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ABOUT PEACE, LOVE, & UNDERSTANDING: We all try to live holistically, to be smart, green consumers, to support the causes we believe in. But if we really want to heal our world, we need more than topical remedies. If war against nature or nations is an infection in the human system, the antidote lies in strengthening what it most directly attacks: our capacity for compassion. Similarly, knowing how to properly "value" Nature.

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Today, more than ever, consumers have the ability — and the interest — to invest in clean energy. Clean energy includes energy efficiency and clean energy supply options like highly efficient combined heat and power as well as renewable energy sources.

Travel Healthy, Travel Smart
















by David Wortman

On a recent trip to Vietnam, I reluctantly found myself looking for malaria medication in the best "pharmacy" available, a bare room full of unmarked jars of pills down one of Ho Chi Minh City's back alleys. Luckily, neither the pills nor malaria got to me. However, poor planning can pose a threat not only to one's health but also to that of the ecosystems we visit.

Eat Locally—and Wisely

Local cuisines should be savored, but mind food-borne perils, particularly where sanitation is minimal and government oversight meager. Poorly washed raw fruits and vegetables as well as undercooked meats can carry a host of pathogens, such as E. coli, salmonella and noroviruses (common on cruise ships). Most often, the result is nausea, vomiting and diarrhea, which can turn travel into a misery.

More exotic foods, however, can mean more exotic diseases and the decimation of endangered species. In West and Central Africa, for example, trade in wild game, or "bushmeat," is the most acute threat to apes, and primates may account for up to 15 percent of the total bushmeat market. The danger to us is real as well: HIV-1, the virus responsible for the global AIDS pandemic, is believed to have leapt to humans through bushmeat hunting. With an estimated 300,000 to 500,000 wild animals eaten annually, "Every year there's a good chance that we could end up with some disease emerging," William Karesh, D.V.M., director of the field veterinary program for the Wildlife Conservation Society, told National Public Radio this March.

What You Can Do

* Stick to cooked foods served hot to your table; only eat street-vendor food prepared in front of you. Avoid salads, uncooked vegetables, undercooked meats and unpasteurized dairy. Wash fruits with boiled, bottled or filtered water and remove peels.

* Be skeptical of unfamiliar meats. "Anytime that you are served something you can't identify, ask questions, and in all cases stay away from eating primates," suggests Natalie Bailey, assistant director of the Bushmeat Crisis Task Force.


* Where sanitation is iffy, rely on bottled water or canned beverages, or disinfect by boiling for up to three minutes, filtering or treating with chlorine or iodine pills. Look for water carrying the International Bottled Water Association seal, and be cautious of bottles that may have been opened and re-sealed. When showering, keep water out of your mouth, nose and open wounds.

* Bring portable water purifiers that treat for bacteria, protozoa and viruses, such as General Ecology's First Need Deluxe or HydroPhoton's ultraviolet Steri-Pen Adventurer purifiers, both available at REI ($97-$130; www.rei.com, 800-426-4840).

Mosquitoes and Other Vectors

While protecting against food-borne illness is your first line of defense, other diseases await unwary travelers. Take care when swimming, as schistosomiasis, carried by parasitic worms, and "swimmer's itch," or cercarial dermatitis, carried by microscopic parasites, are common in freshwater in parts of the Caribbean, South America, Africa and Asia. Malaria-bearing mosquitoes, endemic in West Africa and South Asia, infect 300 to 500 million people worldwide annually, while mosquitoes in Southeast Asia carry dengue fever and those in Africa and South America carry yellow fever. U.S. travel isn't risk-free either; mosquito-borne West Nile Virus claimed 165 U.S. lives last year, not to mention rodent-borne hantavirus and tick-transported Lyme disease.

What You Can Do

* Contact your doctor or travel clinic four to six weeks ahead of travel to plan for vaccinations and medications. Pack a medical kit, including needed prescriptions, first-aid supplies, extra medicines and—if you plan to be sexually active—contraceptives; see sidebar.

* Consider medical insurance for travel to destinations with disease and poor sanitation, or for high-risk adventure plans.

* Fend off mosquitoes and other insect bites with long-sleeved shirts, pants and hats. Use repellents sparingly, especially DEET, which can cause skin irritation and blistering at high concentrations. The less-toxic lemon eucalyptus oil in Bygone Bugzz or Cutter picaridin-based repellents also provide long-lasting protection (see GG #108). Bed netting permeated with pyrethroid insecticides (see below), such as the Mombasa Defender Mosquito Net ($26; www.rei.com, 800-426-4840), can be a useful shield, but minimize contact with skin and clothing.

* In tick-infested areas, check yourself during outdoor activity and at day's end.

* Where swimmer's itch or schistosomiasis is prevalent, swim in chlorinated pools or saltwater.

With 650 million tourists crossing international borders annually, travel is a leading cause of unintended invasive-species introductions. Fungi, insects and seeds hitch rides in luggage, on food and clothing, even on our bodies. "The organisms...that we import intentionally pale in numbers beside the masses of smaller living things we set in motion incidentally," cautions Yvonne Baskin in A Plague of Rats and Rubbervines: The Growing Threat of Species Invasions (Island Press, 2002, $16). And not without cost: In the U.S., invasive species have contributed to the decline of up to 46 percent of imperiled species.

Some countries require aircraft "disinsection" to crack down on alien invaders, forcing airlines to spray cabins with insecticides, including synthetic pyrethroids, which can spark asthma attacks. Passengers may be subject to in-flight spraying on some flights to Asia, Africa, the South Pacific and the Caribbean, while other countries spray planes immediately before passengers board.

What You Can Do

* Thoroughly clean boots and gear after use and avoid transporting seeds, fruits or other natural souvenirs.

* Ask if disinsectants will be sprayed on your flight, and request to deplane beforehand (see GG #97).

In the end, if the litany of pitfalls awaiting your travels seems daunting, consider that most travelers return home healthy and happy, with memories of a lifetime. And—with planning and a little presence of mind—you should, too.

Information and Resources

Centers for Disease Control, Travelers Health Guidance: www.cdc.gov

U.S. Department of Transportation, Countries Requiring Aircraft Disinsection: ostpxweb.dot.gov

International Association for Medical Assistance to Travelers: www.iamat.org

International Society of Travel Medicine, Travel Clinic Directory: www.istm.org

Information on Travel Health Insurance: www.insuremytrip.com

U.S. EPA Guidance on Insect Repellents: www.epa.gov

Wildlife Trade and Monitoring Network (bushmeat): www.traffic.org

World Health Organization Travel Resources: www.who.int


Green Room to Grow In

by Mindy Pennybacker

"If there's one time in their lives when people are motivated to make healthy lifestyle changes, it's when they're about to have a baby," says Philip J. Landrigan, M.D., director of the Center for Children's Health and the Environment at the Mount Sinai School of Medicine in New York. "As a pediatrician I encourage this, because fetuses and babies, whose systems are rapidly developing, are much more vulnerable to toxic substances than at any other time of life." As certain childhood cancer rates creep upward, childhood asthma incidence has doubled and learning disorders are also on the rise, parents would be wise to limit exposure to household toxins before their babies arrive. "There are many simple things you can do that will significantly reduce both health risks and your worries," says Landrigan, coauthor of Raising Healthy Children In a Toxic World: 101 Smart Solutions for Every Family.

For many parents nowadays, healthy means green. "I don't think you can separate the two," says Cara McCaffrey, a New York City mother. "Our furniture, our skin lotions, the food we eat, reducing and recycling plastics—every decision can have an impact on the air, soil, water and our health," Cara says.

Clean Air, Healthy Home

As her children Birk and Vale built with wooden blocks on a hemp area rug during this reporter's visit, Cara noted that the dark hardwood floor was polished with a no-VOC finish, free of petrochemical volatile organic compounds (VOCs) that produce the equivalent of indoor smog. She added that, with the help of green-minded decorator Renee Rizzuto, she's reupholstering her old couches and chairs. It's goodbye to the old polyurethane foam, treated with polybrominated diphenyl ether (PBDE) fire retardants, which cause developmental harm in animals and have infiltrated American women's breast milk. The new fillings will be organic cotton batting, natural latex and naturally fire-resistant wool. Organic cotton or hemp covers will be free of water and stain repellants that can emit formaldehyde and whose manufacture releases toxic perfluorooctanoic acid (PFOA). Both McCaffrey children graduated from a custom bassinet fitted with a new wool mattress ("I had them make one for the pram, too," Cara says) to an organic mattress in an all-hardwood crib to twin organic mattresses covered with wool pads. "An organic, untreated crib mattress is the best investment you can make," Cara says, noting that it's much more affordable than an adult mattress, and the baby spends much more time asleep in its crib than grownups do.

When Mary Tyler Johnson, M.P.H., and her husband, Jesse, hosted an environmental-health discussion in their Lower Manhattan apartment last year, "Many people in the room said their main interest was in protecting their baby," Mary recalls. She herself began eating organic foods, "especially foods that would otherwise have lots of pesticides" (like apples and strawberries) and using green cleaning products, no-VOC paints and least-toxic personal care products before she became pregnant with their first child. One good reason for taking precautions: Studies by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the Environmental Working Group indicate that all of our bodies have absorbed toxic chemicals. Many of these, such as lead, mercury and PBDE flame retardants, can cross the placenta, exposing the fetus. "Jesse had his 'body burden' tested and they found every kind of problematic chemical. I just wanted to reduce what exposures I could," Mary says.

Mary made sure that no pesticides were sprayed in her apartment and is seeking the same for communal areas, such as the gym and children's playroom. As she was working towards her master's of public health at Columbia, Mary learned about the long-term study of 730 non-smoking mother/child pairs being conducted by Frederica Perera, Ph.D., director of Columbia University's Center for Children's Environmental Health. While pregnant, the women wore small backpacks containing monitors that measured pollutants in the air they breathed. Mothers' and babies' blood and urine were regularly tested. One of Perera's early findings was that babies with higher levels of the pesticide chlorpyrifos in umbilical cord blood, a sign of higher pre-natal exposure, were born smaller than those with lower blood levels. As preschoolers, this group were more likely to have developmental problems, including early evidence of attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD). Higher prenatal exposures to combustion-related air pollutants, such as polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) and environmental tobacco smoke (ETS), lead to adverse effects such as stunted fetal growth and cognitive development. PAHs, produced by fossil fuel burning and found in ETS, are also being linked to chromosomal aberration—a biomarker of cancers—and asthma.

"It's of concern that we're seeing these significant effects from exposures occurring in everyday life in New York City," Perera says, adding that for the Harlem-based study population, these effects, especially those of ETS, "were much worse combined with the psychosocial stress due to poverty." Perera's team works with West Harlem Environmental Action in campaigns that seek to reduce diesel buses, show residents how to eliminate asthma triggers such as dust mites and refer children with developmental problems to programs that can help. "Identification of early life risks can have tremendous benefits," Perera says.

The good news, Perera adds, is that reducing exposures produces positive results. Chlorpyrifos was banned from residential uses in 2001, and in babies born afterwards, "cord blood levels of the pesticide came way down. The harmful effects on fetal growth were no longer seen," she says.

Baby Footprints

In addition to your child's immediate health, there's the environment to consider. U.S. retail sales of products for babies, toddlers and preschoolers reached $8 billion in 2005, up from $3 billion a decade ago. And that's not counting food, clothing and diapers! In 2005, the American birth rate rose 1 percent, adding 4,140,419 babies to the mix. All those baby products add up to an outsize environmental impact.

One sure way to step more lightly on the earth—and your budget—is to recycle and reuse rather than buy new, says Deirdre Dolan, coauthor with Alexandra Zissu of The Complete Organic Pregnancy. "People generously gave us so much wonderful organic cotton stuff, but it kills me that babies outgrow their clothes that fast," says Deirdre, a Brooklyn resident who gave birth to a daughter in November. "So 99.9 percent of her wardrobe is hand-me-downs. My sister gave me her 11-year-old crib." (It meets current Consumer Product Safety Commission standards, such as crib slats spaced no more than 2 3/8 inches apart.) Deirdre's two favorites swaddling blankets are 10-year-old cotton hand-me-downs. Mary and Jesse's newborn son sleeps in a hand-me-down co-sleeper, a crib with one open side and a sleeve that fits under the parents' adjoining mattress.

When she had to buy new, Deirdre went for an organic crib mattress and sheets and a Pure Grow Wool puddle pad. Mary's newborn son napped in an organic Moses basket, and the co-sleeper is outfitted with an organic futon. (This spring, when Jesse's Q Collection debuts its baby furniture line, they'll get a crib made of Forest Stewardship Council-certified wood from well-managed forests.) For a changing table, Deirdre bought a bureau in unfinished hardwood and had her husband coat it with a no-VOC finish from ECO of New York. For a changing pad, she covered a Babies R Us plastic pad with a piece of wool and put a small terry cotton fitted sheet over it.

Bye-Bye Plastics (Almost)

The soft PVC (#3 vinyl) plastic used in many "teething" toys, as well as in flooring, shower curtains and wall coverings, contains phthalates, chemicals that evaporate into the air, bind with household dust and have been implicated in children's asthma. Phthalates are also linked to reproductive and developmental harm—and, most recently, worsening of allergic skin conditions—in animals and some humans. Polycarbonate (#7) plastic, used in clear baby bottles, contains a chemical known as bisphenol-A (BPA), which behaves like estrogen in the body and has been shown to migrate from worn or heated bottles into the liquids they contain. Look for baby bottles made of tempered glass or less toxic, opaque plastic (#4 or #5).

In practice, of course, parenting is a continual balancing act. Although she has banned most plastics from her baby's room, Deirdre would not dream of parting with her mom's gift, "A super tacky plastic mobile with a really pure Andean pan flute soundtrack." A green lifestyle, in other words, need not be perfect. So try not to worry too much. "As a grandparent, I've learned that kids have a way of turning out fine," Landrigan says.

Resources

Renee Rizzuto Design sources natural latex, wool, organic cotton & hemp furniture, rugs; www.reneerizzuto.com, 212-253-6370

ECO of New York; www.environproducts.com, 800-238-5008

Columbia University Center for Children's Environmental Health, mailman.hs.columbia.edu/ccceh/index.html

The Center for Children's Health and the Environment, Mount Sinai School of Medicine, www.childenvironment.org

Recommended Reading
(see thegreenguide.com/books)

The Complete Organic Pregnancy by Deirdre Dolan and Alexandra Zissu (HarperCollins, 2006, $14.95)

The Peaceful Nursery: Preparing a Home for Your Baby with Feng Shui by Laura Forbes Carlin and Alison Forbes (Delta, 2006, $15)

Nursery Checklist: 10 Green Necessities
1. Moses Baskets, Bassinets
Moses basket with organic cotton futon and receiving blanket ($200; www.ourgreenhouse.com); palm leaf basket from a Honduran women's co-op, with organic cotton futon and liner ($185; www.naturalnursery.com). Note: Do not use handles to lift basket with baby inside.

Co-Sleeper Sleigh Bed crib ($300, solid wood) or Original ($186, steel w/ cotton liner) converts to bassinet, includes fitted sheet (www.armsreach.com). Organic cotton co-sleeper futon ($95) and cover ($40; www.kidbean.com)

2. Cribs, Furniture
Rather than VOC-emitting pressed woods, choose solid wood from well-managed forests and natural oil/wax or low-VOC finish.

Pacific Rim Arts & Crafts crib, Pacific Coast maple with natural oil/beeswax finish ($675; www.abundantearth.com); DaVinci New Zealand-pine Kalani crib ($460) and Emily 3-drawer changing table/dresser with graceful guardrails ($351; www.daxstores.com); Diktad changing table/bureau ($169; www.ikea.com)

3. Crib Mattress
Make sure mattresses fit snugly in crib.

Organic cotton & wool ($233) or natural latex core, ($324; www.daxstores.com); organic cotton & wool innerspring ($345; www.lifekind.com)

4. Bedding
Organic cotton sheets and organic cotton or wool changing & "puddle" pads: www.heartofvermont.com, www.coyuchi.com, www.kidsstuff.com, www.greenhome.com

5. Diapers & Clothing
Organic cotton sherpa Baby Bunting ($32) and Flannel Footie ($27; www.ourgreenhouse.com); organic cotton baggy gown ($22; www.ecobaby.com); also see www.underthenile.com, www.natural-babycatalog.com

See our Diaper Product Report for organic cloth and greener disposables. Wool, cotton diaper covers/soakers at www.tinytush.com, www.babybunz.com

6. Bath
Organic terry hooded towels: plain ($24, www.potterybarnkids.com); Tadpoles towel with mitt ($20, www.target.com); Georges Collection towel with embroidered bird ($40; www.oneearthonedesign.com)

Non-PVC "tubs" in padded polyester: Leachco Safer Bather ($16; www.amazon.com); Safety 1st Cradle and Comfort ($20; www.target.com)

Shampoo, soaps, diaper creams: Choose paraben-free and unscented, or scented with organic essential oil (avoid lavender and tea tree, suspected of hormone disruption); see www.earthmamaangelbaby.com, www.druide.ca, www.terressentials.com, www.usa.weleda.com

7. Area Rugs
Undyed wool ($273, 4' x 6'; www.oneearthonedesign.com)

8. Non-Polycarbonate Baby Bottles
Glass: www.gerber.com; #5 plastic: www.evenflo.com, www.gerber.com. See Baby Bottles Product Report

9. Toys
Choose hardwood or non-PVC plastic. Color-grown cotton stuffed rhino teether ($12; www.2kh.com). See Toys Product Report

10. Fragrance-free, least-toxic laundry soaps
See Laundry Supplies Product Report

*for hand-me-downs, www.urbanbaby.com and www.craigslist.org


Safe Swimmers' Shampoo

by Mindy Pennybacker

I want a green shampoo, not green hair. Yet, I'm an avid swimmer, and every summer the sun and chlorine give me chartreuse streaks. I've tried conventional swimmers' shampoos that claim to remove chlorine, but they contain potentially harmful ingredients such as SLS, DEA, phthalates and parabens, which are on The Green Guide's "Dirty Dozen" list. So I was delighted to discover Aubrey Organics Swimmer's Normalizing Shampoo and Conditioner For Active Lifestyles, which are free of these ingredients and available in 2-oz refillable, recyclable #2 plastic bottles ($3.25/2 oz. and $9.98/11 oz.; www.aubrey-organics.com).

Another great summer shampoo, perfect for the outdoors, is Liggett's Old-Fashioned Bar Shampoo, which comes wrapped in paper, not plastic, and is also "Dirty Dozen" free. Like Aubrey's, Liggett's sidesteps phthalate-spiked synthetic fragrances by using all-natural plant oils such as almond, olive and hemp. It leaves my hair soft and clean without conditioners ($5.95/3.5-oz. bar; www.canarycosmetics.com/personal_care.htm).

Both are sold at Whole Foods Whole Body and other natural product stores.

For more info on chlorine in pools see "Is Chlorine Safe For My Pool?"

For "Dirty Dozen" ingredients to avoid, see Dirty Dozen

Keep Your Bike Running on Vegetable Oil

by Vincent Standley


A Reader Writes The Green Guide:

I am an avid triathlete, and as such spend a good deal of time on bicycle maintenance. I am concerned about the impact of the products I use, such as chain cleaners and lubricants. Surely they must be toxic, especially given the fact that I have no choice but to use them outside, and they do spill on the ground. Are there any environmentally friendly products for bicycle enthusiasts? If so, is their performance comparable? Thank you in advance for your help!
Sara

The Green Guide Responds:

Annually, approximately 2.5 billion gallons of lubricants are consumed by American industries. Most of these are used in the automotive industry. Over the last 20 years, huge advances have been made in the development of vegetable-based lubricants and fuels. Changes in the logging industry have also lead to more environmentally friendly chain lubricants. Bicycles, motorcycles, chainsaws have chains that require constant lubrication. All three require what's called total-loss lubrication: Whatever is used on the chain will end up in the environment. A chainsaw will expel nearly a quart of lubricant into the environment every hour. To give some indication of the potential impact from a single chainsaw, one liter of petroleum lubricant can contaminate a million liters of water. Needless to say, such facts have led to pressure on the logging industry and subsequent innovation in the development of biodegradable chain lubricants.

Since bicycles already possess great green aspects, bicyclists should have no problem adopting (and adapting) alternatives to petrochemicals lubricants. Because of the relatively small market for bicycle-specific biolubricants, though, bicyclists must piggyback on the products developed for similar applications, such as chainsaw and motorcycle lubricants. Lubricants are by necessity extremely specialized. According to a recent assessment, over 5,000 different kinds of petrochemical lubricants are needed to accommodate their various applications. The significant difference between bicycle and chainsaw chains is the amount of friction and subsequent heat produced during use. Chainsaw and motorcycle lubricants must be optimized to work at sustained high temperatures far beyond the demands of a bicycle. Consequently, these products penetrate well but have higher viscosity and can attract gritty debris when used on a bicycle. The mixture of sand and oil is extremely abrasive and will actually shorten the life of the chain.

As far as how well they work, biolubricants hold their own against conventional petroleum products. Once study done by the Alberta Research Council, concluded that "the performance of the biolubricant in the field of application was very comparable to the petroleum-based oil." However, a general weakness of what the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) calls "biobased" oil is it's tendency to oxidize more quickly, which leads to an unwanted increase in viscosity even at high temperatures. To counteract the problem, biobased oil usually contains many additives. The USDA considers these products biobased as long as they contain a minimum of 51 percent biomaterial. Further, the problem of oxidization has lead to the creation of genetically modified soybeans (for frying oil), by companies like GM, that have high levels of oleic acid which organically resists oxidization. Genetically-engineered soybean oil has, however, been too expensive for bio-based lubricants so far.

There are now a handful of biolubricants marketed specifically for bicyclists, which claim to be vegetable-based and petroleum-free. It would be more economical to use a product for chainsaws if you can figure out someway of thinning it, though it may be a while before there's a biosolvent that can be mixed with a biolubricant. When using conventional chain oil, bicyclists often use paint thinner to lower viscosity. With regards to a biosolvent that can be used to clean a bicycle chain, you're in luck. Several biodegradable, non-petroleum chain cleaners are available.

Resources

Biodegradable degreasers made from citrus extracts:
Pedro's Oranj Peelz.
16 oz bottle $9.99
www.pedros.com

Citrus Chain Brite
16 oz $5.88
www.branfordbike.com/bikecare/bcare2.html#item1

Finish Line Citrus Degreaser
20 oz $9.88
www.branfordbike.com/bikecare/bcare2.html#item1

Biodegradable detergent degreasers:
available at www.branfordbike.com/bikecare/bcare2.html#item1

Finish Line Ecotech
12 oz $7.88

Bio Chain Brite
16 oz $8.88

Pedro's Bio-Degreaser
$12 oz $6.88

Biodegradable vegetable based lubricants:
SoyClean Penetrant and Lubricant
22 oz spray $6.49
www.soyclean.biz

BioBlend Chain and Cable Lube
www.bioblend.com

Prolab Bio-Chain
1 418-423-7507
www.alibaba.com

Green Living 101: Getting Around

by Sarah Lipman

As a senior in college, I've learned the hard way that having a car on campus can be more trouble than it's worth. With hundreds of other students also vying for that coveted parking space, you're usually out of luck if you're not on campus by 8 a.m. And once you've finally found a parking space (across campus, nonetheless), you have to hightail it from the parking lot to class just to avoid glaring looks from professors for ducking in late.

Add those inconveniences to rising gas prices and the other environmental costs of driving, who really wants the extra hassle? Erik Schick, a junior at Arizona State University agrees that having a car on a big campus with minimal parking is too big of a pain. "Everyone rides their bikes and skateboards here, which is good because Tempe is already a big city with cars all around releasing emissions. The fewer cars there are on campus, the better for the environment and for our own health."

He's right. Besides cutting your stress level in half, cutting driving out of college life can have a huge impact on reducing your carbon footprint. For every gallon of gas burned, 25.3 pounds of carbon emissions are released into the atmosphere in addition to other harmful vehicle emissions like nitrogen oxide and hydrocarbons, which all deplete the ozone. Luckily, there are tons of other ways to get around campus—from rental cars to carpools or shares to trains and buses.

Most universities offer some form of public bus service to help students get to and from classes. Some even operate shuttle buses that run on less-polluting biodiesel and pollution-free hydrogen power. The University of Delaware, University of Colorado at Boulder and SUNY Stony Brook have all adapted cleaner modes of transportation for their students. But what should you do if you actually want to leave campus? Here are a few alternatives if your city or university lacks an effective transportation system:

Car Shares

Car-sharing programs are growing rapidly across the country—good news for the college-aged considering that most car rental companies prohibit people under 21 from renting cars. Zipcar, the largest car-sharing company in the world, has formed partnerships with more than 40 universities, including University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Yale University and Massachusetts Institute of Technology. The program allows students with at least two years of driving experience and a clean driving record to rent a car for as little as $5 per hour plus an annual membership fee of approximately $35. Not only is sharing cheaper than owning, but it benefits the environment as well. Zipcar has found that car-sharing programs reduce driving by nearly 50 percent. "We estimate that Zipcar takes about 20 cars off the road and one car can serve around 50 students," says Adam Brophy, director of business development at Zipcar. To find out if Zipcar serves your university, see www.zipcar.com/universities.

Green Living 101: Dorm Room Decorating

by Sarah Lipman

Every year, high school students applying to university (and their parents) lose sleep, time and hair worrying over which college will fulfill their academic, vocational, artistic and other ambitions. And those serious about their environmental concerns will be just as focused on the green credentials of the institution they'll be funding for four years. If they're lucky, they're headed to a school like the University of South Carolina, which is home to one of the world's few LEED-certified green residence halls, the Silver-rated Green West Quad.

Serving double duty as residence hall and educational medium, the Green Quad complex includes three residential buildings, which house around 500 undergrads, and the Learning Center for Sustainable Futures, a research and educational facility focused on environmentalism and community development.

"We wanted to make it like a green bubble for the campus and community," says David Whiteman, faculty principal of the Quad and director of the learning center. But, he says, "We're also trying to look holistically at the entire social economic system that needs to be in place to have a sustainable society," noting that, this fall, they'll start a community garden and host seminars on local food.

The complex is outfitted with features standard to most LEED-certified buildings: solar panels, recycled materials, a green roof and low-VOC paints and finishes. But it also has a few unique aspects, like a changing room to encourage bike commuting and a five-kilowatt hydrogen fuel cell that generates a small portion of the complex's energy and is also used as a teaching tool for the university's chemical engineering program.

Green residence halls are slowly but surely spreading across the country, appearing on both coasts at Portland State in Oregon, the University of California-Berkeley and Carnegie Mellon in Pittsburgh. Their rarity, while making them unique, can seem frustrating to college students looking for an eco oasis during those four stressful years.

Fortunately, the idea of a green dorm isn't limited to LEED certification or hydrogen-fuel electricity generators. What's more, you can create your own oasis without spending a ton of money. Just think used. Buying second-hand goods, or helping your parents unload their unwanted stuff (like that beanbag chair your brother wanted so badly but never sat in), is the greenest way to outfit a dorm room. If your family attic and basement come up empty, then frequent web sites like www.craigslist.org or www.freecycle.com where you can barter your way to a greener education.

If all your efforts at seeking used alternatives leave you with holes on your list, buy products like the following that can be reused as long as possible.

Bedding

Conventional cotton is responsible for up to 25 percent of the insecticides used worldwide, so look for 100 percent organic cotton or bamboo sheet sets. West Elm also sells affordable organic cotton sheets, which are colored with low-impact dyes to spruce up your room ($29-119; www.westelm.com), and Bed Bath & Beyond sells a bamboo twill set ($40-80; www.bedbathandbeyond.com). Pair those with an old quilt or blanket from home and a Natura Organic Cotton Comforter (call for discount pricing; www.natural-beds-pillows.com, 800-278-5004) and Greenfeet's recycled polyester-filled Eco-Basics pillow ($18.50; www.greenfeet.com).

Bath

If your dorm room is suite style, chances are you have your own bathroom. PEVA shower curtains by Ikea ($8.99; www.ikea.com) are affordable alternatives to shower curtains made with PVC vinyl, which not only contains hormone-disrupting phthalates but is also the most environmentally damaging plastic, releasing carcinogenic dioxin into the atmosphere during production. PEVA contains no chlorine (the source of dioxin) or phthalates.

You'll also want to keep a pair of shower shoes handy if you share your shower with other people in your room or on your floor. Try Simple Shoes' Toetami, made from rubber and PVC alternative, EVA ($28; www.simpleshoes.com). Before you shower, check out our Dirty Dozen Smart Shopper's Card to make sure the products you're using are free of nasty hormone disrupting and petroleum-based chemicals. Remember to cut that shower down to five minutes and dry off with an organic cotton terry towel set from Pottery Barn ($8-26; www.potterybarn.com).

Decoration

Get thrifty and decorate your room to fit your personality. Shop at local thrift and craft stores for unique frames and artwork, or scour online Web sites, like Wow Imports (www.wow-imports.com) or Global Exchange (www.globalexchange.org), for items that are fairly traded. Or make your own wall decorations with pictures from old magazines to create collages! Tack up photos of family and friends and leave yourself reminders on The Container Store's 100 Percent Recycled Rubber Bulletin Board ($25-35; www.thecontainerstore.com). Again, keep your eyes open at home for things you'll want to take to school with you. An old flower pot can make a great pen holder with a fresh coat of paint.

Before plunking down tons of money on a brand new rug that will just end up covered in everything from mud to cookie crumbs, stop by some of the carpet stores in town (or check out Craigslist) and ask if they sell or give away discontinued-carpet samples. You can make a colorful area rug with rescued carpet tiles tacked to the floor with double-sided tape. An added bonus: it's easier to clean one stained tile than an entire rug. Otherwise, Abundant Earth sells affordable hemp area rugs in a variety of colors and sizes ($65.95 and up; www.abundantearth.com).

Electronics

Let's face it—we're a generation raised by technology, so naturally you'll be bringing a TV, DVD player and MP3 player, along with your computer and printer. Plug everything, including your cell phone charger, into power strips that you can turn off when you're gone. For your calculator, use NiMh rechargeable batteries ($7/4 mercury-free Pure Energy brand AAA rechargeable alkaline batteries; www.sundancesolar.com). Finally, to brighten up your room, replace incandescent bulbs with compact fluorescent bulbs and reduce carbon emissions by nearly 150 pounds. Try Ikea or Wal-Mart for the lowest prices on CFLs and powerstrips.

If you're looking for a more eco-friendly TV or computer, see "Bigger Isn't Better: Choosing TVs and Computers."

Kitchen

Whether you're just getting back from work at your campus newspaper or a workout at the university's fitness center, nothing beats a good snack. Be sure to stock your Energy-Star-rated three-in-one refrigerator/freezer/microwave from MicroFridge ($389; www.microfridge.com) (which not only saves energy but also resources and less packaging than if you bought them separately) with lots of organic snacks from a local farmer's market. Find one at www.localharvest.org. Microwaves are better than toaster ovens, electric grills and electric frying pans because they concentrate heat, aren't big-time energy suckers and don't pose a fire hazard.

One other caveat: money will be tight, so don't waste it on bottled water when you can get clean, safe drinking water from the tap for free. Refill your SIGG stainless steel reusable water bottle ($20; www.mysigg.com) everywhere you go.

Storage

Lugging all your stuff to school is a pain, not to mention generates tons of waste. Borrow luggage and duffle bags from your family to haul your clothes, and if they'll let you, use them year round to store out-of-season items. If need be, pack in cardboard boxes that can easily be broken down and recycled rather than disposable plastic bags. Since cardboard can attract roaches and silverfish, it's not good for long-term storage, so look for PVC-free bags and containers. Not only is PVC an environmental scourge, it can discolor clothing and linens.

At the end of the year, instead of spewing unnecessary greenhouse gas emissions by renting a van or truck to bring everything back home, consider putting your belongings in a storage facility (check with your university's Residence Life office for a facility near you).

Once you lighten the eco footprint of your dorm room, you can focus your attention on greening the rest of your campus, like getting the administration to serve local, organic food in the dining hall or to switch to sweatshop-free college apparel. And, of course, you'll probably need to study for a few exams while you're at it.

Resources

Eco Checklist 2007: Green Gear for the Back-to-School Blues

Green Home Makeover Series

Energy Star: www.energystar.gov

Center for a New American Dream: www.newdream.org

Clean Green Energy

The Green Party wants to make sure that we meet all our energy needs without storing up problems for our children and grandchildren.

This means investing in sources of energy like offshore wind farms, wave and solar power that don't cause global warming. It means being more energy efficient so that we don't generate power just to waste it. It means ensuring Britain is part of one of the fastest growing employment sectors in Europe. There are more than 200,000 jobs just waiting to be created in clean energy, energy efficiency, organic faming, recycling and public transport.

Around 30,000 people- mainly older people and the very young- die in this country every year because poverty prevents them from properly heating their homes. The cost to the NHS alone has been estimated at £1 billion each year. Real Progress would be directing fuel grants and payments to the people that need them.

Real Progress means stopping a nuclear industry that can't even stand on its own feet. Nuclear power gets nearly two million pounds of our money in subsidies every day - enough to employ fifteen thousand extra teachers.

Real Progress means choosing clean, honest, reliable energy we can trust - not clinging to a failed nuclear dream.

Gina Dowding, one the 7 Green councillors in Lancaster, blew the whistle on Lancaster City Council allowing the local nuclear plant to get away with putting off paying its business rates at a cost to local taxpayers of £18000. Green MEP Caroline Lucas dug further and sparked a European Commission legal investigation that uncovered a vast web of subsidies paid by the Labour government to dinosaur nuclear companies that costs the British people 100s of millions of pounds every year.

© The Green Party 2006 Code, Design and Photo Credits
Published and promoted by Jim Killock for The Green Party, both at 1a Waterlow Road, London N19 5NJ.

Stop the Dripping

There are currently 400 million people worldwide facing severe water shortages, according to the United Nations. By 2050, that number will be 4 billion, yet the pain is already being felt around the country. In California, Governor Schwarzenegger has declared the first statewide drought in 17 years. Meanwhile, residents in some areas of Georgia were only recently relieved from a moratorium on car-washing and running sprinklers, while most of northeast Georgia still faces what officials are calling "extreme drought." All the while, an enormous amount of water is lost through seemingly minor drips around the house. A leaky faucet can lose up to 20 gallons of water a day, while a leaky toilet can flush an extra 200 gallons every day! What's worse, the toilet could be leaking and you might not even know it! To test for a leak, put five to ten drops of food coloring in the tank. If ten minutes later there's coloring in the bowl, you've got a problem.

Not sure how to stop the dripping? Check out H20use's repair guide, which includes sinks and toilets, or learn how to repair a faucet from the folks at How Stuff Works.

And if you're still having trouble, call your landlord, the plumber or the next-door neighbor who's really good with a wrench. Do whatever it takes to fix the leak in your sink, bath tub, toilet, garden hose. . .

© The Green Guide, 2008