Friday, November 9, 2012
Election's over, let's get back to saving the planet
Now that the Presidential election is over, maybe we can get
back to saving the planet.
Allen Hershkowitz, senior scientist with the Natural
Resources Defense Council, is vacationing on Kaua`i, and took, the time to give
a couple of talks.
His message: The planet needs saving, and the job is so huge
that you might despair. His further message: You can’t do everything, but be
sure to do something.
“We’re facing urgent ecological pressures,” he said. The
climate is changing. Species are going extinct at a rate of one every 20
minutes. Forests are being destroyed at a rate of an acre per second (38
million acres last year). Most of the plastic in the world is not recycled, and
a lot of it ends up in the ocean, where it outweighs a lot of biological
organisms.
Hershkowitz is considered the father of the “greening”
movement, which he describes as reviewing a business or industry’s operations
with an eye to reducing impact.
Individuals and communities can “green” themselves, too.
His message to his Kaua`i audiences: If you do one thing,
recycle. The impact of using raw materials in manufacturing is immense, and
recycling is an answer. It saves energy, it saves money, it creates jobs, it
saves forests (does it make any sense at all to use virgin fiber for toilet
paper?) and mountains (mountaintop-removal coal mining).
We’re cutting down tropical forests and destroying entire ecosystems
for paper, when we could make the same paper out of agricultural waste like
corn stalks.
That used plastic bottle is entirely lost if it goes into a
landfill. It creates a tiny bit of energy if it’s burned in Honolulu’s HPOWER
waste-to-energy plant. But if recycled, it saves far more energy than is used
to make a bottle out of virgin materials—and it also saves raw.
Hershkowitz doesn’t much care whether your community
separates your recyclables at home (more efficient waste stream with lower
processing cost, but lower participation, higher collection cost) or uses a
single stream system that separates the recyclables after collection (threat of
recyclable contamination, higher participation, lower collection cost but
higher processing cost).
He just wants you to do something. And indeed, the
communities of Hawai`i have been stumbling along the path to doing something
for some time. As an example, Kaua`i County has been talking about a Materials
Recovery Facility for two decades.
“There’s no MRF on Kaua`i. That makes no sense to me,”
Hershkowitz said. “There are companies that will come and build them and pay to
do so.”
Here’s a YouTube piece on how a MRF works. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7CFE5tD1CCI
© Jan TenBruggencate 2012
Posted by Jan T at 10:07 AM
Labels: Agriculture, Climate Change, Conservation, Fisheries, Marine Debris, Pollution, Sustainability
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment