The biggest threat to the ozone, according to a recent study, is laughing gas. Yup, good old N20 is the new villian. Perhaps just another reason to avoid the dentist? Well, not exactly. The nitrous oxide in the air comes from fertilizer and animal waste.
The good news is that we've seen this before. Remember the '80s? Metal bands like Poison and Winger were using enough CFC-rich hair spray to deplete our precious ozone. Fortunately, we realized the threat and got interested in grunge rock and hip-hop by the early '90s, killing off the hair bands and their evil ways. Also, the Montreal Protocol, when 190 nations agreed to ban the use of CFCs, probably helped.
Now we need to find a way to regulate nitrous oxide. The Kyoto Protocol called for regulations, but of course, not everyone singed that one. And it runs out in 2012. Stay tuned.
Final note -- I love the internet as much as the next guy. But when you start a blog, and then get busy and distracted, it can be somewhat embarrassing that the blog sits there. The last post, its date stamped visibly next to the title, can be cringe worthy.
Friday, November 6, 2009
Monday, August 31, 2009
Is there anybody out there?
:Knock, knock:
Hello, is this thing on?
Apologizes for the extended absence. The GGP took a solid five weeks off in August this year, Euorpean-style, to re-charge the old AA batteries. Fortunately, vacation dulled neither my passion for going green nor for writing the blog. So while you may have been wondering if a new post was ever forthcoming, you may now rest easy.
Tomorrow is September 1st, and with the new month will come new posts and discussion here at the GGP.
Stay tuned.
Hello, is this thing on?
Apologizes for the extended absence. The GGP took a solid five weeks off in August this year, Euorpean-style, to re-charge the old AA batteries. Fortunately, vacation dulled neither my passion for going green nor for writing the blog. So while you may have been wondering if a new post was ever forthcoming, you may now rest easy.
Tomorrow is September 1st, and with the new month will come new posts and discussion here at the GGP.
Stay tuned.
Tuesday, July 21, 2009
A Farm for the Future
One of my favorite topics on this blog is food. One of the easiest and yet most effective ways to living a more sustainability life occurs when we chose what to eat every day. Your food choices have a wide-ranging impact on the environment, and we should all be more aware of where our food comes from and how it ends up on the table.
But of course, awareness is only part of the problem. As our planet's population increases, we face the growing problem of how to feed all those people. How can we move towards more sustainable agriculture when there are people starving in the world even now?
The BBC has recently produced a documentary on this very subject (which I discovered on the Civil Eats blog). Called A Farm for the Future, the program shows how Rebecca Hosking explored how she might turn her family's farm in Devon, England into a farm that doesn't use any fossil fuels. As you might expect, nature holds the key.
You can watch the entire video below. As you can imagine, it's extremely well done and very interesting:
But of course, awareness is only part of the problem. As our planet's population increases, we face the growing problem of how to feed all those people. How can we move towards more sustainable agriculture when there are people starving in the world even now?
The BBC has recently produced a documentary on this very subject (which I discovered on the Civil Eats blog). Called A Farm for the Future, the program shows how Rebecca Hosking explored how she might turn her family's farm in Devon, England into a farm that doesn't use any fossil fuels. As you might expect, nature holds the key.
You can watch the entire video below. As you can imagine, it's extremely well done and very interesting:
Sunday, July 19, 2009
Litterbug, litterbug
We've all seen it: you're walking along in the city, or maybe down a suburban street in your hometown. You're minding your own business, perhaps whistling a tune or daydreaming. And then, out of the corner of your eye, you see someone blatantly littering. They're dropping a wrapper, tossing a soda bottle, crumpling up a piece of paper and letting it fall to the ground.
So what are you, a concerned citizen, supposed to do? Do you silently continue on your walk, stewing about the disrespect some people have for the planet? Do you lurk around the corner and then pick up the trash yourself when the litterer is out of sight? Do you confront the person, there and then, in middle of the street?
I encountered a litterbug yesterday while out for a run. I was minding my own business, listening to my iPod and generally struggling through the heat. I suddenly noticed a man walking towards me, about 30 yards away, who was unwrapping one of those cheap convenience store ice cream cones. He was peeling off the wrapper, and as I got closer, he just let the paper fall on the ground. This was a grown man, in his 40s or 50s, not some child who didn't know better.
So I slowed my run, got right up close to him, pointed at the wrapper, and forcefully but politely suggested that perhaps he was unaware that he had dropped said wrapper. He looked at me blankly. Perhaps it was the endorphins from the run, but at this point I decided to tell him loudly that he reminded me of a particular part of the human anatomy. You might be able to guess which one.
I'm not sure if this is the most effective way to deal with people who litter on the street. But then again, what can you really do?
Friday, July 17, 2009
The Green Arches?
Are the Golden Arches going green? That's what the Daily Greenz blog asks today. Can McDonald's, that famous icon of American cuisine and subject of quasi-documentary film exposes, be a green company?
Ok, so they're upgrading the light bulbs in their stores to improve their energy efficiency. And yes, Greenpeace is on board with MickeyD's efforts to step up their effort to save the rainforests.
Still, the Daily Greenz asks the all-important question: how green can a company that relies on the principles of factory farming really be?
I'd stop short of accusing them of greenwashing. Their efforts are in fact good for the environment, and we can't fault them for changing out their bulbs. Let's recognize the good, but not go overboard in calling them the Green Arches just yet.
Ok, so they're upgrading the light bulbs in their stores to improve their energy efficiency. And yes, Greenpeace is on board with MickeyD's efforts to step up their effort to save the rainforests.
Still, the Daily Greenz asks the all-important question: how green can a company that relies on the principles of factory farming really be?
I'd stop short of accusing them of greenwashing. Their efforts are in fact good for the environment, and we can't fault them for changing out their bulbs. Let's recognize the good, but not go overboard in calling them the Green Arches just yet.
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