FYI: From David Suzuki: The D Word is obscene…..Living in a disposable word…

From the Editor: From our inbox to you:

Something to think about as we shop for Christmas…. Durable is better…… Please visit The David Suzuki Foundation website for Eco Friendly ideas and informative articles. 

green earth Stock Photo - 8164235

A kerfuffle is raised every time a comedian, politician, or businessperson uses the F-word or the N-word. I understand that. But to me, the D-word is the most obscene. I’m referring to disposable. Let me explain.

When I was a boy, we were poor and it was a big deal when my parents bought me a new coat. I would quickly outgrow it, and it would be passed on to my sister. My parents boasted that three of their children had worn the same coat. They weren’t concerned (nor were we kids) about gender differences or fashion; it was the coat’s ability to keep the wearer warm and its durability (now there’s a good D-word) that mattered.

We now have an economic system in which companies must not only show a profit each year, they must strive for constant growth. If a product is rugged and durable, it creates a problem for even the most successful business — a diminishing and eventually saturated market. Of course, any product will eventually wear to a point where it can no longer be patched, so the market will continue to exist to replace worn products.

But that’s not good enough in a competitive world driven by the demand for relentless growth in profits and profitability. So companies create an aura of obsolescence, where today’s product looks like a piece of junk when next year’s model comes out. We’ve lived with that for decades in the auto industry.

I’ve always said a car is simply a means of getting from point A to point B, but it’s become far more than that. Some cars convey a sense of power, and cars become safe havens when loaded with cup holders, sound systems, and even TVs and computers. Some people even name their cars, talk to them, and care for them like babies — until next year’s models come along.

It’s similar with clothing, even with outdoor attire beloved by environmentalists. We have a proliferation of choice based on colour, sexiness, and other properties that have nothing to do with function. I don’t understand torn blue jeans as a fashion statement, and I wish people would wear their pants till they spring their own leaks rather than deliberately incorporating tears. All of this is designed to get us to toss stuff away as quickly as possible so the economy can keep spinning.

Nowhere is this more obvious than with electronic gadgets. When my wife lost the cord to charge her cellphone, she went to seven stores. None had the necessary plug for her phone. Finally she went back to the retailer that sold her brand only to be told that the cords for the new models don’t fit the old ones and hers was so old, it wasn’t even on the market any more. It was a year-and-a-half old.

I remember when I was given the first laptop computer on the market. It had an LED display screen that let me see three lines at a time and a chip that stored about three pages of writing. But it was small and had word processing and a port to send my pieces by telephone. It revolutionized my life. I was writing a weekly column for the Globe and Mail and was able to send articles from Russia and even remote towns in the Amazon.

A couple of years later, a much better laptop hit the market. It had an LCD screen, a huge memory, and it displayed almost a full page. I got one. A year later, I got a new model, and then half a year after that, another. Each served me well, but every year, new ones would appear that were faster, smaller, and lighter, with longer-life batteries and more bells and whistles.

Try to get one fixed or upgraded, though. As with digital cameras, I was repeatedly told that it would cost more to fix an old laptop than to buy a new model. This is madness in a finite world with finite resources. At the very least, products should be created so components can be pulled apart and reused until they wear out.

You see why I think the D-word is so obscene.

By David Suzuki

ECo News: New Packing Material

Good news for the environment…. less Styrofoam, and more recycled paper may be used for packaging material in the future.

Free Clip Art Packaging : Cardboard Parcel Box

 

With the help of students from Durham College, Ralph Cilevitz has come up with a fabulous new way to package our breakables without wrecking havoc on our environment.

Up till now most business’ use Styrofoam, bubble wrap or polystyrene to package product for shipping to prevent damage during the shipping process. Unfortunately these preferred packing products are not preferable for our environment as they take ages to break down and add more to our already bursting landfills.

Thank goodness someone has been searching for a greener alternative, and Mr. Cilevitz, along with the Durham College folk have finally found one. The new product is called, Paperchipz and can be used by both small and large business.

Paperchipz is about the size of a microwave oven and uses a roll of paper to produce paper filler for packaging, and it’s produced on site whenever it’s needed.

Paper, we know breaks down, and I am hoping recycled paper can be used with the paperchpz. This fabulous idea is another step in the right direction to responsible living, and it also speaks of the global concern regarding our environment, as it was in response to the global movement for environmentally friendly packaging.

Mr. Ralph Cilevitz is an employee of the Ontario based company ALX technical Services-Global Earth Products.

Durham College received $750,000 in research funding to work with small and medium-sized businesses on subjects such as applied research, technology development and product testing and certification. Rob Braithwaite, a professor with the School of Science and Engineering Technology, along with a couple of recent mechanical engineering technology graduates are working with ALX-GEP on the Paperchipz project.

Source: Whitby This Week November 2011

FYI: From David Suzuki: Our Economy needs to include the value of nature and her resources.

From the Editor: FYI From our inbox to you…. the latest from David Suzuki and Friends: Our economic structure needs some changes to include the value of nature and her resources.

By David Suzuki

In early November, 70 Harvard University students walked out of their introductory economics class. They wrote to Prof. Gregory Mankiw that the biased nature of his course “perpetuates problematic and inefficient systems of economic inequality in our society.” Mankiw is the author of Principles of Economics, a textbook used by almost every economics student in the Western world.

The walk-out was part of a larger event organized by Boston’s Occupy protest, and it echoed a key element of the worldwide Occupy movement. Like these students and protesters, I’ve been thinking about our dysfunctional economic paradigm. I share the anxiety that we are sacrificing too much to a system driven by three fallacies: that well-being can only be measured in money, that distribution does not matter, and that the economy can grow forever. And like so many people today, I question whether our economic system is serving the goals that are important to society. After all, an economy is a means to prosperity, not the end.

This economic system is relatively new. In the 1930s and ’40s, world leaders had to address unemployment and underproduction. Many of our current economic measures were developed when natural capital (the benefits that nature provides) was plentiful but built capital (buildings, machinery, infrastructure) was not. In providing more manufactured goods and services, we developed a blind spot to the economic importance of natural systems. Labour, built, and financial capital are typically considered as the primary factors of production for economic development. Land and natural systems have seldom been included.

With growing human populations and profit-driven, consumer-based economics, more land is being eaten up by development, habitat is being destroyed and degraded, and resources are being exploited at unsustainable levels. Natural capital is disappearing.

For example, salmon were abundant on B.C.’s West Coast in 1900. More built capital, such as nets and boats, was required to harvest them for food. By 2000, there were no shortages of nets and boats, but the fish and the habitat they need to survive had become scarce. As natural capital and the goods and services it provides have diminished, interest in this area of economics has increased.

Economists are also starting to recognize that human well-being depends on more than having manufactured products. A great deal of research shows that things like leisure time, equality, and healthy relationships are more important to people’s happiness than greater consumption. This is starting to change our economic models.

But we still have far to go. The services provided by nature and the qualities that contribute to human well-being are still invisible in the marketplace. Because we have elevated economics above everything else, this is dangerous. When you have a society that largely equates the quality of life with economic indicators, such as gross domestic product, and those indicators fail to track the health of its fundamental inputs, you end up on shaky ground.

How do we address this? One tool is natural capital vauation. Putting a price on nature’s services is a complicated subject. Although nature’s full worth is unquantifiable, its ecosystems undeniably provide services to society that have real and tangible economic weight. For example, wetlands filter water and reduce natural disasters such as flooding, and forests manage water runoff and provide habitat for pollinators.

By making nature’s value visible, decision-makers can take into account the true benefits and costs of conservation and restoration. These economic benefits have even received the attention of the World Bank, which plans to assist countries in tracking natural capital assets and including them in development plans, in the same way we track other wealth using the GDP index. And more recently, former Canadian Prime Minister Paul Martin has advocated including natural capital in national accounts.

These measures won’t completely change our current economic paradigms, but they could at least slow the rampant environmental devastation and its consequent impacts on human health and well-being that are a symptom of our profit-driven corporate economies. They may also help us to think about what we truly need to be healthy and happy as humans, and to see the trade-offs inherent in our activities. Until we do this, we cannot hope to address the inequalities the students and the Occupy protesters are rallying against.

Written with contributions from David Suzuki Foundation environmental economist and policy analyst Michelle Molnar.

Learn more at www.davidsuzuki.org.

Photo credit alexindigo via Flickr.

FYI: Durham Region Recycles…

The Region of Durham’s Green Bin and blue Box waste diversion program provides new residents with a one time waste diversion kit. 

 

This kit includes one curbside green bin, one kitchen container and two blue boxes. If you are a first time homeowner in Durham, please contact the following numbers or visit www.durhamregionwaste.ca to order your free kit. 

905-579-5264 or 1-800=667-5671

If you are a resident of Durham and move to another region please take your green bins and blue boxes with you to your new home. 

Damaged green bins and blue boxes can be exchanged for new units at no cost. Please bring them into The Waste Management Centre at 4600 Garrard Rd. N. in Whitby, which is open from 8 am to 5 pm Monday to Friday. 

You are encouraged to have your waste out by the curb on your designated garbage pick up day, by 7 am.  Waste collection drivers have a route which may change, and drivers cannot go back to a street for late pick up once that street has been done. 

Source: Durham Works:

 

Ontario Landfills are filling up ….

From the Editor: 

Landfill : Digger working at landfill site Stock Photo

 

In our local paper this week, there was a 3 part series about the landfill situation in Ontario. And I am sure it is not just our province that is running out of room for our garbage. Why is are we in such a crisis situation?? The article mentions that  while we have a recycling program in effect, and have done for some time now, people are still throwing recycling items into the regular garbage bin. 

If you look around you, you will see that for a number of years we have been what is termed as “a throw away society”. The products that we purchase don’t last very long,  most of them aren’t worth fixing, a lot are cheaper to buy new again then send out for repair, and many of us just aren’t capable of fixing things. And so they end up in our landfill’s. 

There are a lot of people and we buy a lot of stuff, and it is hard sometimes to stop ourselves from buying what we don’t need, (which is a lot of stuff). Our governments want us to spend money because it helps the economy, (not sure who’s?) So it’s logically to assume space for garbage would be running out in the future… Well the future is here…. 

It’s a chore I know sorting our garbage, the organic bin along with one bin under the sink for glass and containers and two bins in the cupboard, one for paper and one for cardboard and there are days I get frustrated with it, but for the most part sorting the garbage in our house is second nature. 

55% percent nationwide of garbage that could be recycled ends up in landfills instead: article by: Don Campbell and Thana Dharmarajah: 

Batteries are a huge NO NO for the landfills and many are found. 

Plastic is very bad for our environment, not only does it take ages and ages to break down (if it ever does) wildlife get caught up in it, or they eat it both can lead to death for them. 

Paper comes from trees, trees clean our air and give us shade and they take time to grow, cutting them down continuously for paper seems barbaric. 

Cardboard comes from paper which comes from trees. 

These are just a few of the reasons why we need to be vigilant about our recycling, not only does our garbage fill up space, (that could be used for better things) we are depleting our resources at an alarming rate, we are playing with our children’s future, and we aren’t playing nice…. 

Please visit the following link to find out more about our garbage. Or to view how and what we do regarding our garbage in Durham Region. 

http://www.durhamregion.com/searchresult?AssetType=Article&q=Landfills%20&r=all:1&sortby=sPublishDateTS

Please Click on this link http://www.durham.ca/works.asp?nr=/departments/works/waste/bluebox.htm to find out what you can put in your blue box (Durham Region).