[AGL] carbon neutral text 1
Harry Edwards
laughingwolf at ev1.net
Sun Jun 25 18:57:29 EDT 2006
For those of you unable to access the link I previously emailed. This
is worth reading. twisty d
June 25, 2006
A New Way to Ask, 'How Green Is My Conscience?'
By CHRISTINE LARSON (NY Times)
WHEN Anne Pashby moved to Baltimore last year, she was dismayed by the
complexity of recycling in her new city.
"I can never get it right about which day is paper versus cardboard
versus cans," said Ms. Pashby, 38, a human resources manager. "So I've
given up on it."
But she wasn't ready to give up on the environment. Looking for an
easier way to make her life greener, she tried a "carbon calculator" at
the Web site of the Conservation Fund (conservationfund.org). She
learned that the events of her everyday life, like driving the car,
heating her home or taking plane trips, produced about 14 tons a year
of carbon emissions, or "carbon footprint." The Conservation Fund, a
nonprofit group in Arlington, Va., offered to neutralize that amount
for $57, by planting 11 trees in the lower Mississippi Valley — enough
to remove 14 tons of carbon dioxide from the atmosphere. She happily
complied.
"It felt pretty good," she said. "I could pat myself on the back and
not lay out a whole lot of cash."
Call them green upgrades: easy ways for consumers to help the
environment without changing their behavior. Such upgrades have been
proliferating: Skiers, for example, can spend an extra $2 at some
resorts to offset the pollution produced in a drive to the mountains;
the money goes to environmental organizations. On Web sites like
TerraPass.com or CoolDriver.org, drivers can total a car's pollution
for a year and direct a corresponding sum to clean-energy projects.
Similar opportunities to become "climate neutral" can be found at
concerts, music festivals and sports events, and even while shopping:
On June 9, Gaiam, a retailer in Broomfield, Colo., that sells products
including solar lighting and organic cotton sheets, started offering a
$2 "carbon neutral" shipping option, with the money going to the
Conservation Fund to plant trees.
Green upgrades appeal to a sense of personal responsibility. "I like
the idea that I pollute this much, so I pay this much," said Morgan
Waters, 36, a physician from Sacramento. Last fall, he paid about $40
through TerraPass, a Web-based, for-profit company in Menlo Park,
Calif., to offset emissions from his Volkswagen Jetta. TerraPass
channels the money to projects promoting green power and industrial
efficiency. He also pays an extra $6 a month to his local electric
company for renewable energy.
The challenge for consumers is to understand exactly what their money
goes for, and how much the upgrades actually help the environment.
Some are easy to grasp. At the Lenox, a hotel in Boston, the Eco Chic
package, at $309, costs more than a usual one-night stay ($239 and up).
In return, guests get breakfast, passes for Boston public
transportation — so they don't have to drive a car — and a copy of "The
Consumer's Guide to Effective Environmental Choices: Practical Advice
from the Union of Concerned Scientists." And the hotel buys enough
renewable power to offset the greenhouse gas produced during the
guest's stay: about 52 pounds of carbon emissions a night.
Other green upgrades may be more complicated.
"I was thinking about buying green energy, but when I looked into it, I
found so many different options," said Zoë Chafe of Washington, a
researcher at the Worldwatch Institute, an environmental research
group. "Some were through the electric company; others were saying,
'Put your money here and you'll help us start a manure farm that will
generate alternative energy.' "
About 20 percent of the nation's utilities offer customers so-called
green power. In Sacramento, Dr. Waters participates in the Greenergy
program offered by the Sacramento Municipal Utility District, which
totals his electricity use and tries to buy an equivalent amount of
power from a wind farm or other renewable-energy supplier. But there
aren't enough clean-power plants in Sacramento, so the utility also
buys renewable-energy certificates, or "green tags," from wind farms
elsewhere. The tags certify that a clean-energy company somewhere sold
a certain quantity of power.
When consumers lack the option locally, they can buy their own green
tags or other "carbon offset products," like financing efforts for
clean-energy projects and reforestation elsewhere in the country. For
instance, Ms. Chafe came across NativeEnergy, a private company whose
majority owners are 11 Native American tribes in the Dakotas, Nebraska
and Wyoming. For $8 a month, it offsets 100 percent of customers'
electrical use by supporting farm methane projects that harness gas
produced by cow manure. The company is based in Charlotte, Vt.
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