Monday, May 10, 2010

preserve your toothbrush

Stumbled across this toothbrush today that is made from recycled yogurt containers & comes in a pack with prepaid postage that you mail back for further recycling.

They also have:
razors, toothpicks and tongue cleaners and a variety of personal care, table ware and kitchen items.

I commend the effort, but wouldn`t it be easier to keep it simple and just make regular tooth brushes, razors and other products recylable...

glass or plastic sir...

Sparked by a recent jump from glass to plastic wine bottles by UK grocery giant Marks & Spencer, the debate between which is better for good ol` mother earth.
It took over two years to develop the plastic compound, which sandwich an impermeable layer between two layers of PET plastic

Plastic is obviously lighter than glass, cutting down on both shipping costs and weight, and therefore amount of fuel used to lug wine bottles accross the country.

However, the glaring issue, in the UK recycling plastic comes in the form of burning for ``energy recovery`` which blows the carbon footprint largely out of proportion.

Seems to me it is the better of two evils... the solution, pick a local favorite wine and recycle the bottles or even better- return them to the vineyard when you are there picking up the next case our two.

Wednesday, April 21, 2010

regulators dropping the ball on biocrops

Recent findings by Robert Kremer, a U.S. government microbiologist and other agricultural scientists are raising fresh concerns about Monsanto's products and the Washington agencies that oversee them.

"This could be something quite big. We might be setting up a huge problem," said Kremer, who expressed alarm that regulators were not paying enough attention to the potential risks from biotechnology on the farm, including his own research."We don't have a robust enough regulatory system to be able to give us a definitive answer about whether these crops are safe or not. We simply aren't doing the kinds of tests we need to do to have confidence in the safety of these crops," said Doug Gurian-Sherman, a scientist who served on a FDA biotech advisory subcommittee from 2002 to 2005.(Reuters)

Keep in mind that it is not the law in North America to label goods that have been produced with GMO crops. For more info on the issue, check out this cbc article...

the truth about global food production

It is commonly quoted that by 2030 the world needs to increase it's food production by 50% or double by 2050.

But, it appears that is incorrect. The actual amount is 70%. In a report from the soil association,'reveals that all those claiming we need to double global food production by 2050, or 50% by 2030, are wrong about the figures, are wrong about what the figures apply to, and are wrong to claim that achieving these figures will mean we will feed the hungry or end starvation.'These claims are being used to justify huge increases in industrial farming, specifically in continued production in genetically modified crops.

Peter Melchett, Soil Association policy director, said:
“The ‘big fat lie’ of needing to double global food production by 2050 has dominated policy and media discussions of food and farming, making it increasingly difficult for advocates of sustainable farming methods, such as organic, to convince people we can actually feed the world without more damage to the environment and animal welfare.


Focus Earth: the food industry (video)

Download the full report here

Monday, April 19, 2010

dirty dirty foods: scandalous secrets of our favorite treats





 6 Foods with a Dirty Environmental Secret

weed or plant?




is it a weed or a plant?

stay away from: phthalates




What are: phthalates