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6 votes
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Nurdles: The massive, unregulated source of plastic pollution you’ve probably never heard of
10 votes -
Bilge dumping: The worst pollution you've never heard of
5 votes -
World's biggest shipping company sees record profit as demand surges – Denmark's AP Moeller-Maersk saw 2021 revenue come in at $61.8 billion
8 votes -
We were warned about the ports - A 2015 federal report predicted the entire slowdown that’s come to pass
5 votes -
Three suspected pirates who were detained for six weeks on a Danish warship off West Africa's coast have been released at sea in a small dinghy
5 votes -
Why wind power ships may be the future of transportation
5 votes -
Maersk is investing £1bn to speed up its switch to carbon neutral operations – eight methanol fuelled vessels could help save more than 1m tonnes of carbon emissions a year
16 votes -
How one little boat (and me) held up miles of London traffic at Tower Bridge
7 votes -
Michelin proposes putting puffy sails on cargo ships
16 votes -
The untold story of the big boat that broke the world
6 votes -
Why there are now so many shortages (It's not COVID)
5 votes -
How to design a sailing ship for the 21st century?
15 votes -
Supply bottlenecks leave dozens of container ships anchored off California coast
7 votes -
Stranded sailor allowed to leave abandoned ship after four years
21 votes -
Massive container ship stuck in Suez Canal, blocking world's busiest shipping route
44 votes -
Snøhetta, the world's first tunnel for large ships, has been approved and will soon begin looking for contractors in Norway – expected to begin construction in 2022
6 votes -
I like that the boat is stuck
69 votes -
Sending stuff around the world
I want to try something new and send some sacks of coffee over the atlantic and maybe start a sidehustle. I'm in the process of checking tarifs and stuff, but I have no idea where to even start...
I want to try something new and send some sacks of coffee over the atlantic and maybe start a sidehustle. I'm in the process of checking tarifs and stuff, but I have no idea where to even start looking for somebody who would do the actual transporting or what it might even cost.
did anybody here do something like that?
how did you do it?
what did you send?
why did you do it?
what was your experience with it?
would you do it again?8 votes -
Shipping carriers rejected tons of US agricultural exports, opting to send empty containers to China instead
11 votes -
As US shopping habits change, ports and cargo carriers struggle to keep pace
7 votes -
A group of migrants rescued by a Danish tanker in the Mediterranean have been allowed to land in Italy after more than forty days at sea
5 votes -
The infinite loop of supply chains
4 votes -
The day the pirates came
6 votes -
Shipments of SUVs wait out at at sea, revealing scope of US auto market glut
13 votes -
A mayor in Norway's Arctic looks to China to reinvent his frontier town
11 votes -
How bad is the environmental impact of shipping/delivery?
I've recently started trying to improve my environmental impact, so I apologize for what might be a very basic question, but how bad is it to have items shipped/delivered to you, rather than...
I've recently started trying to improve my environmental impact, so I apologize for what might be a very basic question, but how bad is it to have items shipped/delivered to you, rather than picking them up from a store near you?
I'm specifically interested in two situations:
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If I'm buying a specialty, zero-waste product that's not available in stores nearby, which is worse: having it delivered directly to my house, or having to drive a good distance in my own car to get it? Are the two roughly comparable, or is one considerably worse than the other?
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I use a service called PaperBackSwap that is sort of like a big, distributed, online used bookstore. You give away books from your collection to people who request them, and for each book you send out you can request one to be sent to you. I like that it's putting books in the hands of people who specifically want them (as opposed to donating them or selling them to a used bookstore where they might be shelved indefinitely or pulped), but now I'm sitting here wondering how bad it is for that single hardcover of mine to travel halfway across the country. On the other hand, the book is getting reused, potentially multiple times if it then gets requested by others after that. Should I be considering this good reuse, or a waste of resources?
Outside of those two, I'd welcome any primers on the topic at large, as well as any best practices with consumer goods that I can start putting into place. I've already done a lot to find plastic-free alternatives to a lot of what I use, but I don't know if I'm trading one ill for another by getting them from places that have to send them from hundreds of miles away.
11 votes -
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TV, or not TV: The story of our bike box
13 votes -
Oslo wants to build the world's first zero-emissions port
6 votes -
Sweden receives indications Iran is ready to release British tanker Stena Impero
4 votes -
Iran 'seizes British-flagged oil tanker'
25 votes -
The hundred-tonne robots that help keep New Zealand running
3 votes -
There’s no plan B for port security
9 votes -
Spinning sail technology is poised to bring back wind-powered ships
6 votes -
World's largest shipping company heads into Arctic as global warming opens the way
14 votes