Five Ways to Get Started Caring for God’s Creation
Want to DO something to take care of the earth? Here are 5 small steps you can take to begin to re-order your life and use less of the earth’s resources.
If making changes sounds difficult, you also may be pleased to learn that these are almost painless. In fact, they might not seem like enough to make a difference – but if ALL of us begin to make these kinds of small changes, they really do add up.
(Unless otherwise noted, statistics and actions are from Center for a New American Dream, c3.newdream.org)
1. Eat Locally
Here’s a statistic I just can’t get over. Do you know how far the average food item travels from its origin to your dinner plate? Anywhere from 1200 to 2500 miles. It takes a lot of fuel to move that food – not to mention that this is also why we have so many pink, crunchy tomatoes in the grocery store. A nice ripe tomato just won’t survive the trip.
So for at least some of your groceries, visit a farmers’ market (Ashland, Goochland, 17th Street – there’s even a new one in Lakeside! Check out http://www.localharvest.org/farmers-markets/). Or buy somewhere like Ukrops, where you can tell which produce is locally grown.
When you eat food that’s grown in Goochland or New Kent, you’re saving a lot of fuel and a lot of emissions from trucks. Not to mention that a Hanover tomato doesn’t crunch when you bite into it.
2. Change that light bulb
The next time the bulb in your closet burns out, replace it with a compact fluorescent bulb. Compact fluorescents give the same amount of light as traditional incandescents but use 75% or 80% less electricity.
According to Fast Company magazine, what that means is that if every one of 110 million American households bought just ONE ice-cream-cone bulb, took it home, and screwed it in the place of an ordinary 60-watt bulb, the energy saved would be enough to power a city of 1.5 million people for a year.
“But they’re more expensive,” you say. Uh – not really. Yes, you will pay more at the cash register to take this bulb home versus a GE Soft White – but by the time it burns out, you would already have replaced an incandescent several times. Plus, you save on the electricity used to operate the bulb over that number of years. You do the math. (Fast Company, September 2006)
3. Break the bottled water habit!
I’m not sure how I missed this fact, but somehow I did. Did you know that plastics are made from petroleum? What is most bottled water, bottled in? Uh-huh – plastic.
In 2004, the U.S. consumed more bottled water than any other country—almost 7 billion gallons. Making those bottles required more than 1.5 million barrels of oil annually, enough to fuel some 100,000 cars for a year.
That’s the front end. Here’s the back end: 86% of those plastic water bottles aren’t recycled. Some are incinerated, which produces toxic stuff like chlorine gas and ash containing heavy metals. Others are buried in landfills … where they can take up to 1,000 years to biodegrade.
Here’s the wildest fact: did you know something like 40 percent of bottled water is just tap water! We complain about paying $4 a gallon for gas, but we’ll pay $8 a gallon for bottled water – something we can get out of our own faucets and water fountains practically for free!
· So, you might consider giving up bottled water. You can put a filter on your faucet or get a filtered pitcher to keep in your fridge.
- To take water with you, get a water bottle that is designed to be reused. (Don’t reuse a disposable water or soda bottle – it’s not safe. The plastic can begin leaking toxins into your beverage, especially if the bottle gets warm. Some plastic reusables aren’t safe either – look at http://mysigg.com)
4. Give Your Clothes the Cold Shoulder
Want to save an easy 60 bucks? Wash 4 out of 5 laundry loads in cold water, and you’ll save that much in energy costs every year.
A whopping 90 percent of the energy used by a washing machine goes to just heating the water. You could reduce your CO2 emissions by 72 pounds in just one month by doing this!
5. BYOB
Aren’t plastic bags great? Strong, lightweight, easy to carry…and they last forever. Literally. Plastic bags don’t biodegrade, they just break down into smaller and smaller toxic bits. They contaminate soil and waterways, and get into the food web when animals accidentally ingest them – even killing hundreds of thousands of sea turtles, whales and other marine mammals who mistake bags for food. Worldwide, human beings use over one million plastic bags per minute.
It’s easy to find reusable bags these days, and they are cheap. Take your own bag along whenever you shop. Even if you only use one less plastic bag – that’s one less plastic bag. And when you have to use plastic bags, save them up and take them back to retailers who will recycle them.