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26 votes
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EU states clash over use of toxic mercury in light bulbs – lighting industry's exemption from 2011 ban may jeopardise climate goals says Sweden
7 votes -
When it comes to climate hypocrisy, Canada's leaders have reached a new low
7 votes -
Germany eyes new offshore wind farms dedicated to green hydrogen production
7 votes -
Donald Trump’s US border wall, vulnerable to flash floods, needs large storm gates left open for months
7 votes -
Stockholm has been named 'smartest city in the world' for its innovations on the environment, digital technology and residents' wellbeing
5 votes -
How to Actually Personally Fight Climate Change
12 votes -
Climate change activist Greta Thunberg says she is trademarking her name and the #FridaysForFuture movement to stop people from impersonating her
11 votes -
SolarRoof.Cool — A crash course on Tesla's Solarglass roof, Powerwall, and sustainable energy systems, from the perspective of an owner.
26 votes -
How sustainable is a solar powered website?
10 votes -
Smaller TN waterways lose protection under new EPA rule
3 votes -
An open letter on Australian bushfires and climate: urgent need for deep cuts in carbon emissions [signed by Laureates of the Australian Research Council]
4 votes -
A journalist in Japan looks at how much single-use plastic he accumulates in a week, then attempts to spend a week without using any
17 votes -
Magnitude 7.7 earthquake hits between Cuba and Jamaica
7 votes -
Invasion of the ‘Frankenbees’: The danger of building a better bee
6 votes -
Air pollution inequality growing in Massachusetts
3 votes -
Planet Money - Episode 926: So, should we recycle?
3 votes -
Oslo may see just fifty days of snow deeper than 30cm in 2050, down from eighty days today and 140 days in 1900
8 votes -
Greenpeace loses Norway Arctic oil lawsuit appeal – Oslo appeals court approved Norway's plans for more oil exploration in the Arctic
7 votes -
Why Australia's fires are linked to floods in East Africa
4 votes -
Carbon-neutral in fifteen years? Finland – the country with an ambitious plan
7 votes -
Iceland didn't hunt any whales in 2019 – and public appetite for whale meat is fading
6 votes -
America’s radioactive secret: Oil-and-gas wells produce nearly a trillion gallons of toxic waste a year
10 votes -
California's new groundwater law explained
9 votes -
Greta Thunberg: ‘Forget about net zero, we need real zero’
19 votes -
Stockholm street just became the first in Sweden to ban old diesel cars – 4,000 of the 24,000 cars that use Hornsgatan every day will now be forced to take a detour
9 votes -
The US pesticide industry's playbook for avoiding neonicotinoid bans
10 votes -
David Gunnlaugsson – Iceland's melting glaciers are nothing to panic about
2 votes -
New UNSW research calls for national action to minimise the risk of the platypus vanishing due to habitat destruction, dams and weirs
4 votes -
Norway made an outspoken right-wing lawmaker who once called wind turbines 'white monsters' its oil and energy minister
9 votes -
Norway says its new giant oil field is actually good for the environment – critics call it climate hypocrisy
4 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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Terrorism police list Extinction Rebellion as extremist ideology
12 votes -
Microsoft announces their plan to be carbon negative by 2030
9 votes -
Incredible, secret firefighting mission saves famous Australian 'dinosaur trees'
5 votes -
US electricity generation from renewables surpassed coal in April
8 votes -
The Australian government has been forced to talk about climate change, so it’s taking a subtle – and sinister – approach
11 votes -
Year of the planet, environmental activism, and us
Hi! I'm Micycle_the_Bichael! I'm a pretty passionate local environmental activist. Short summary: I think climate change is bad, but even if climate change wasn't happening the way we interact...
Hi! I'm Micycle_the_Bichael! I'm a pretty passionate local environmental activist. Short summary: I think climate change is bad, but even if climate change wasn't happening the way we interact with nature is still gross and leaves a lot to be desired (ex: over fishing, whaling, landfills). While there definitely needs to be governmental action on corporations on climate change, there are still changes that can be made in your daily life to help make the world a better place! Enter the year of the planet. This is a community group for making one small change a month to help the environment. Some may be things you're already doing, some may be new. For example: the January goal is to start using a reusable coffee cup when ordering coffee at a cafe since most paper coffee cups are lined with polyethylene and thus not recyclable. The biggest difference for me between this and many other (very great and valid) projects like it is that it heavily emphasizes building a sense of community.
The group who organized this is The Good Empire, who describe themselves as:
"Year of the Planet is an initiative of Good Empire. We’re makers of startups and projects for good.
Inspired by and aligned with the United Nations’ Sustainable Development Goals, we bring ideas to life that are good for the world. We help change the things that need to change.
And most importantly, we’re a tribe. A global community of good people, united in purpose, to help create a better and more sustainable future for all.
Good Empire is not a registered charity, but we partner with registered charities in everything we do.
We will take no management fees from Year of the Planet, nor will any of the funds raised come through us. All donations will go directly to our charity partners."Some of those partners being Wildlife Emergecy Fund and the seabin project which is a project close to my heart along with the ocean cleanup project
This post has been what feels like a really long rant on a couple of groups and causes that I'm very passionate about. I'll probably DM one of the other Tildes members who does scheduled posts and see about making a bi-weekly environmentalism thread to discuss what people are doing to make a positive change not only in the local environment, but in their community (a lot of good environmental initiatives also make your neighborhood/local community nicer and happier places :) ), struggles people are having, questions, products they have found, etc. and we'll see if it sticks or if it is just me shouting into the void.
11 votes -
How to Stop Freaking Out and Tackle Climate Change
13 votes -
IBM’s lithium-ion battery uses seawater materials instead of heavy metals, charges in just five minutes
12 votes -
The ecological devastation of the Victorian bushfires has been laid bare in a leaked report which warns some species are likely to already be extinct
4 votes -
A News Corp employee has accused the organisation of a "misinformation campaign" filled with "irresponsible" and "dangerous" coverage of the national bushfire crisis
14 votes -
Too much combustion, too little fire
6 votes -
The Chinese paddlefish, one of world's largest fish, has gone extinct
3 votes -
Assessing the US Climate in 2019 - Warmest year on record for Alaska, second wettest for contiguous US
8 votes -
Why the simple life is not just beautiful, it’s necessary
9 votes -
How climate change threatens Iceland's iconic puffins – and the community that has gone from hunting and eating them, to rescuing them
5 votes -
Norway's Equinor plans to cut greenhouse gas emissions from its domestic operations by 40% this decade and to near zero by 2050
6 votes -
Norway records warmest ever January day at 19C – the main cause for the record-breaking temperatures at this particular site was from a foehn wind
9 votes -
A blizzard of “sustainability” labels
4 votes