Organise the perfect green Christmas this year and save money with top 10 tip guide; reduce your carbon footprint and have a more eco friendly and sustainable holiday season.
1. Serve local, healthy and seasonal December foods at your events and xmas parties. Choose vegetables that are in season and do not have to be flown in from abroad. Broccoli, cabbage and onions can all be grown without the aid of harsh chemicals so you can spend your organic pounds elsewhere.
2. Decorating your house can be one of the most enjoyable parts of Xmas. Go for ethically made and traded decorations. Natural Collection, Big Green Smile, Nigel’s Eco Store and Vita Etica all have a great range. Kids really enjoy making their own green decorations out of old scraps of material and leftovers. Try popcorn garlands – which are really fun and cheap to make and scour a woodland floor for fallen pinecones and twigs that are great for decorations!
3. E-mail party invites and Christmas cards rather than post them. There are loads of free Xmas themed party invite e-cards around or alternatively make your own out of scrap and recycled products. If you really want to send cards, choose charity ones or check out these really funky recycled ones. After the big day, make sure your Christmas cards don’t go to waste – take them to a Woodland Trust recycling point.
4. Christmas heating and lighting bills can be huge! Save cash and protect the environment by using energy saving devices such as standby busters and radiator boosters. Don’t forget to turn off the tree lights or better still try these solar powered ones.
5. Use recycled paper, gift bags or even colorful cloth to wrap the Christmas presents and instead of tape, use colorful ribbon to tie up the gifts.
6. Make a green statement this xmas! Send a message to the manufacturers of consumer goods by shopping for & buying only natural, non toxic, eco friendly, organic presents this year. Shop through www.moreeco.com for the largest selection of green retailers on one site and earn cashback and offset carbon at the same time.
7. Which makes a better tree? Artificial or a real one? Simply real ones are as they are great for the environment and can be replanted after use. If replanting isn’t an option, most local councils run Christmas tree recycling schemes. Contact yours or go to http://www.letsrecycle.com. If you need to use an artificial one avoid those made in China or Tawian which have transport costs associated with them. They also can be made with nasty chemicals, metals and plastics which can emit into our homes. Adorn with fair trade and ethical traded decorations or again make your own.
8. How do we give children what they desire but without poisoning our planet? Take electronic toys for instance. There are 900 million batteries used each year in the UK alone and many are in toys. But only 2% of batteries are currently recycled – the rest end up in landfill sites and are poisoning our planet! So what do you do? Choose an eco toy. Green and eco-friendly toys shouldn’t cost the earth so choose from a great selection here that don’t require batteries. Alternatively go for rechargeable batteries which will save you pounds throughout the year.
9. Recycle your unwanted presents. Unfortunately everyone receives at least one unwanted gift at Christmas. Many recycle their unwanted presents to charities. Local hospitals and hospices are often very pleased to receive unwanted smellies to give to patients. Or you could try Nigels Eco Store’s regifting forum or www.freecycle.org and swap them for other people’s unwanted gifts.
10. Don’t go overboard especially in the current climate and remember – reduce, reuse and recycle.
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The giraffe population of Niger, which was on the verge of extinction just 10 years ago, is now on the rise and moving into new habitats.
From a herd of 50 animals, careful conservation supported by Niger’s government has seen their numbers rise to around 200. Once, thousands of giraffes roamed across tracts of West Africa from the deserts of Chad to the Atlantic coast. They are a specific sub-species of giraffe that only inhabit the region.
These endangered animals are now only to be found in a tiny area close to Niger’s capital, Niamey. Julian Fennessy, of the Giraffe Conservation Foundation, says they live side by side with farmers just 60km (37 miles) from the city.
“You can see them cross the fields,” he says.
“They are drinking from the same water pans as cattle. It is quite a remarkable synergy that the people have with the giraffe, and it is the last wildlife left in this whole area.”
As their numbers rise, the giraffes are on the move. They are looking for fresh ranges and keeping track of them is vital. Conservationists have been given a grant to buy collars for the animals to monitor their movements. The government of Niger has banned all hunting and believes the giraffes will help build the country’s tourism industry.
From these herds it is hoped that the animals, which grow to up to 6m (19ft) tall, will rebuild the population of the region.
Find the original article here: BBC.co.uk
Image also from original article: BBC.co.uk
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Larry Elliott, from the Guardian, discusses Gordon Brown’s notion that rich western banks should pay for the world to go green:
The response was predictable. No sooner had Gordon Brown expressed enthusiasm for a global transaction tax than the backlash began. Not something we like, said the Americans. We want lower not higher taxes, said the Canadians. Too hard to enforce, said the International Monetary Fund.
This is the last gasp of an ancien régime. The banks in 2009 are the Bourbons in 1789, the Romanovs in 1917. They existed in a bubble of privilege and took the public for a ride. They caused a financial crisis and triggered the biggest economic crash since the 1930s. They now expect the state to clear up the financial mess caused by this greed and stupidity through public spending cuts and higher taxes.
As the prime minister noted in St Andrews on Saturday, this is not on. “There must be a better economic and social contract between financial institutions and the public, based on trust and just distribution of risks and rewards,” Brown said. Amen to that. He is 100% right and he deserves support.
Finance ministries were initially dismissive about debt relief but were eventually won over. Angela Merkel and Nicolas Sarkozy have both backed the idea of a transaction tax; Brown’s intervention means there is now a powerful bloc challenging the status quo.
Tim Geithner, the US treasury secretary, was sniffy about Brown’s idea at the weekend, but Downing Street is encouraged by the Obama administration’s willingness to cooperate internationally in a clampdown on tax havens.
The political argument in favour of reform is strong. Firstly, policymakers want to put in place measures to reduce the risks of future financial crises. Secondly, financial institutions provide an easy source of revenue at a time when governments are counting every penny.
Poor countries did not cause the crisis yet have been badly hurt by it. They need money to develop low-carbon growth strategies. Without a willingness by the west to bankroll greener economic strategies in the developing world there will be no climate change deal. The portents are bad for next month’s climate change summit in Copenhagen. Indeed, the negotiations are starting to echo the global trade liberalisation talks, which began in Doha eight years ago this week and are still going nowhere.
Rich countries have found that the bigger developing nations are no longer prepared to be pushed around. In all previous rounds, the European Union and the United States have imposed a private deal on the rest of the WTO membership: the big change during the Doha talks has been the no-nonsense approach of Brazil, India and China. They have refused to roll over in the face of bullying tactics from Brussels and Washington, demanding that the developed world provide compensation to poor countries for the biased outcomes of previous rounds.
The stakes are much higher in Copenhagen. If the scientists are right, then the international community cannot afford a decade of delay in concluding a deal on climate change. Developing countries say – with some justification – that the west has been responsible for the lion’s share of greenhouse gases and that rich countries should therefore shoulder most of the burden when it comes to cutting emissions. India has more people without electricity than live in the EU.
Rich countries – particularly the US – argue that there can be no deal unless the larger developing countries participate. They, too, have a point. While the stock of greenhouse gases is certainly the responsibility of the developed world, the flow of new emissions will come from the fast-growing emerging countries, where demands for energy are increasing exponentially. Four-fifths of the growth in emissions between now and 2030 will come from those developing nations.
Please read the full article at: Guardian.co.uk