Archive for February, 2009

Producer responsibility

Tuesday, February 3, 2009

dumpstertaoist made a great point in a comment to my former post, and I have the fantastic Swedish holier-than-thou reply! This should probably have gone in the original post, but I actually forgot about it. When one takes things for granted…

Anyways, here goes: Back in Sweden, manufacturers are governed by what’s called “the Producer responsibility”. It essentially means that companies selling products that will end up as garbage are responsible for the collection and disposal of their discarded products. The producer responsibility law stipulates companies obligations in five areas:

  • Packaging
  • Tyres
  • Newsprint
  • Vehicles
  • Electrical and electronic products

You can read more, in english, at the web of the Swedish Environmental Protection Agency! Among other things, check out the Waste Council.

Upcycling

Sunday, February 1, 2009

Upcycling.  It’s all the rage.  Want proof?  Just take a click through the internet this week.

Curbly posted on recycled kitchenware lighting, via the fantastic garblog Green Upgader.

Colander lamp by French designer "Garbage"

Colander lamp by French designer "Garbage"

The Temas Blog did a video roundup of Brazilian trashion.  This clip of looks fashioned from drink can tabs is my favorite.

Wooster Collective found not one, but two posts worth of fur coat upcycling by street artist Neozoon.

Upcycling ala Neozoon

Upcycling ala Neozoon

And the crafty mavens of Etsy shared all kinds of DIY upcycling for Valentine’s.  I love this men’s shirt turned party dress.

shirt-dress

Upcycled shirt dress

Also, the heart jean skirt is literally badass.

The green nuns of NYC

Sunday, February 1, 2009

If you haven’t yet,  you should really read Joseph Huff-Hannon’s fabulous piece about an order of nuns on a faith-driven mission to live the greenest life possible.  Go ahead and click through now, the rest of this post is just me gushing.

Photo by Josh Haner for The New York Times

Photo by Josh Haner for The New York Times

The story centers around the sisters’ efforts to build an eco-friendly convent and is full of fun scenes, like nuns sitting around  a table covered in BlackBerries negociating local food deliveries.

I love this article for a bunch of different reasons.  First of all, it is told respectfully.  It would be really easy for a piece about city nuns going green to feel expoitative or snarky.  This doesn’t.

Second, it takes place in Morningside Heights, my childhood neighborhood and home to the country’s finest journalism school (which I also attended).  The farmer’s market cited in the article is just in front of the University gate closest to the J school—a building teeming with ambitious young reporters and veteren journalists alike, all of whom are among the most news-infomed humans on the planet.  I love that this reporter—a J schooler himself—lifted a rock so close to home and revealed a world we never knew existed.

Third, it dresses dull waste politics up in compelling details.

Fourth, it covers faith in a fresh way.

Fifth and finally, it was sent to me directly by the author, allowing for a lazy Sunday of blogging from bed, thinking about the old hood and researching green building materials such as concrete visually and structurally enhanced by recycled glass (which the nuns hope to use for thier new HQ).

Thanks, Huff-Hannon.  I’ll be looking out for your byline.