Wal-Mart introduces packaging scorecard

From Treehugger:

As part of Wal-Mart’s continuing efforts to address its environmental footprint, the company established a goal to reduce packaging used by suppliers by 5% by 2013. In an effort to achieve this target, the retail behemoth has announced an innovative scorecard system. The scorecard will allow manufacturers to rank their current use of packaging. Scores will be given on several relevant categories including: greenhouse gas emissions produced per ton of packaging, raw material use, packaging size, recycled content, material recovery value, renewable energy use, transportation impacts, and innovation.

See a sample of the score card here: www.scorecardlibrary.com

Tips for Treehuggers

I just found this site thanks to Lifehacker.
The site has lots of tips on making your life more green.
Here’s a rundown on some of the site highlights…

  • The first installments of our How to Green Your Life series are out and cover your public transportation and meals…with more to come.
  • An unassuming Minneapolis city may be the first to bring solar-powered Wi-Fi to its citizens.
  • Starting in 2007, a new daylight savings time will save us upwards of 3 billion kilowatt hours of energy.
  • Now that we can buy wind power cards next to the granola bars at the grocery store, do we really understand what they do?
  • Slate.com and TreeHugger have teamed up to create the Green Challenge, a step-by-step program for greening your daily grind.
  • The 100-Mile Thanksgiving Challenge is on, bringing the holiday closer to home.
  • Winners of this year’s TED (Technology, Entertainment, Design) Prize include Architecture for Humanity founder Cameron Sinclair and legendary biologist E.O. Wilson.
  • Also in TreeHugger, our guest bloggers from Live | Work examine growing trend of products of service and access over ownership, green chemistry for the masses, and how to make your own non-toxic wallpaper paste.
  • Good news for pastors from the IRS

    What the IRS Did to Save You Money:

    For all you pastors and evangelists who rack up miles on year car each year for the sack of ministry, I have good news for you. The IRS has announced that as of January 1, 2007, the standard mileage rate for business purposes will be raised to 48.5 cents per mile.
    And for the church volunteers, the mileage rate for charitable service purposes will remain unchanged at 14 cents per mile.
    Log your miles. Enjoy the savings.

    Promoting on YouTube

    From CNET:

    In a sequel to its advocacy of internal blogs, Sun Microsystems has begun encouraging its rank-and-file employees to publish videos promoting the company’s products.
    Sun has launched an internal contest to see who can publish the most compelling video at video-sharing site YouTube, said Sun Chief Marketing Officer Anil Gadre. He said that Sun minions tell him, “If I could just get out and tell everyone about my product myself, we would sell so much more,” Gadre said. “YouTube allows us to enable every one of them to do just that.”

    This is a great concept. Last year Chevrolet asked customers to build their own television commericals for the Chevrolet Suburban and YouTube was flooded with ads (parodies – but added publicity for Chevrolet). Now Sun is using YouTube for its advantage by getting the people who use their products to advertise with the new “word of mouth.”
    How cool would it be if churches got behind this idea.
    What if your church held a contest for the youth and/or members to make a one minute ad talking about your church?
    What would it look like? What would they say is the best part about your church? How would people outside the church respond?
    If we could only get people in the church as passionate about the Gospel as they are about their iPods, we might get somewhere.

    YouTube named invention of the year

    Time Magazine looked over Gardasil, a vaccine that fights off a sexually transmitted disease and the Hug Shirt, which simulates the feeling of being embraced by a loved one, and chose Internet site, YouTube as the invention of the year.
    “YouTube had tapped into something that appears on no business plan,” writes Time’s Lev Grossman, “the lonely, pressurized, pent-up video subconscious of America. Having started with a single video of a trip to the zoo in April of last year, YouTube now airs 100 million videos and its users add 70,000 more every day.”

    Replace those bulbs with LEDs

    I remember as a kid my dad showed me how to make a small cardboard Christmas tree with lights that used LEDs. It wasn’t a bright enough light to light up much at all, but now developers are predicting household lighting uses for LEDs will be practical within the next few years. From CNet:

    Light-emitting diodes will become economically attractive as replacements for conventional lightbulbs in about two years, a shift that could pave the way for massive electricity conservation, according to a researcher.
    Right now, consumers and businesses can buy a light-emitting diode, or LED, that provides about the same level of illumination as an energy-hogging conventional 60-watt lightbulb, Steven DenBaars, a professor of material science at the University of California Santa Barbara, said at the SEMI NanoForum, taking place here this week. A principal advantage of the LED: It lasts about 100,000 hours, far longer than the conventional filament bulb.

    Changing conventional light bulbs to LED would save everyone money. Experts predict that within two years the cost of the bulbs will be $20 a piece, but would pay for themselves within a year with reduced energy costs. But on top of reduced costs, consider the reduced energy usuage worldwide:

    If 25 percent of the lightbulbs in the U.S. were converted to LEDs putting out 150 lumens per watt (higher than the commercial standard now), the U.S. as a whole could save $115 billion in utility costs, cumulatively, by 2025, said DenBaars, and it would alleviate the need to build 133 new coal-burning power stations.
    In turn, carbon emissions in the atmosphere would go down by 258 million metric tons.

    I’m picturing a house with solar energy running LED light bulbs. I can see the meter run backwards faster and faster everyday.