Apparently the BBC has a show in which a waste expert travels the countryside helping families reduce their waste and cut back on expensive electric and water bills by saving energy. It’s called No Waste Like Home and involves a host called Penney, whose green tips are also cataglogged on the accompanying Web site. What I like best about this idea is that it frames trash in terms of everyday people and the cost/benefits of reducing their footprints If only all progressives were as practical as the BBC. They should totally remake this in the US.
No Waste Like Home
Wednesday, November 22, 2006coo coo for coco products
Wednesday, November 22, 2006
While I was out of town and slacking on my garblogging duties, my colleague Keith over at The Temas Blog was busy rounding up all the possible uses for coconuts under the sun for a two-part series on recycling their shells. In part one, he informs us of the problem of coconut waste clogging landfills in Latin America…all those discarded husks drunk dry and tossed aside (there’s even a Utube video to demonstrate the draining and enjoying of a fresh coconut). Then, in part two, he offers an exhaustive compilation of coconuts reimagined. I know what you’re thinking, but you’d be amazed at all the coco byproducts out there: seat upholstery for cars, carpet padding, rope and, of course, art. It’s inspired stuff.
weekly compactor
Tuesday, November 21, 2006- Cool Hunting reports on woods-inspired work at the London Design Festival; and also in England
- The British experiment with trash-eating homes;
- “Waste-to-watts” programs in Deleware make use of gas from landfills;
- Greenloop sends out the first of a four-part eco-friendly holiday shopping guide;
- Vietnam’s new trash law isn’t solving any problems; and
- A Canadian garbage bag company is cashing in on new sorting regulations.
congressional trash
Tuesday, November 21, 2006Waste News comments on what the midterms mean in terms of trash:
New Senate committee leadership picture starts to take shape
By Bruce Geiselman
Nov. 20 — Senate Democrats have named their leadership for the Environment and Public Works Committee and its subcommittees beginning next year. However, a struggle may lie ahead among Republicans, who will become the minority party.
The Senate Democratic Caucus named Barbara Boxer, D-Calif., as the new chairman of the environment committee.
However, John Warner, R-Va., said he wants to become the committee´s ranking member instead of outgoing committee Chairman James Inhofe, R-Okla. Warner issued a statement saying he is the senior Republican on the panel, having served on the committee since January 1987.
“As the senior Republican on the Senate EPW Committee, I intend to submit my name for election as the ranking minority member of that panel,” Warner said. “I will do so in recognition of established Senate Republican conference rules and precedents.”
Warner had been chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee, but will have to relinquish his leadership role on the committee because of a six-year term limit established by Republican rules. That may have prompted his decision to seek a leadership role on the environment committee.
Meanwhile, Inhofe intends to fight for the right to head up the Republicans on the environment committee. “I have been a long friend of John Warner,” Inhofe said. “However, I think he has a misunderstanding of the rules. I intend to retain my leadership position in the 110th Congress, returning as the ranking member of the EPW committee.”
Warner is viewed as more moderate on environmental and climate change issues than Inhofe, who has argued that global warming is a hoax.
Boxer has said that as committee chairman, she intends to make global warming legislation one of her top priorities.
Republicans on the environment committee will vote to select the ranking member, but the full Republican Conference must ratify their decision.
While the Republicans have yet to select their committee leader, Boxer has named the chairs of the various subcommittees.
►Boxer will serve as chairman of the Subcommittee on Public Sector Solutions to Global Warming, Oversight, Children´s Health Protection and Nuclear Safety.
►Max Baucus, D-Mont., will chair the Subcommittee on Transportation and Infrastructure.
►Joseph Lieberman, I-Conn., will chair the Subcommittee on Private Sector and Consumer Solutions to Global Warming and Wildlife Protection.
►Tom Carper, D-Del., will chair the Subcommittee on Clean Air, Nuclear Plant Security and Community Development.
►Hillary Rodham Clinton, D-N.Y., will chair the Subcommittee on Superfund and Environmental Health.
►Frank Lautenberg, D-N.J., will chair the Subcommittee on Transportation Safety, Infrastructure Security and Water Quality.
Entire contents copyright 2006 by Crain Communications Inc. All rights reserved.
waste news
Thursday, November 16, 2006
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(Note the clip art).
peddling for clean water
Thursday, November 16, 2006
Though I have never managed to time a trip to Ouagadougou with the famous Fespaco film festival, I was lucky enough last week the attend the final day of the Salon International de L Artisanat de Ouagadougou (SIAO). SIAO is a biennial crafts fair that gathers artisans from all over Africa to display and sell their wares in huge convention center rooms. You buy a ticket to enter the fair grounds and have to pay extra to visit the air conditioned rooms. My friend Ouermi bought himself some stylish Ivorian dress shirts and I picked up a woven scarf for my mother and a small wooden puzzle in the shape of a baobab tree that I’m saving to give as a baby gift. Then we sat down and for a couple of dollars worth of local currency split a dozen small kebabs, a plate of fried plantains and two very large beers. It was a lot like visiting a state fair, what with the cultural displays and food on a stick. Next we climbed the displays of local huts set up to show the range of dwellings found around the country. Finally, we walked the line of exhibit booths promoting environmental groups, microcredit projects, local remedies for such problems as premature ejaculation and painful menstrual cycles. It was there that I noticed some of the machines on display: a moped rigged as a bush ambulance, folding bins for carrying water and the pictured bike-pump designed for the easy drawing of clean water from the ground. Such a simple way to save energy! All in all, an educational day.
P.S. I just linked flickr to everyday trash, so click on the photo for more visuals of the fest.
Leave the trash on the conveyor belt
Wednesday, November 15, 2006The British environmental minister is urging his countrymen to leave excess packaging at the checkout as a statement to grocery stores that they shouldn’t stock over-wrapped products. What I find most interesting about this story is one, how receptive the companies interviewed seem to be (I guess PC dictates compliance) but also the fact that there is a minister of environment in Britain and that he advocates civil disobedience.
This link, like so many before it, was scouted by the incomparable Kimberly.
trash wonders of the world
Wednesday, November 15, 2006
Whew, still catching up around here and trying to get back on schedule. Thankfully, journalista extraordinaire Elizabeth tipped me off to a readymade compilation that will have to sub for the weekly compactor until I find some post-trip-report browsing time. Enjoy. And New Yorkers, note that our very own Fresh Kills made the cut! It’s a proud day for Sta’n Islanders.
intellectual trash
Monday, November 13, 2006Salut, trashies, I’m back from West Africa and everyday trash is back to everyday living. That’s right, no more exotic trips planned for now and back to our regularly scheduled programming. Thanks for your patience. It appears the world spun a bit more quickly than usual while I was gone: the US government more or less changed hands and violence in Africa and the Middle East bubbled. To lower our blood pressure in the face of chaos, here’s a link to a New Yorker trash piece pointed out to me by my friend salmon.
trash hiatus II
Friday, November 3, 2006My next nonprofiteering expedition is taking me to Burkina Faso, West Africa. Regular posting may be difficult from now through the 11th, but I promise to bring home tales of trash from overseas and hope to post from afar.
images
Friday, November 3, 2006Check it: The California Integrated Waste Management Board keeps an online clip art gallery of waste prevention images.
iFrod
Friday, November 3, 2006Check it, Stay Free! magazine is doing with broken iPods what I want to do with used bridesmaid dresses.
Weekly Compactor (back on schedule)
Wednesday, November 1, 2006- Chicagoans fail to understand/participate in blue bag program, city shuts it down;
- Kenyan eco-activist Wangari Maathai releases autobiography;
- Mystery medical waste found burried in a Pennsylvania mine;
- Vietnamese hospital caught burning and burrying waste as well; and
- Bilateral pact may open the door for Japan to dump trash in the Philippines’ back yard.
Always a bridesmaid…
Wednesday, November 1, 2006
In my quest to find a use for my small collection of bridesmaid dresses, I came across uglydress.com and just had to share. The three red dresses I’ve sported down the aisle are not that bad in the grand scheme of things one might have to buy, alter and wear in public on behalf of a friend getting married. But they aren’t exactly reusable, either.
Just what are we supposed to do with the dress when the pageant is over? I refuse to throw them away and I don’t know any little girls with dress-up boxes (and wouldn’t encourage this sort of gender-specific dress-up item anyway).
My mother, always hopeful about these things, suggested I have the skirt of my last bridesmaid dress shortened and that I wear the apple-red satin ballgown as a cocktail dress. With a triple-layer of black lacey stuff under the skirt and a halter neck, the cocktail party I wore that thing to would have to be on ice (in which case I wouldn’t have right muff for the occasion anyway).
So, I’m left with the aforementioned halter gown, a maroon seperates number (the top of which presumably could be used as the shell of a suit, if I had the sort of job that required wearing suits), a spaghetti strapped ankle-length dress that might have been reusable if it didn’t constitute the physical proof of that time my cousin joined the navy, married a stripper and forced me to be the “red” in their patriotic-themed ceremony. Also, it’s just a little too orange, which always kills a red dress.
I know there are used dress sites, but I’m looking for something bigger and badder ass to do with my collection. An installation project perhaps? A hipster crafts project? Please post any and all ideas as comments.
CFR: Grim News on Environment
Monday, October 30, 2006The Council on Foreign Relations daily brief puts scary findings on global warming, forced migration and gobbling up of natural resources at the top of today’s agenda. You know it’s grim news for the green when reports on the environment beat out three stories on international weapons crises to take the headline.