Showing posts with label manageable change. Show all posts
Showing posts with label manageable change. Show all posts

11 December 2015

All I want for Christmas is to change the world

This month's action is to write this blog post, to ask YOU to do something.


Would you consider taking a Small Step for Sustainability this Christmas, as your gift to me, or to someone you love more than me? Perhaps especially as a gift to someone younger than yourself, who will be living longer with the world you are creating.

Or, would you consider asking your friends to take a Small Step as their gift to you, instead of buying you something? You could direct them here for ideas.

Following are over six years of our Small Steps sorted as suggestions for you to try 'gifting':

Reduce your energy usage

Get your electrical equipment off standby; wash in cold water; use more efficient lighting (note that this is an old post and there are many more options now - see comments); boil less water; turn down your hot water heater; insulate your hot water piping.


Make changes to cool your house (and yourself) passively (turn your aircon down - or even off!)

Shade your house (1 2 3 4), put up a heat barrier (curtain), use pelmets, cool with extractor fans and various other tricks.

Make changes to heat passively

Warm yourself before you heat the room; seal up drafts; various other tips. (Particularly for those of you heading for Christmas in the northern hemisphere! You have probably noticed that cooling is a bigger issue than heating for us in Perth)

Make sustainable choices in your celebrations

Christmas (1 2 3 4); Birthdays (1 2 3); catering in general (1 2); going on holiday


Make sustainable choices about your food

Buy from a producer (try a farmers' market); use & preserve bulk seasonal fruit and veg: strawberries 1 2, plums 1 2nectarines, lilly pillies, tomatoes (bottling and making purchase choices); commit to buying local for a particular item (we chose cheese - 1 2)


Support local businesses

For school supplies and fundraising (toys & books); also ideas around food, above.

Improve water use

Consider a more efficient washing machine (or at least use the one you have as efficiently as possible);  rethink how you use water; use less water in toilets (1 2); short showers instead of deep baths; catch tap water; reuse grey water (with buckets, or with a wheelie bin 1 2)

Reduce your TV use (here)

 

Make ethical consumption choices

Fundraiser chocolates; clothes; printing; use the Shop Ethical Guide; washing powder; use libraries and buy secondhand; also all the ideas already mentioned around food and local businesses.

Be more sustainable in your garden

Grow grapevines; compost; and then compost better; drip irrigate; utilise your garden waste; use grey water (see the water section above) 

Reduce your waste

Get rid of phone books; pack rubbish-free lunches; fix instead of chuck and replace; use cloth nappies and cloth nappy wipes; use bread bags instead of nappy sacks; try no-buy no-waste toddler activities;  return unwanted packaging; rescue items from bulk waste; consider rubbish when you are buying.


Reuse materials to make new things

Verge collection beds reformed into a loft bed; room redecoration using existing materials; uses for pieces from an old washing machine
 

Make choices about your transport

Get to school without a car; car pool; consider a more efficient car; buy a bike (and/or commit to using it); rig up your bike to carry stuff; climb stairs instead of taking the lift.

 

Advocate for sustainability

Have a conversation in your household; write a blog (or share or comment on this one) - or whatever way best suits you to let others know about sustainable choices your are making; join a public demonstration or lobby people in power.

Assorted other posts

Short-form list of lots of actions from before I began blogging - lots of these are the simpler actions, so possibly a good starting place if this is all new to you;  combined blog of six months of ideas; update on how we did with our first year of commitments; Introduction to the blog, the 'one thing a month' project, and us in general.


If you just arrived here this list might look a bit overwhelming, as if we are some sort of sustainability gurus living the life. We are not. I've been writing this blog for just on six years, and we've been plodding away at improving our sustainability for some time longer than that. It all began because I was finding myself overwhelmed both by the enormity of the world's problems and by Tyson's enthusiasm for conquering them, so we decided we would take on just one thing a month. That was a slow enough pace that I thought I could manage it. Small steps. 

There are now a lot of actions documented here and I am hopeful the blog can be a resource for others wanting to take small steps.

 

Initial Time: For me, the couple of hours it took to write this post. For you: if you would like something that doesn't need a lot of your time, scroll all the way to the bottom and choose the label 'under 15 minutes'.

Initial Cost: For me, zero. For you: if you would like to choose something that doesn't cost you much money, choose the label 'under $15' for ideas.

Ongoing time or cost commitment: For me, the time it takes to answer any questions that you might throw at me as you take your Small Steps. For you: depends which Small Step you choose!

Impact: I will never know how many people read this and take a Small Step. Ideally I am hoping for a double impact: less Christmas gifts purchased AND a whole pile of individual little actions all over the world adding up to a better world. It would warm my heart to hear back from you if you do something in response to reading this. Perhaps you could even send me a photo of your Small Step (I may manage a follow-up post to report back on the impact of this Christmas action)

 

And a big smoochy thank you to everyone who reads this blog regularly. I really appreciate you giving it your time. Have a lovely Christmas season.

22 August 2014

Goodbye phone books

Phone books make great door stops.


They also contain lots of contact details for people I don't know and businesses I will never use. So recently we opted out of receiving any for the next five years.

Probably in five years time I will get myself an updated business & government directory (White Pages) and then cancel for another period. I doubt I will ever opt back in to the Yellow Pages.

Initial Time: Five minutes to go online and opt out. Go to https://www.directoryselect.com.au/action/home

Initial Cost: zero

Ongoing time or cost commitment: We do use our hard-copy phone books occasionally, and it generally takes a little longer to get the Yellow or White pages up on Tyson's phone than to flip open the book (or longer again if we have to fire up an actual computer) but its a few extra minutes a year. Updating the book every five years instead of every year would be enough to keep it useful.

Impact: Sensis, who print phone books for Australia, is 'proudly carbon neutral', encourages recycling and from what I could find prints within Australia, so it is doing its best. Nevertheless, millions of phone books are printed and delivered every year that are rarely or never used, and however you off-set it or recycle it, that is a lot of unnecessary paper. When the company changed from opt-out to opt-in for residential phone directories a couple of years back only 2% of suburban households requested to still receive books, suggesting a lot of people had little use for the ones they previously had delivered every year. I couldn't find a figure for how many books are currently printed but from various data about percentages in particular areas my estimate is around 15 million phone books in Australia each year. At 800-1000g each, that's approximately 13,500 tonnes of paper. If only 2% are actually wanted or used, that could be reduced to 270 tonnes. Even if I have wildly over estimated, it is still a lot of paper that could be avoided. And that is just the product itself - there are also factors like resources used to run the printing factories, wrap books in plastic, transport them and dispose of them at the end of each year.

(For those not in Australia: every household in this country until recently was supplied for free every year with paper phone directories - some years four fat volumes - as part of the main telephone provider's legal obligations to provide a directory service. White Pages books are alphabetical listings of all registered land-line phone numbers; Yellow Pages are commercial directories that businesses pay to be included in. In the four largest cities, which together account for over half the nation's population, the 'residential' volume is now opt-in, and the others have been stream-lined, but two volumes are generally still delivered)

02 January 2013

What to do when the hottest week on record is forecast for your city

When the forecast showed Christmas day as the first in a run of seven days close to 40°C, Perth's hottest week on record, we knew it would test our commitment to sustainable living to its edges. The temptation was to pour water on the garden, crank the airconditioner and stay inside (possibly in front of some energy-consuming electronic entertainment). Here are a few things we did to ride out the week of heat without maximising our environmental footprint.


- Wore wet flannels to feel cooler. When I lived in an uninsulated unairconditioned fibro house I used to freeze wet tea towels in a U-shape and wear them around my neck. Now if I am reaching that point I consider we are past the 'bearable' test and its time to turn on the aircon.

- Sent Eva to bed with a squashy ice pack.

- Breastfed baby twice as often... as if the heat wasn't making me tired enough already!

- Kept the fridge as full as possible, filling empty spaces with blocks of ice or cold water, to improve thermal mass by reducing the amount of air to be kept cool. Air is hard to keep cool because it escapes whenever the fridge or freezer door is opened. 


- Shaded everything! In addition to the summer-long emplacements we added some temporary foam rubber mats along the kitchen & rear toilet windows and a tarpaulin over the clothesline. The foam rubber mats make a huge difference. The glass inside was noticeably cooler behind the mats, even before the sun was on the window, and even the cranky thermometer registered about 4 degrees difference between the covered and uncovered glass.

- Washed every day to ensure there was enough grey water for the garden. We always run the washing machine with a full load, so I worked my way through 'sometimes' items (towels, sheets, bathmats etc) to ensure the garden got water every day without having to give it pure drinking water from the tap. On a couple of the hottest days I did two loads and gave the lawn a good soak.



- Played outside in the mornings for as long as possible (for exercise, fresh air and to prevent against cabin fever). Did quiet indoor activities through the worst of the heat (lego, trains, playdough, craft, hide & seek, tea-sets, dolls & teddies, etc). Read a lot of books.

- Had cold or nearly cold showers, cool baths, and used the paddle pool sparingly (and put the water onto the garden when shower/ bath/ play was over).


- Were disciplined about the water-catching bowl in the kitchen sink, and got it out onto the courtyard pots any time it was full to help the plants through the worst of the heat.

- Ran fans rather than the airconditioner for as long as this was bearable. We turned on the aircon on four of the seven hot days - on three of those days for only about three hours. On day three, when we used it first, we set it at 28°C. On day five, when it came on again, the walls of our house had soaked up more heat and we dropped the aircon to 26°C. This is easily enough to cool our living spaces. (Due to the location of the air conditioner unit, even running it like a fridge would not really cool our bedrooms).

- At night, opened the house up to cool as much as possible before morning. We ran the extractor fans to help remove the day's heat and placed pedestal fans in the eastern windows (the overnight direction of cool air if any is coming) to help draw in the breeze.

- Didn't cook (or barely cooked). Christmas leftovers helped with this. We also reheated some frozen meals in the microwave. When we used the toastie maker we then put it outside to cool, so that its heat was not added to the inside temperature. We definitely did not turn on the oven, and only used the stove for about an hour in total all week.



- Went out to places that were cooler (eg the beach, the shady playground beside the lake) or where airconditioning would already be running for other people (Tyson's work, grandparents' house, public facilities). This is not about letting others carry our footprint, but about maximising the number of people each aircon serves, thereby minimising the total number of airconditioners running. On New Year's Eve it was our turn to run the airconditioner on behalf of a group of families. We ran it for 13 hours, but for much of that time had members of up to seven other households sharing it with us.

- Did not increase screen time. We don't have a TV at all. Tyson & I watch a little I-view but Eva is allowed only a very occasional episode of Playschool under extreme circumstances (like the week she was stuck home with hand foot & mouth disease recently). Although I had Playschool in mind as an 'if all else fails' emergency activity for the heat we didn't need to go there - perhaps because the room with the computer is not the coolest room in the house.

Despite being over 42°C on New Year's Eve, with the road still hot under our bare feet at midnight as we watched fireworks in 30°C heat with no breeze, not all the predicted maximums were reached. The average maximum temperature of 39.4°C made it only the hottest week in 34 years, the third hottest week in 116 years of records, and the hottest December week on record, NOT the hottest week ever. Lucky us, eh?! Even though it was only below 25°C for a handful of hours all week, in some early mornings, and didn't get below 20°C at all...

None of these actions had any initial cost, and time commitments were very small (a matter of a few minutes here and there).  

The impact is difficult to measure in any precise manner. Certainly if we had not used passive cooling measures we would have run the airconditioner a lot more in the past week. Its hard to say exactly how much energy this would have meant, as it depends on things like the temperature outside, the temperature the aircon is set to, and how much we would actually have turned it on, but the aircon uses (roughly) between 1.5 and 2kWh (units of energy) per hour. Perhaps as much as 100kWh was saved by limiting our aircon use. If we had run it 24-7 for the week it could have used between 252 and 336 kWh in total.

More importantly, we did not significantly increase our demand for power through a peak period of demand. Demand in peak periods wastes energy all year, as the whole system needs to be built for extremes rather than averages. Minimising peak usage has more impact than minimising average usage. 

I'm quite pleased with how well we did. One more day and I think I would have collapsed. But then, if one more day had been forecast I would have paced myself for eight days as I paced myself for seven this time. Tyson thinks any of our more usual three or four day heat waves for the rest of summer will seem so easy to manage by comparison that we may not turn the aircon on again all season. I have my doubts. I've booked a holiday to southern Victoria in a few weeks to visit my parents rather than ride out the whole summer here - thereby, in two cross-country flights, practically wiping out any footprint gains we make by reducing our domestic power usage here. Ah well. Its about small steps.

08 January 2010

Introduction

Global crisis talk overwhelms me. I know that things are not at all good, and yet when the conversations about emissions, sea levels, food shortages, climate change, peak oil, tipping points, food miles, crisis crisis crisis begin I find myself retreating into an inner hiding space, a kind of ‘la la la’ deliberate ignoring of the realities of the world I live in. It all seems too much. Reversing trends to save the planet seems impossible, and being the token few trying to make a difference feels like missing the party while things are good only to be left with nothing when things eventually fall apart. ‘La la la’ is much easier and happier and, frankly, changing my lifestyle just doesn’t appeal to me. I have never harboured desires to be a dreadlocked idealistic earth’s-own activist type. I just want to live peacefully and put my energies into building better relationships with my neighbours, friends and family.

Alas, my husband Tyson has recently completed a Masters in Sustainability. Saving the planet is not just an ideal, it is becoming his profession. Dinner conversations regularly raise global issues – not to mention more than occasional pillow talk that includes solar panels or transition towns or the like. Ignoring the crisis in our house is simply not an option. And, to be fair, it’s not an approach that is satisfying for me, either.

Adding to the tangle is that we live in rental housing, so many sustainable living actions (grey water recycling systems, solar panels, solar hot water systems, water tanks, insulation, etc) are not options for us. I have a long-running frustration about the way talk and action on sustainability generally appears to assume you own your own home, while the very assumption of universal home ownership is in my mind one of the factors driving Australia’s unsustainable lifestyle. Especially the cultural expectations of how large and overfilled with stuff our homes should be.

Linked with our rental accommodation is that our income is relatively small. Spending a lot of money to save the planet may be exactly what governments and big business need to do, but for our little family it is not feasible. There will be no Prius in the drive any time soon!

Several months ago the inner tensions of all this came to a head. Tyson & I had a long and fruitful discussion about how we were going to live. Tyson accepted that I could not cope with the magnitude of change required. I accepted that we need to be doing SOMETHING to live more sustainably. The outcome was that we agreed to implement one sustainable act each month. Indefinitely. These actions are to be cumulative, not sequential (that is, we don’t try one thing for a month then move on – we add an extra thing each month, retaining all that has gone before).

We’ve kept this up for eight months now. I am feeling much more positive about sustainable living as a result. Although I am not quite a green evangelist yet, I thought perhaps others might be able to use ideas from our approach, so have decided to blog them as we go. Also this is a way that I can gather up ideas for future monthly sustainable actions. Please add your suggestions or comments.