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Walk Your Talk: The Fifteen Most Important Things You Can Do to Green Your Life

Years ago, a friend told me a story of an acquaintance with strong environmental leanings who hoped to teach his children the importance of nature and environmental protection. One day, while riding in the car with his children, her friend was giving a friendly lecture to his children on the value of recycling. When he had finished, his son asked, “Dad, if recycling’s so good, why don’t we do it?”

Over the past decade, I’ve spoken to hundreds of audiences about environmental protection, many of which were populated by environmental educations and environmental enthusiasts. Numerous people in my audiences have admitted to me in private that they don’t do enough — or don’t do much at all. They talk a good talk, but don’t seem to be able really to walk their talk.

Leo Tolstoy may have said it best, “Everybody thinks of changing humanity and nobody thinks of changing himself.” A cynical friend once remarked, “Environmentalists are people who want to tell others how to live.”

While I know many dedicated environmentalists who really walk their talk, I know a fair number who “think globally, but act vocally.” They complain and provide advice for others, but don’t do much to help make a better world. To them, knowing the answer is not always living the answer.

If you’re one of those individuals whose sentiments and actions are out of alignment, here are fifteen steps you can take to dramatically reduce your impact and help create a truly sustainable future.

1. Install compact fluorescent light bulbs in the most commonly used light fixtures in your house.

2. Hire a professional to perform an energy audit on your home, then weatherize your home and beef up the insulation.

3. Install and use a programmable thermostat. It will cut your heating and cooling bills by 10 percent or more.

4. Plant shade trees to keep your house cooler in the summer.

5. Install water-conserving fixtures such as water-efficient showerheads and water-efficient toilets.

6. Replace worn out appliances such as clothes washers, dishwashers, furnaces and air conditioners with energy and water-efficient models. Buy Energy Star qualified models.

7. If you water your lawn, water early or late in the day and replace water-hungry grasses with low-water grasses, and remove sections of lawn that are hard to water and wasteful of water.

8. Recycle all household waste from newspapers to cardboard to aluminum to glass.

9. Compost all kitchen scraps (except meat and bones) and yard waste. Compost in your backyard and use the compost to enrich the soils in your flower and vegetable gardens.

10. Eat more vegetables and less meat. Buy organic vegetables whenever possible.

11. Carpool, ride a bike, walk, or take the bus whenever possible.

12. Replace gas-guzzling vehicles with fuel-efficient models getting 40 miles per gallon or more.

13. Curb consumption. Learn to live more simply. Buy less. Buy used goods. Practice green gift giving.

14. Reduce the number of pets you keep. Hard as it is to swallow, our pets have a huge impact on the environment, one rarely discussed these days for fear of offending pet lovers. Cats, for instance, kill several hundred million songbirds each year. Pets such as cats and dogs produce mountains of solid waste that may wash into nearby streams during heavy storms. Feeding cats, dogs, parakeets, cockatiels, and other pets also requires enormous acreage, land that was once wildlife habitat, and energy for processing and shipping food.

15. Drop those extra pounds. Weight loss is another important environmental strategy, though never mentioned. Today, over 60 percent of all American adults and 15 percent of all children are overweight. They take in more calories than the need. In fact, the average American requires 2,200 calories per day, but consumes 3,200 — 1,000 calories extra, which accounts for the extra poundage that leads to late-onset diabetes, heart attacks, and other medical problems.

Consuming calorie-rich food in excess, which has become something of an American pastime, is not only unhealthy it requires more resources. The more food we eat, the more land is required, the more energy and materials are used, the more fertilizer that’s needed, the more pesticides are applied to our land, and the more pollution is produced. Taking care of health problems also requires massive amounts of money and resources.

By eating less and maintaining health, we can lower our environmental impact — and quite dramatically.

These steps can dramatically reduce your impact on the environment, the first step in building a sustainable future.

Most of the steps are easy. If you put your mind to them, change your priorities, refocus on your values and commit to living by your ideals, well, anything is possible.

And if hundreds of thousands of people in each state follow suit, we can make huge inroads into current problems and help steer our society back onto a sustainable path.

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Train Now for Tomorrow’s Green Jobs

Many people are asking me whether the economic recovery plan will stimulate jobs in green energy and green building. My answer is yes. Definitely.

What areas will we see growth?

One hot area, of course, is renewable energy — solar electricity, wind energy, geothermal and others. Expect jobs in residential renewable energy as well commercial renewable energy production.

Energy efficiency could be even bigger. These measures offer the most benefit for the least cost.

I expect a lot of jobs in green building, too, at residential and commercial levels. I just read Five Hot Future Careers — Train Now by Woodrow. Aames says that green construction management will be one of the top new jobs in the near future — and a lucrative one, too.

If you are interested in a career in residential green building or renewable energy, be sure to check out our workshops at The Evergreen Institute.

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Train Now for Green Jobs of the Future!

With renewable energy and efforts to combat global warming high on the list of national priorities, Dan Chiras, Mother Earth News contributing editor and founder of The Evergreen Institute recently announced the opening of the Center for Renewable Energy and Green Building, an educational center in east-central Missouri.

The Center for Renewable Energy and Green Building offers hands-on instruction in solar electricity, wind energy, passive solar design, residential energy efficiency, green building and natural building.

The courses are taught primarily by author and educator, Dan Chiras. Chiras has taught at the college level for 32 years. His books include The Homeowner’s Guide to Renewable Energy, Power from the Wind, Green Home Improvement, the Natural Plaster book, The Solar House and The Natural House.

Chiras consults on residential green building and renewable energy throughout North and Central America.

The first three courses at the Center (April 18, 19 and 20, 2009) are Home Energy Efficiency, Basic PVs and Intro to Wind.

The Evergreen Institute also offers Certificate Programs in Residential Green Building and Residential Renewable Energy for individuals interested in pursuing a career in green building and/or renewable energy or individuals interested in furthering their professional credentials in these burgeoning fields.

The Evergreen Institute is working in partnership with the Midwest Renewable Energy Association and The University of Colorado’s Continuing Education and Professional Studies Program.

To learn more, visit The Evergreen Institute, e-mail info@evergreeninstitute.org or call 303-883-8290.

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The Road to Economic Recovery Will be a Slow One

Americans have become conditioned to expect immediacy. Cell phones, faxes, computers, Internet access, overnight mail and text messaging give us instant access to friends and families and a wealth of information. It’s all there at our fingertips.

Thanks to computers and the Internet, we can go online today, research a product in depth, order it, and have it on our doorsteps the next day. We can text a friend in China or India and receive an immediate response. And, we can access a boundless amount of information without so much as a single trip to the local library.

Unfortunately, our conditioning is a detriment. As we struggle to rebuild our economy, impatience is rearing its ugly head. Critics are already casting doubt on the economic recovery plan recently signed by the president, not giving it a moment to take effect.

We forget that it took us a while for the crisis to unfold. The economic crisis probably started with the burst of the tech stock bubble. Then came 911, an event that knocked our economy to its knees. Then came the invasion of Iraq, and the high price tag, which drained our economy.

And don’t forget hurricane Katrina, with a price tag of over $150 billion, and countless other disasters all brought on by global warming. Each one cost us dearly — in lives, in property loss and in dollars. Each one helped weaken our economy.

Tax relief to America’s wealthiest probably hurt the economy as well, decreasing revenues in a time when spending for wars in Iraq and Afghanistan reached record levels.

The high price of gasoline, dealt a blow to our economy as well. And then came the subprime mortgage meltdown. It was the last straw and knocked the already severely weakened legs right out from under our economy.

Let us not forget that the current crisis took a long time to unfold, and will take a long time to solve. We must remain patient — and do our part to prevent the kinds of things that got us here in the first place.

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Making Solar Electricity Affordable

Many people who are contemplating installing solar electric systems on their homes struggle with the high initial costs. To pay for a system, they either have to dip into their savings or take out a loan. A 3- to 5-kW grid-connected solar system, suitable for most homes, can run $30,000 to $50,000.

Even with recent legislation that provides a 30 percent tax credit for solar and wind systems for homes and businesses, the cost of such as system will still cost $21,000 to $30,000, which is a substantial piece of change.

Isn’t there some way to reduce this cost?

There is. It's called efficiency.

Richard Perez, founder of Home Power magazine, ran the numbers. He found that every dollar invested in energy efficiency could reduce the cost of a photovoltaic (PV) system by $3 to $5.

How?

By reducing the size of a system one must install to meet his or her needs. The economic savings from efficiency are quite substantial. For instance, a $2,000 investment in home energy efficiency — for example, weatherization, insulation and energy-efficient compact fluorescent or LED light bulbs — will reduce the demand for electricity. This, in turn, will reduce the size of the PV system required to meet one’s needs. It could easily save $6,000 to $10,000 on the cost of the system of a 3- to 5-kW PV system before tax incentives. Taking into account the 30% federal tax credit, the savings would be $4,200 to $7,000.

Spend a little more on efficiency and the cost of the system drops even more. If you invested $4,000 in efficiency, the total system cost would decline by $12,000 to $20,000. Taking into account the federal tax credits once again and the decrease in initial cost would be $8,400 to $14,000.

That’s not a bad return on an investment in efficiency.

Instead of spending $21,000 to $30,000 for a system, you’d pay $12,600 to $16,000.

So, if you're thinking about installing a PV system, think efficiency first. It’s a gift you give yourself and the planet. It will reduce energy demand, reduce pollution, and reduce the cost of a system substantially. Moreover, the savings will provide dividends for the life of the house.

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Follow the Money: Renewable Energy in the Stimulus Package

Want to know more about where that $787 billion dollars in the stimulus package is going? Here are links to a couple of timely articles with all the details about how the stimulus package will encourage renewable energy and energy efficiency.

 • “Will the Stimulus Help Wind and Solar?” from the New York Times blog, Green Inc.

 •  “What the Stimulus Means for EcoGeeks,” from the EcoGeek blog.

 • “Stimulus Act Expands Clean Energy Tax Credits for Homes and Businesses” from the Department of Energy's EERE News site.

Also worth knowing about, there’s a new government website, Recovery.gov, designed to help people learn more about the recovery package and track how the money is being spent.

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Free Green Home Plans

Free Green offers free plans for green homes. Some plans include energy consumption comparisons between building to code and building with green features. Each plan explains green features.

I downloaded plans for one house to check things out, and the amount of information was impressive. I was expecting floorplans and elevations, but the PDFs included cost estimates, links to products featured in the design, projections of energy costs and a detailed listing of how the house rates in LEED.

The site is searchable, and plans are customized to your location before you download them. You also can purchase blueprints, too. If you're looking for plans, be sure to check out this site.

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