's girlfriend a "skank whore" because he supports Al Gore.

His resonse?

I'll tell your sister what you think of her.

Ouch.






From: eLeX@
01 Mar 2007, 4:47 pm

My intent was to spread the word on how people can do their part to offset their impact on global warming, not to get into a debate about what Gore is doing.  However, since that is what we are doing here now, here are the facts.  Gore is eliminating his personal carbon footprints in several ways, as listed below.  I ask that you seperate yourself from the person that put out the video and see the real message here, that is, that global warming is real and needs to be curbed by everyone.  My father who is a staunch right-winger himself has seen the video and was able to say what an important film it was.  He was able to even say that he found Gore to "be more of a person" and "even likeable" in the film.  My question to you is have you seen the film? 

Gore Responds To Drudge’s Latest Hysterics

The right-wing is angry that Al Gore has won so much public attention and goodwill for his work on global warming. Determined to smear his efforts, Drudge writes in a screaming headline:Responding to Drudge’s attack, Vice President Gore’s office told ThinkProgress:1) Gore’s family has taken numerous steps to reduce the carbon footprint of their private residence, including signing up for 100 percent green power through Green Power Switch, installing solar panels, and using compact fluorescent bulbs and other energy saving technology. 2) Gore has had a consistent position of purchasing carbon offsets to offset the family’s carbon footprint — a concept the right-wing fails to understand. Gore’s office explains: What Mr. Gore has asked is that every family calculate their carbon footprint and try to reduce it as much as possible. Once they have done so, he then advocates that they purchase offsets, as the Gore’s do, to bring their footprint down to zero.It’s the latest in a series of desperate attacks by Drudge to paint Gore as a hypocrite. Some other examples:These are the lengths that climate skeptics must go to suppress action on global warming. There is no meaningful debate within the scientific community, so the right-wing busies itself with talk about how much electricity Al Gore’s house uses — and even then they distort the truth.

Found at....

http://thinkprogress.org/2007/02/26/gore-responds-to-drudge/ 

 

 

An Inconvenient Truth: Carbon Neutral, Profits Going to Educational Campaignby Michael Graham Richard, Gatineau, Canada on 06.12.06Culture & Celebrity (audio video)

An Inconvenient Truth is, according to this post on the official website's blog, the first carbon-neutral documentary. "Paramount Classics, Participant Productions, and NativeEnergy have joined forces to offset 100% of the carbon dioxide emissions from air and ground transportation and hotels for production and promotional activities associated with the documentary." Al Gore has also mentioned in numerous interviews that he has made his life carbon-neutral, and now he's announcing that "100 percent of the profits from the book and the movie [will go] to a new bipartisan educational campaign to further spread the message about global warming." That's in addition to forming a thousand people to give his slide presentation around the world. We're curious to see what the movie's critics will think of next... They certainly haven't successfully attacked the science thus far and now they're losing some fuel for their "attack the messenger instead of the message" campaign.On a more personal note, I finally had a chance to see the film (it came out in Ottawa last Thursday) and it is excellent. I highly recommend it to all treehuggers and especially their less eco-consciouss friends and family.

 

Found at.....

http://www.treehugger.com/files/2006/06/ait_carbon_neutral.php






From: eLeX@
26 Feb 2007, 7:50 pm

Hello there just wanted to respond to your post with something I found

"In a USA Today column widely cited by conservative websites and blogs, Peter Schweizer compiles a largely distorted and baseless assualt on the credibility of Al Gore. Rather than recognizing the success of his impact on the global warming debate, and his personal leadership in embracing a carbon neutral lifestyle, Mr. Schweizer instead attempts to paint Mr. Gore as an environmental hypocrit by focusing on three irrelevant details of his personal consumption habits and the peripheral environmental impacts of his business and investments.

As with most right wing smear efforts, the article entirely misses the point. Al Gore is championing action against global warming, not recycling, not sustainable mining, and not the green character of the democratic party. What he is doing is advocating explicit action to curb and control carbon emissions, and he is living his life 100% consistently with this aim by going carbon neutral"

found at http://consciousearth.blogspot.com/2006/08/al-gore-in-conservative-crosshairs.html

 

Cheers

Elexa






22 Feb 2007, 9:42 pm
Good post Alex!  Miss you baby!







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