Oct 30 2009
The Green Seen
Several items relating to the business and technology of clean energy and the environment caught our attention this week:
Here are some last-minute tips for a green, affordable Halloween Saturday night, courtesy of Treehugger: Ignore the Halloween superstores and recycle stuff around your home -- clothes, cardboard, aluminum foil, boxes and paint -- to craft nifty costumes like skunks, spiders, fish, face masks and more. Select a walking neighborhood for trick or treat and carry a reusable paper bag or a pillow case for your treats and a second bag for litter. After the big night, host a costume swap party or donate costumes to a children's hospital for dress-up days. Happy Halloween!
Jeans giant Levi Strauss & Co. wants you to treat their clothes with the environment in mind. Working with Goodwill stores, Levi Strauss will sew tags into all of its clothing instructing buyers to donate the items when they're no longer needed, Green Inc. notes. The tags will also encourage customers to wash their clothes in cold water and dry them on a clothesline when possible to save energy. Clothing makes up a significant portion of the 23.8 billion pounds of textiles in U.S. landfills each year.
More on clotheslines: There is no longer a U.S. manufacturer of wooden clothespins; we import them from China and sell them as novelty products. Eighty percent of U.S. households have a tumble dryer and millions more go to the laundromat. Dryers account for 3 percent of household power, not including laundromats, hospitals, colleges and so on. The Project Laundry List organization figures we could save 10 percent on energy costs if we did the laundry the old green way -- cold water, line dry, no bleaching or ironing. Maybe Project Laundry List can team up with Levi Strauss and Goodwill.
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