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Top 10 Eco-Friendly and Green New Year Resolutions

When you are thinking about the changes you want to see in your life in 2009, don’t forget about the environment. If you are really serious about turning a green resolution in to a goal, check out our goal setting worksheet.
There are many easy and money saving steps that you can take to help everyone live in a greener, and more environmentally friendly world. Setting eco-friendly goals not only helps the environment, you can save money, be healthier and benefit you local economy.
Starting to be informed on environmental issues is a good beginning. Taking action on even one of the Top 10 Eco-Friendly and Green New Year Resolutions will make a huge impact by December of 2009.
1. Wash (and rinse) your clothes with cold water. According to the U.S. Department of Energy, “about 90% of the energy used for washing clothes is for heating the water.” This tip will keep your energy bill and carbon emissions down.
2. Bring your own reusable bags when you go shopping. Ask if your grocery store gives a discount for using a reusable bag. As an added bonus, you won’t have to take as many trips to the car when unloading since more items fit into the sturdier cloth bag that paper or plastic. If you forget your bag when running an errand, ask yourself at the check out counter if you really need a bag for this purchase and tell the clerk to skip the bag.
3. Use revolving doors instead of swing doors when possible. According to an MIT study “a single person walking through a revolving door in February [in a cold climate] saves enough energy to light a 60-watt light bulb for 23 minutes.” Similar results can be seen in warm climates during the summer months. This is a tiny change in behavior that, over the course of a lifetime, can change the world.
4. By your food locally whenever possible. Each pound of local food you purchase prevents a quarter pound of global warming (C02) emissions that result from transportation.
5. Kick the water bottle habit. According to Wikipedia, Americans buy 28 billion water bottles a year. Yes that is billion with a B. Use a reusable water bottle and tap water to “drink green.” By using a refillable cup, either for water, coffee, juice or soda, you cut down on oil need to manufacture plastic and save space in landfills. If you are looking for a GREAT reusable water bottle, Freedom Personal Development has a super cool water bottle that our staff members rave about.
6. Use less paper. One way to accomplish this is to use both sides of the paper. If one side is still clean, put it back in the printer or fax. Second, only print out materials or emails if you absolutely must have a hard copy of the item. Lastly, use “Print Preview” before printing. You may not need the entire document printed or realize that the last page doesn’t contain anything of value.
7. Car pool, bike, walk or take public transportation at least once a week. According to the American Public Transportation Association, public transportation use saves 1.4 billion gallons of gasoline each year, and can reduce household expenses by $6,200. Plus you’ll get a day off from road rage.
8. Call the catalog companies that mail you and ask to be taken off their mailing lists. You can stop receiving junk mail using a free service like Catalog Choice http://www.catalogchoice.org/ Another organization that can stop the flow of junk mail to your house or office is http://www.41pounds.org/ According to their website, the average American adult receives 41 lbs of junk mail a year and junk mail produces more C02 than 9 million cars annually.
9. Unplug or use power strips that can be turned off for appliances and electronic devices such as computers, chargers, printers, televisions, cable set top boxes, microwave ovens, DVD players and coffee makers, to avoid energy vampires. Energy vampires can be spotted by walking through your home at night with the lights off. If you see the “standby” lights and digital displays on various appliances and electronic devices, these devices are using power and act like vampires silently sucking away energy even when they are turned “off.” Across all U.S. households, energy vampires account for an estimated 65 billion kilowatt-hours of electricity each year. This extra electricity costs consumers more than $5.8 billion annually and sends more than 87 billion pounds of heat-trapping carbon dioxide into the atmosphere each year.
10. Reduce energy consumption at your home and office. Turn off the lights and TV when no one is in the room and if you haven’t replaced your light bulbs with florescent bulbs get with the program and buy some today. The energy savings are more than make up for the costs of the bulbs.
The following pages provide tips on how to save energy:
- Tips from StopGlobalWarming.org
- EPA Global Warming Site: Actions for Individuals
- Personal Emissions Calculator
- Home Energy Saver
- Energy Star energy efficient appliances
- Choosing Energy Efficient Products
- Energy Efficient Windows
- Consumer Energy Information
- Power Smart
- Home Improvement Toolbox
- Energy Efficiency: First Things First
- Energy Efficient Home Articles
So which one of these green New Year Resolutions are you committed to? Any others that you would suggest?
Post your commitments, comments and suggestions below.
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Most RecentMost Recommended Comments (14)
at 13:51 on January 6th, 2009
Some really great ideas here - thanks!
at 14:40 on January 6th, 2009
Great list of ideas!
at 15:17 on January 6th, 2009
Great article! Great ideas! Thanks :)
at 15:41 on January 6th, 2009
I have a passion for being Green, eco-friendly, Earth conscience and whatever else you hear it as these days. I strive to reduce, reuse and recycle as much as possible. My husband and I try to eat organically and we participate in a crop share over the summer. The photo depicts my new reusable mug from Starbucks. I love it! I hope you make an effort to protect our Earth and yourself.
Holly Christian has contributed a photo to this story.
at 16:00 on January 6th, 2009
This is the first delivery we've recieved from the Sail Transport Network, supplying fresh, local, organic produce to the Seattle area using exclusively the power of the wind and tides. This particular run is from Sequim, WA, here you see spread out on the settee in our boat.
Eric the Beard has contributed a photo to this story.
at 16:38 on January 6th, 2009
#1) Agreed. Hot water is only needed for dirty white stuff.
#2) I have several canvas bags I made at home, a good choice.
#4) I have a winter garden, Bok Choi, Spinach, Radish, Basile, Thyme. Summer time brings Squash, Corn, Beets, Green Beans. The Green Beans grow really fast.
#5) I bought a five stage water filter system for $100.00. My tap water is the very best water a person can drink. I also have 3, large Stainless Steel water bottles, so I can have my water on the road.
#9) My coffee pot, coffee grinder, TV, Stereo, and much more draw phantom power, so I do not keep them plugged in, until I need them.
#10) Two years ago I built a small (500 watt) solar array. My home office is for the most part, solar powered. One of my PC's is actually a POS (Point of Sale) machine, no moving parts (CPU fan, Hard Drive, DVD-ROM) means it draws about 1/2 an Amp of power. Less than a table lamp.
Last month, my electric bill was $27.00!
Anaheim Jeff has contributed a photo to this story.
at 08:18 on January 7th, 2009
Great advice! I like making resolutions, green or other, thoughout the year not just on New Year's Eve.
So much so that myself and two friends opened http://www.pledgehammer.com just before Christmas. It provides an easy way to write resolutions down with a deadline and share with whoever you want to share them with. It also has a charitable 'flipside' to it - if you can't stick to your resolution Pledgehammer asks you to donate money to charity eg. the World Land Trust that fights to preserve the rain forest. So whether you stick to your resolution or not, either way the world will be a little bit better.
It's great to see people have started to use it for their green resolutions already:
http://www.pledgehammer.com/jnicbrad/begin-using-the-one-in-one-out-philosphy-when-i-buy-something-new-something-old-gets-donated-to-charity/
http://www.pledgehammer.com/029da754d423658430def289731494/return-mail-all-credit-card-offers-in-the-supplied-return-envelope-such-that-they-will-pay-for-the-postage-and-recycle-their-paper-waste-themselves/
http://www.pledgehammer.com/Femme/not-buy-more-than-one-plastic-bag-a-month/
Would be great to get more people to try Pledgehammer out and hear if it's helpful for green resolutions like this.
at 23:22 on January 7th, 2009
The washing the clothes in cold water is a really effective way to help the environment and to save you some money as well.
lankin247 has contributed a photo to this story.
at 23:47 on January 7th, 2009
Yes, lets get rid of all of those plastic bottle andn disposable coffee cups... its crazy that we use these onece and throw them away.
at 06:43 on January 8th, 2009
some great ideas and many thanks for including a photo of a Pouch recycled fabric belt!
another one to add to the list is "line-dry your clothes"
The tumble drier is one of the most energy-hungry appliances in the house
By reducing the number of times you use a tumble drier by just one load per week, you will reduce your carbon emissions by approximately 60kg a year.
And reduce your electricity bill!
pouch has contributed a photo to this story.
at 07:14 on January 8th, 2009
A funny resolution that didn't make the top 10 list I thought I would share:
Don't get divorced - it is bad for the environment.
Shuttling kids back and forth between houses in a car adds tons of green house gasses to the air.
So if you have to get divorced, maybe look at living next store to each other
at 07:17 on January 8th, 2009
Another resolution that didn’t make the cut along the lines of reducing driving: if your employer allows it, work from home once a week or put in four 10 hours days and take one off.
at 22:02 on January 8th, 2009
There are so many things that we can do to lessen our negative impact on the planet. Easy changes in our daily life can really make a difference. This article has great, simple tips that we should all use!
Happy (greener) New Year!
Mireasma has contributed a photo to this story.
at 20:58 on January 13th, 2009
3D vinyl wallpaper tiles are DIY and ECO Friendly. Wav-e-walls.com offers over 200 designer styles to choose from.
wav-e-walls has contributed a photo to this story.