Hi:
The following article is from Rachel's Health & Democracy Newsletter, June
12, 2008, #963. You're probably doing many of the things noted here but
always good tips on what else we can do.

Tony Del Plato

Ecolocalizer<http://ecolocalizer.com/2008/06/06/want-to-curb-global-warming-start-recycling-and-composting/>,
June 6, 2008

*WANT TO CURB GLOBAL WARMING? START RECYCLING AND COMPOSTING.*

[Rachel's introduction: If we all aimed for zero waste and got serious about
recycling and composting, we could quickly reduce greenhouse gas emissions
by an amount equal to the emissions of 87 coal-fired power plants (1/5 of
the nation's 417 plants). This would be huge, and could be done quickly. But
we'd have to get serious.]

By Shirley Siluk Gregory

Looking for ways to reduce your carbon footprint beyond changing lightbulbs
and taking the train? Turns out we all could make a big difference in
greenhouse gas emissions by composting our food waste and not throwing out
so much trash.

That's the message from "Stop Trashing the
Climate<http://www.stoptrashingtheclimate.org/>,"
a report by the Institute for Local Self-Reliance <http://www.ilsr.org/>,
the Global Alliance for Incinerator Alternatives
(GAIA<http://www.no-burn.org/>)
and Eco-Cycle <http://www.ecocycle.org/>, a non-profit recycler. The study
finds that waste prevention and increased recycling and composting could
reduce as many greenhouse gas emissions as are produced by 21 percent of the
U.S.'s 417 coal-fired power plants.

Why? There are two basic reasons. One, by trashing stuff instead of reusing
or repairing it, we create the demand for new resources... and extracting,
manufacturing and transporting those resources generates carbon dioxide.
And, two, by tossing biodegradable materials into landfills instead of
composting them, we're creating emissions of methane, a greenhouse gas that
is shorter-lived but 72 times more powerful than carbon dioxide.

"Recycling is as important for climate stability as improving vehicle fuel
efficiency, retrofitting lighting, planting trees and protecting forests,"
said Brenda Platt, co-director of the Institute for Local Self-Reliance and
lead author of the "Stop Trashing the Climate" report. "By avoiding landfill
methane emissions, composting in particular is a vital tactic in the battle
to stop Arctic ice melting. Biodegradable materials are a liability when
buried and burned but an asset when composted."

The report asserts that "A zero waste approach based on preventing waste and
expanding reuse, recycling and composting is one of the fastest, cheapest,
and most effective strategies to protect the climate." It also notes that,
per megawatt-hour, a trash incinerator produces more carbon dioxide
emissions that a coal-fired power plant. Incinerators also waste three to
five times as much energy as recycling helps to conserve.

"A zero waste approach is not only good news for climate stability, it's
also good news for America's businesses and economy," said Eric Lombardi, a
report co-author and director of the Boulder, Colorado- based Eco-Cycle.

"Stop Trashing the Climate" urges a local and national 20-year goal of zero
waste. We can get there, the authors argue, by not subsidizing landfills and
incinerators, putting an end to waste incineration, composting biodegradable
materials and expanding the nationwide infrastructure for reuse, recycling
and composting.

As part of World Environment Day, community supporters of better recycling
and composting lobbied officials in several parts of the country, including
Tallahassee; Providence, Rhode Island; Bridgeport, Connecticut; Los Angeles;
and Massachusetts.


-- 

"Justice is what love looks like in public."
~ Dr. Cornel West
_______________________________________________
For more information about sustainability in the Tompkins County area, please 
visit:  http://www.sustainabletompkins.org/ 

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