Thirty positive actions for a sustainable Earth
1. Recycle and re-use
Wherever possible, separate waste
into compost material, bottles, tins, paper, and clothing etc and make
sure that these get recycled. See if your local council has a policy
for recycling, food reclamation to fuel or even methane extraction from
waste. If they don't - start one. Ask your neighbors to contribute to a
local composting station.
"The UK has one of the worst
recycling records in Europe (12.4%) compared with 64% in Austria, 52%
in Belgium, 50% in Germany and 47% in the Netherlands.
In the UK
we bury 80% of our rubbish in landfills, compared to the Swiss who only
landfill 7% of their rubbish." (The Observer 2004)
2. Shop locally or order a beg box
Give
your local farmers a boost by buying direct - either by visiting farms,
farmer's markets or through vegetable box schemes - which are usually
organic. This saves transport costs in 'food miles' and guarantees,
fresh, local, un-polluted and healthy, in-season food. Try and avoid
supermarkets and shop locally when possible to enhance your own local
micro-economy.
"The average household [in UK] spends £470
a year (or one sixth of its total food budget) on packaging. In a
typical Asda or Tesco shopping basket only 26% of the cost is accounted
for by food; the rest is packaging, processing, transport, store
overheads, advertising and the mark-up of supermarkets which is
sometimes as high as 45%." (National Farmers' Union)
3. Make more of your own food from fresh
Stop
buying ready-meals and throw away your microwave. Take the time to make
healthy, balanced and delicious meals and condiments from wholesome raw
ingredients. Be like the French and live to eat - rather than eat to
live! Eating food is the only activity apart from sex that involves all
of our senses.
4. Promote community exchange
If
you can exchange skills, items or energy direct with other people
without the use of money - this makes your activities more efficient.
If you can share resources with people around you - then you don't have
to earn so much to buy things and you don't have to work as much.
5. Improve local diversity of nature
See
what you can do to provide the right ecosystems to promote local
biodiversity. Bring butterflies, moths, birds, wild flowers and so on
into your local environment by providing the resources they need.
6. Review domestic energy use
Check
whether you can save energy by cutting down consumption or being more
efficient. There are government schemes in the UK to help with heating
efficiency and insulation. Even switching off at the plug at night
saves power -those little red 'power on' lights add up to over £4
million of electricity used in the UK each year! Look at how your home
uses energy and where it can be saved, even if it means putting a
jumper on occasionally.
7. Start a local investment scheme
If
you want to save for a future - doesn't it make sense to invest in
something you can see and touch - like a local investment system that
brings a return on your money and improves your own locality? Invest
money where you can see what it is doing - and where you can lend a
hand if needs be. Community companies, local co-operatives and credit
unions are a growing resource for sustainable local investment. What
better way is there than to invest your energy directly into your local
micro-economy where you can cherish it?
8. Use an ethical banking system
Just
what does your money do when you invest it a bank? Do you invest in the
land mines that blow off children's legs? Do you support armaments
manufacturing, the over-exploitation of rainforests, globalizes cartels
intent on raping the planet? Does your default investment in a bank
endorse child slavery and prostitution, international drug running and
money laundering? Check the investment policies of your bank to see
just where they are putting your energy as an investment. If you don't
like what you see, at least consider using an ethical bank that might
invest in things you want in the world. Even better - reach for a
lifestyle that doesn't include a bank account at all.
Did you invest in this?
"Japanese
physicist Professor Yagasaki calculated that the 500+ metric tones of
depleted uranium (DU) that the US unleashed on Afghanistan was the
radioactive equivalent of 51,875 atomic bombs of the size dropped on
the Japanese city of Nagasaki.
During the 2003 Gulf War the
amount of DU used was the equivalent of 103,750 atomic bombs the size
of that dropped on Nagasaki. DU fallout will travel from the Middle
East to the UK, US and parts of Asia." (International Physicians for
the Prevention of Nuclear War)
9. Review car use and petrol consumption
The
real price of petrol, if you apply economic principles to its
production - that includes the time the earth has taken to make it -
comes in at over £1 million per gallon. Its use produces awful
chemical pollution and extreme noise. Most internal combustion engines
run at an incredibly low efficiency (usually about 20%). The logic of
having something that weighs over a ton to transport a single person
defeats me. Yes, I know they're incredibly convenient compared to the
alternatives and that many motors have cult status but - come on -
there has to be a better way than this! Boy is I looking forward to
hydrogen / oxygen fuel cells. Cycling is great!
10. Start a local energy collective
Your
roofs are a resource! Take a look at some of the rooftop energy panels
available today. Chat with your neighbors about a collective approach
to local energy needs. Sell your excess energy back to the grid!
Intermediate technology combined with modern technology in wind, solar
or water power has come of age so start your own power supply.
11. Learn more about the nature in your local environment
Which
wild animals and plants live in your environment? Share some time with
them and see what they can teach you. Become a direct 'friend of
nature' and explore how other species see the world we share. You could
even adopt some wild nature near you and 'look out' for it.
12. Make things from found or recycled materials
Do
you remember the fun you had whittling wood when you were younger? Keep
an eye out for interesting wood you can prepare to make useful things.
So much stuff is just thrown away or destroyed that could be useful
again given a little T.L.C. Wild wood can make attractive coat hangers,
boxes, shelves, even furniture. Waste skips often have objects that can
easily be given a 'new life'. Working with your hands to make things
'new' can be a deeply satisfying experience.
13. Make your own Christmas and birthday presents
Take
time out to make things that you enjoy and give them away to people you
love. These have a value way over anything you can buy. If you have a
creative hobby - use it to make gifts instead of buying them. If you
don't - find a hobby or activity that puts you in touch with natural
things.
14. Stop using pharmaceutical drugs and chemicals and go natural we are in a culture where medical
Consumerism
is the norm. Explore some of the alternatives like using your food as
preventative and curative medicine, or learn about the herbs and spices
that have traditionally boosted mankind's health for millennia. There
are many gentle ways to find, promote and maintain health and you will
find some excellent examples at the Star Fields Network.
15. Join an environmental group
Express
your energy in a collective way by joining a group that voices your
concerns. Put your energy into changing the situation for the better by
directly sponsoring a specific environmental cause.
16. Use natural materials from a sustainable source over synthetic materials
The more natural a product is - the less pollution is usually incurred
in its production. Support your environment by valuing natural
materials over synthetic, for example (organic) cotton over polyester.
Think about where building materials or other resources have come from
and the processes it takes to make them.
17. Feed your neighbor a quick story based on Dante's Inferno:
Dante
(or someone like him) visits Hell and finds a room of 'food torture'.
The inhabitants are glued to chairs round a large table covered with
food, but they all have their arms replaced by 10 foot chopsticks. They
lift bits of food high over their heads and drop it down onto their
faces in a pathetic attempt to feed them. Later, our hero visits heaven
and finds exactly the same situation except for one thing. The people
in heaven are feeding each other across the table!
18. Dance, sing and laugh. Look after yourself and have fun
If
you are happy, fulfilled, in good humour, enjoying life's journey and
so on - the chances are that others around you will be able to feel
that way too. This moves us all along.
19. Don't fly in airplanes
If
possible, take a ship or train for long hauls or holidays. Aircraft are
extremely expensive in pollution terms. Enjoy the sensation of
traveling more slowly. Accept the journey as part of the trip.
20. Take an action holiday
Why
not donate your energy to a cause like helping indigenous people set up
sustainable economies? There are many companies offering the experience
of useful voluntary work overseas. This is a most direct way to
contribute to a sustainable world and gives you face-to-face contact
with other cultures.
21. Grow more plants indoors
Enhance
your pact with nature by turning your home into a plant haven. Even
simple spider plants can improve your space by bringing nature in and
cleaning the air.
Plants are pretty undemanding compared to pets and they bring life in and produce air. Go the whole hog and grow some trees.
22. Consider changing your employment
What
does your ‘mean of income' do in energy terms? If the 'ethics' of
your employment is distant from your own values then you have
essentially sold your soul for money. Think carefully about the
consequences of your employment.
Consider finding employment that is near to your core values and you will find a more
fulfilled 'you'.
23. Review how you are investing in your own future
Concerned
about pensions? It is certainly looking like someone has pulled the
plug on that one. Anyone under 45 should be looking to exactly what
they want in older years and finding ways to achieve it that may not
involve money.
There are serious flaws in our investment systems that are becoming more and more evident.
Co-operative or communal solutions to support in older years will be an increasing solution to lack of money.
24. Review your usage of water
If
you have metered water, review how much you use and where savings might
be made. For example bath water (without chemicals) can be used to
water plants; a brick in the water cistern saves flush water. Can you
use the water that lands on your roof that you pay for the privilege of
having removed?
Water butts are cheaper than ever and some local councils offer price reductions to residents.
There are many water filters on the market that improve the quality of
tap-water and water is a key issue in health, we are mostly made of it!
Water is a key issue on planet earth in the 21st century.
“Nearly
97% of the world's water is sea water or otherwise undrinkable. Another
2% is locked up in ice caps and glaciers. This leaves 1% to meet all of
humanities growing needs, including agriculture, manufacturing,
community and personal household needs. Of that 1%, one quarter of the
world's fresh water is found in Canada's lakes, rivers and streams."
(CPS June 2004)
25. Cut down on noise and light pollution
Many
birds in cities sing at night as it's the only way they can make
themselves heard. Generally birds in cities have to sing louder and the
stress this causes gives them shortened life spans.
Listen for a moment now - what can you hear beyond the hum of computer fan?
How much of this noise is really needed? Wouldn't just some 'quiet times' be nice?
Get together with your neighbors and see if you can negotiate a local 'quiet time', like a Sunday morning.
Unnecessary
light also interferes with wildlife and even worse - it blocks out the
stars - a source of wonder till the end of time.
26. Start your own herb garden
Grow your own medicinal and culinary herbs. Many of these are easy to
grow on a windowsill, in a window box or tub somewhere. The direct
growing and use of plants ties you into natural cycles and rhythms -
you could even learn about 'moon gardening' cycles and biodynamic!
27. Grow your own food
Even simple growing such as mustard cress or delicious sprouting seeds
contributes to a good diet. A surprising amount of your own food can be
grown in a little space by using 'potato stacks' or climbing fruits.
There is no better feeling than harvesting your own crop and eating it
with friends. There are many dwarf bush varieties of fruit; some even
have more than one fruit type on the same bush.
28. Downsize
Think
about how you can work less and keep a good quality of life. Balance
quality of life with standard of living. Contribute less to GDP and the
national/global economy and more to a wholesome local and global
ecology. Think global and act local.
29. Go organic
Whatever
you consume, source it from a place that values natural processes over
industrial ones. There are many enterprises providing organic food,
drink, clothing or materials from sustainable sources. Take pride in
tracking these down and using them in preference to more exploitative
practices.
30. Spend time with nature
Take the
time to visit nature and spend time relating with it. Find and adopt
special places where you can go to feel the cycles and forces of nature
and know that it is an aspect of you, and you of it. Many people are
forming 'collectives' to protect or improve special places they value.
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