Archive for the 'Environment' Category

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Inertia limits changes in traditional work week

Last month, David Green wrote about shorter work weeks as a possible key to higher productivity for Fast Company.

Naturally, most businesses blanch at the notion of giving up any competitive edge in a globalized economy. But it’s not as if moving to a four-day (or 32-hour) workweek would simply lop 20% off the economy. Cutting hours may actually raise per-hour productivity. France, home of the 35-hour week, creates more GDP per work hour than the United States ($37 versus $34, as of 2003). Norway spanks us too ($39), and Norwegians work 26% fewer hours a year than Americans. It’s a myth of modern hypercapitalism that an overworked, sleep-deprived, stressed-out workforce is a necessity. Studies have consistently shown that longer workweeks increase productivity only in the very short term. In a recent survey by Salary.com, workers copped to wasting about 20% of the average day Web surfing and gossiping.

At my last job, it became obvious that while cubicles may promote interactivity between staff members, it also leads to a lot of time being wasted because it’s hard to block out surrounding conversations, so you wind up doing more socializing that you intend to. Fortunately, I wound up assigned to a cubicle at the far end of the floor with little foot traffic. I don’t think management understood why I kept turning down cubicles in the fray (which was thought to be the good real estate) when they freed up; I spent too many hours at the office to begin with, being a social butterfly was not going to make my days shorter.

While there appears to be a compelling argument for a 4 day work week (improving work place efficiency, some life balance, and being aware of one’s environmental impact v. the badge of honor/shame if you log insane hours), inertia persists. But it seems our not-officially-in-a-recession economy may allow Americans to shorten the work week, if not eventually start taking back their time.

When Ohio’s Kent State University offered custodial staff the option of working four days a week instead of five to cut commuting costs, most jumped at the chance, part of a U.S. trend aimed at combating soaring gasoline prices.”We offered it to 94 employees and 78 have taken us up on it,” said university spokesman Scott Rainone.

The reason is simple: rising gas prices and a desire to retain good workers. . .

“In our office, we have people who travel anywhere from five or six miles to a couple who are on the road 45 to 50 minutes,” Rainone said. “As the price of gas rises, the level of grumbling rises.”

The cost of commuting is making the shift to telecommuting and compressed work weeks more palatable to employers who typically want bodies in the building. Employers are also looking to cut back on overhead expenses, which shared office space can do. Yes, the sharp increase in expenses makes getting your job done more expediently beneficial to both workers and management.

As always, feel good changes that benefit the environment, not as important as feel good changes that benefit the bottom line.

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Al Gore's new Power Point presentation

Gore can’t be POTUS; he’s got a higher calling.

Hypocrisy: An Example

I preface this labeling of hypocrisy by saying Bon Jovi is my favorite band, and I count Jon Bon Jovi as one of of my heroes when it comes to the philanthropic pursuits he (and his wife) support.

From PRnewswire on March 25th:

Bon Jovi has again selected NativeEnergy, a leading provider of high quality carbon offsets and climate crisis solutions, as the official carbon offset provider for its international Lost Highway Tour. Working directly with NativeEnergy, Bon Jovi has calculated and offset the carbon impact its 2008 world tour will have on the climate; offsetting more than 5,000 tons of carbon dioxide from the six-month tour…

“Through NativeEnergy we are making an investment in renewable energy projects that we hope will result in efficient alternatives to power our tours in the future,” says Jon Bon Jovi. “Until then, we want to help those who are seeking solutions to a problem we can’t afford to ignore.”

The press release and Jon’s frequent use of the word “we” implies that he speaks for the Bon Jovi collective, not just himself. Global warming BAD; we’re doing what we can.

That night, Richie Sambora gets picked up for a DUI, while driving a HUMMER. How is that remotely an environment-friendly choice of a vehicle? They spend more time NOT on tour than on tour.   Sigh.

Noah's Ark of plantlife

It’s like something out of an episode of the Bionic Woman (the classic and good version with Lindsey Sommers). Norway is host to a doomsday seed vault (near the North Pole) with a capacity of 4.5 million seed samples, in order to have a way of rekindling a species, or many, in the event of a global disaster.

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Years from now when scientists realize genetically modified crops are causing undesirable modifications in people we’ll have acres of crops grown with in greenhouses free from the taint of wild seeds, much like farm-raised fish. . . .does anyone else think Soylent Green may have been prescient?

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"Healthy" Choice? Not so much for the planet

Healthy Choice (owned by ConAgra) sells a line of frozen entrees called Cafe Steamers.

The sauce for Cafe Steamers is in a special compartment, which acts as a steaming agent for the meal.

The technology cuts cooking time from four minutes to three, says Chuck Baddley, R&D chief. The sauce container on the bottom has lots of tiny holes to let the steam rise through the meal in the perforated top tray.

“To consumers it will look and taste fresher,” says Don Rhodes, marketing director. (USA Today)

Having tried the Cajun style Chicken and Shrimp, I can agree that the quality is better — the food does seem fresher and isn’t overcooked. However, despite following the instructions on the package, it took twice as long to cook my meal. At 5 minutes my entree was still quite cold.

My opinion of the food doesn’t really matter though. What perplexes me is that in an era in which companies are finding ways to cut back on packaging to save money and be Earth-friendly, Cafe Steamers are more costly to make and create more waste.

It’s a plastic bowl in a plastic bowl. We’re not talking flimsy trays like you get with most meals. These are pretty darned sturdy. Yes, they’re recyclable. With the growing concern for the limited raw resources on earth, creating more packaging that will likely wind up tossed in a landfill, seems irresponsible.

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The water is drying up

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Today, Alternet features an interview with Maude Barlow, author of Blue Covenant: The Global Water Crisis and the Coming Battle for the Right to Water, who discusses the global water crisis at length. In the US alone, 36 states hover in a state of drought.

Fundamental to understanding the pending water shortage is that:

what we learned in grade five about the hydrologic cycle being a closed, fixed cycle that could never be interrupted and could never go anywhere, is not true. They weren’t lying to us, but they weren’t aware of the human capacity to destroy it, and the reality is that we’ve interrupted the hydrologic cycle in many parts of the world and the American Southwest is one of them.

Check out the article to read about how we’ve interrupted the cycle, with the best of intentions to get water where it appears to be needed most, as well as moving water with the focus on the almighty dollar

there is a private sector interest coming together to control every level of water, from when we take it out of the ground, bottle it, to how we deliver it, to wastewater treatment, and now the biggest and newest is water reuse and recycling. That sounds benign at first, but when you really start to look at it, really it is about big, big corporations like GE, Dow Chemical, Proctor & Gamble getting into the ownership, control, and recycling of dirty water, which because there are billions of dollars at stake, in my opinion, becomes a disincentive to protect source water. And you can start to understand why governments, in collusion with these companies, are starting to spend millions of dollars on cleanup technology but will not enforce rules to stop pollution in the first place.

At the rate we’re going we’ll be syphoning water off Saturn’s moon Enceladus. And you thought Bling water was expensive!

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The Economic "Stimulus" Package

Our political elite announced their carefully considered economic stimulus package. I can look forward to a $600 check from the US government sometime this summer because the IRS is a tad busy processing tax returns til June.

I have a few problems with the notion of this stimulus package.

A) We already have a federal deficit of over $9 trillion; clearly pissing money away hasn’t been much use for us over the last 7 years (as we’re about to slam the economic brakes) so spending more money we don’t have might not be the best solution. Borrowing more money from Asia, one of our biggest economic threats, also not so good an idea. FYI : Asia basically owns the US at this point. They could cripple our government and economy by calling in all of the money they’re owed at once.

Maybe I’m just bitter about crappy budgeting, what with pouring money into military operations abroad, while health care, education, and economic issues at home are neglected. It seems to me that it’s a tad hypocritical to expect financial responsibility from our citizens when our elected officials can’t pull the same off with our federal government.

B. How does this stimulus create new jobs? It seems to be it just accepts the status quo and wants to keep people shopping on weekends, while corporations can continue to cut corners at the expense of their employees.

Perhaps investing in green business might generate some new gigs. Perhaps we should look to committing to a 20-year deadline for abandoning fossil fuels. Let’s kick that $150 billion towards research and application of advancements in clean energy — that might create jobs. Ironic that the same companies that have been happily degrading our environment to boost profits, will now get to do the innovating that will make billions trying to save our planet.

C. Per Cardtrak.com, American consumers carry a median $6,600 in credit card debt. I can only speak for my inner social circle, but $600 is a nice payment on a line of credit that has already been extended to me. there’s really no need to buy more stuff. I need to pay for the stuff that I have; fortunately, I only have about $3000 in credit debt to clear, but my student loan is another story. I don’t think payng off my credit card will be the kind of economic action Bush and his lackies are hoping for.

What will you do with your rebate?

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Telecommuting, Good for you and the Environment

In recent months I’ve become a fan of Alexander Kjerulf’s blog Chief Happiness Officer, which focuses on how to make the work place a more enjoyable venue to spend half your waking hours.

He recently blogged about the Top 5 Reasons to Let Employees Telecommute, and I’m a bit disappointed that he neglected to discuss the environmental and bottom line impacts of telecommuting as well. Kjerulf focused on the feel good aspects of telecommuting — better home and work relationships all around, productivity, freedom and responsibility.

Business being business, it’s important to highlight the economic benefits of telecommuting. Last summer, Ted Samson published a great article at Infoworld entitled, “Giving telecommuting the green light,” which covered some great cost savings of telecommuting.

For instance, there is increasing media coverage of the American dependence on fossil fuels. Samson reports that

According to the 2005/2006 National Technology Readiness Survey (NTRS), we could save about 1.35 billion gallons of fuel if everyone who was able to telecommute did so just 1.6 days per week. That calculation is based on a driving average of 20 miles per day, getting 21 miles per gallon.

On an average week, I can sit in traffic for 30 minutes to and from work. So for every day I telecommute that’s an hour of my life I get back, and over the course of a year hundreds of dollars at the gas pump that I’m saved.

At the end of the day most companies care about the bottom line. Thus Samson points out that

“Your organization could save one office for every three teleworkers (that’s about $2,000 per teleworker per year, or $200,000 per 100 teleworkers),” according to the Canadian Telework Assocation(CTA). . .

AT&T reports savings of $3,000 per office, for approximately $550 million, by eliminating or consolidating office space; about 25 percent of IBM’s 320,000 workers worldwide telecommute, saving Big Blue some $700 million in real estate costs, according to the CTA.

Even with the expense of setting up telecommuting situations, companies still come out on top because of their use of less physical space, which in turn means less technology plugged into a wall socket and lower utility bills. Note: this money saving is also good for the environment; regardless of how plugged in you are at home,you would be unlikely to use as much energy in a residential space as you would in a like sized business one.

Telecommuting, kind to the environment and a tool to keep your sanity.

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Just ask nicely

Though media coverage hasn’t exactly been forthcoming, we are facing a global drought crisis. All around the world less and less fresh water is available to support more and more people. Some parts of the South East face the prospect of running completely dry in the next 12 to 18 months — Atlanta is just a bit nervous right now.

The Bush administration seems as prepared for that pending crisis as they were Hurricaine Katrina. This shocking news, not, despite that fact it seems the citizens of this country are more than happy to cut back on resource consumption when asked.

North Carolina Governor Mike Easley asked residents to limit their water consumption this fall because of severe drought conditions. 92 of the 100 counties are facing “exceptional, extreme, and severe” droughts; the other 8 counties just face moderate drought.

Crazy cats. . . they cut back their water usage. I guess the prospect of no water for all made everyone more utilitarian.

water utilities representing 72 percent of the 6.8 million customers served by public water systems responded to his call to provide information on water use. Early indications, based on an analysis of information from the 25 largest systems in the state, show an average drop in daily water use of nearly 30 percent from the month of August compared to the last week of October. . . The 25 largest public water systems in the state saw some dramatic drops in water use, such as nearly 48 percent in Union County…

Or it’s fall. The victory is being proclaimed comparing August to October numbers, rather than October 06 to October 07 numbers. Kind of liking comparing the purchases of iced coffee in July versus December of the same year, and freaking out that buying is down.

I really don’t want to be a skeptic here; I want to believe people can band together over the long haul and make personal sacrifices for the betterment of the community. If our citizens can do it, why can’t our politicians?

Electronics waste management

We all have more electronic gadgets than any one of us can carry.  Unfortunately, as we upgrade to a better, faster version, we often thoughtlessly dump our disposables in the trash.  Given the increasing concern of the planet’s health, here’s a PSA shared by GOOD Magazine that educates about electronic waste and gives you actionable steps to limit the damaging ripple of tossed gadgets.