Reduce
It's all very well offsetting your carbon footprint but there's no point planting trees and carrying on to live a fossil-fuel-rich lifestyle. So please reduce your emissions first.
Good News
Once we recognise we have problems, there is a lot we can do. You can use public transport more, or drive more fuel-efficient cars. Equally, you can wash your clothes at 30°C instead of 60°C and save 30% of the electricity. You can turn your heating down by 1°C and use 10% less energy.
Easy steps to reduce your impact on the environment
Waste not want not … reduce, reuse, recycle
- Don't leave things on standby
With the average household having 37 electrical appliances, leaving these on standby is a big deal. Turn off appliances and feel the benefits in a trimmer electricity bill. - Free gym
Walking and cycling are great exercise and help you relax. Why not take every chance you get to walk or cycle? You'll be helping the environment by polluting less. If you must use a car, try to avoid busy peak time travel periods - it will save you on fuel and time, and help the environment. - Buy locally
Farmers' markets are great sources of locally-produced, in-season goodies. Buying locally means your food will have travelled less, which means it has less impact on the environment. Buy products with less packaging to create less waste. - Take your greener habits to work and share the word
Making a business more green and sustainable
Waste not want not … reduce, reuse, recycle
- Product life cycle
Consider disposal of products after usage. Sustainable design and sustainable business models should consider product, people and planet. - Everyday energy efficiency savings
These can be immediate cost savings. The easiest to implement are: - turning the heat down when areas are unstaffed
- hanging lightbulbs to environmentally friendly versions
- improving building insulation
- leaving nothing on standby.
- Transport
- Don't travel unnecessarily: conference calls save you time, as well as helping the environment.
- Use trains, not planes.
- Introduce car-share schemes.
- Think global, buy local
- Buy AA-rated energy-efficient products (for example, staff room kettles). For more information visit www.energysavingtrust.org.uk.
- Buy from local sustainable sources where possible. Especially, buy locally-sourced water for your coolers.
- Introduce innovative working practices and working culture
- Video conferencing can be cheaper and will lead to less time out of office.
- Introduce car-sharing and flexible working hours. Avoiding the rush hour uses less fuel and facilitates a better work life-balance, which makes for happier and more productive employees.
- Improve your grounds. If possible, make your surroundings greener and friendlier to wildlife. This not only benefits the wildlife around you but will benefit your employees and make them more productive!
Source: Central Scotland Forest Trust
We have drawn information from a wide range of sources. We try to get to the bottom line quickly. However, if you want to dive into the science, there are several useful web links here.
Why reduce?
According to the Stern Report climate change could shrink global economies by 20%. If we do nothing, by 2050:
- World temperatures are likely to rise by 2°C, and could rise by as much as 5°C.
- A temperature rise of 2°C could threaten up to 40% of species with extinction.
- Up to 200 million people could become refugees through flooding or drought.
- Remedial action will cost only 1% of GDP but save £1·32 trillion.
- Rich nations have caused global warming but the main sufferers will be poorer nations.
- We still have time to avoid worst impacts but delay would be costly.