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Home arrow Default Category arrow Shop Green
Shop Green PDF Print E-mail
Written by Mary   

Shopping is one of the best ways to express our environmental concern.  From using less plastic, to buying paper products that aren't made of timber from virgin forests, there are many great way to care about the earth through our wallets.  Many of us feel helpless in today's age of heavy resource consumption, but we can make a difference for future generations, and we can set an example for friends and family.  Here are some simple ways to shop green.

1. When grocery shopping, bring your old paper bags, or buy those great shopping bags from Trader Joes and Whole Foods.  They are not only useful at the store, they are great for around the house.  Many stores, such as Ralph's, are starting to offer "bag credits" or a discount on your purchase when you bring your own bags.  San Francisco was recently the first city in the US to ban plastic bags in grocery stores entirely.  Plastic bags are incredibly wasteful and fuel intensive to produce and recycle.  Plastic waste has taken a terrible toll in ocean habitats, and clogs our landfills.  Reducing plastic consumption is a great way to help the environment.

2. Speaking of reducing plastic consumption, when you drop off your drycleaning, ask them not to put all that plastic bagging over your clothes.  Is that really necessary?  It just instantly fills your trashcan.  Also, bring in your old hangers.  Most drycleaners will happily reuse the hangers.

3. Buy paper products that do not use virgin forests.  Check out this great guide from www.nrdc.org

Shop Smart, Save Forests

A Shopper’s Guide to Home Tissue Products

Natural Resources Defense Council: www.nrdc.org

Ancient and other endangered forests are being destroyed to make toilet paper, facial tissues, paper towels and other disposable paper products. But you can help halt this destruction by pressuring the tissue products industry to change its practices and by making smart shopping decisions. This green guide provides you with a list of tissue paper products to buy—and a few to avoid. Visit www.nrdc.org/paper for a more extensive product list and to send a message to paper giant Kimberly-Clark, the maker of Scott, Cottonelle, Kleenex and Viva, telling the company to stop using virgin wood for throwaway tissue products.

Three Things You Can Do To Help Save Our Forests

Buy paper products with recycled content—especially post-consumer fibers.

Look for products that have a high recycled content, including high post-consumer content. Post-consumer fibers are recovered from paper that was previously used by consumers and would otherwise have been dumped into a landfill or an incinerator.

Buy paper products made with clean, safe processes.

Paper products are bleached to make them whiter and brighter, but chlorine used in many bleaching processes contributes to the formation of harmful chemicals that wind up in our air and water and are highly toxic to people and fish. Look for products labeled totally chlorine-free (TCF) or processed chlorine-free (PCF).

Tell tissue manufacturers to stop using virgin wood for throwaway products.

If a brand you buy for your home doesn’t have any recycled content, contact the manufacturer. Tell the company to use more recycled fibers, to avoid sourcing from ecologically valuable forests such as those in the Cumberland Plateau and Canadian Boreal, and to ensure any virgin fibers used are certified by the Forest Stewardship Council. Saving forests also helps reduce global warming pollution.

4. Buy organic, especially veggies and fruits that are the most pesticide intensive in terms or growing methods.  Check out this handy guide from www.foodnews.org.

PESTICIDES in PRODUCE

Buy These Organic (Most Pesticide Intensive)

Peaches
Apples
Sweet Bell Peppers
Celery
Nectarines
Strawberries
Cherries
Lettuce
Grapes (Imported)
Pears
Spinach
Potatoes
12

Lowest in Pesticides

Onions
Avocado
Sweet Corn (Frozen)
Pineapples
Mango
Sweet Peas
(Frozen)
Asparagus
Kiwi
Bananas
Cabbage
Broccoli
Eggplant

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Go Green!
Written by admin on 2007-12-28 20:11:11
It took some convincing, but I now do agree with the not using plastic on the dry cleaning. It really does make a large amount of waste...

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