Tag Archives: recycle

Old Navy, Office Depot Collecting Old Flip-Flops, Pens For Recycling

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Today, April 22, is Earth Day! And if you’re wondering how you can contribute to our planet’s conservation, gather your junk and take it to Old Navy or Office Depot. Until tomorrow, people can take their unwanted pens, markers and mechanical pencils of any brand to Office Depot. TerraCycle, a recycling company, will then use them to make office supplies like organizers and trash cans. Meanwhile, until May 21, people can take their unwanted flip-flops to Old Navy. TerraCycle will mix, melt and extrude the footwear into plastic boards. The boards then will be used as structural pieces in playgrounds which will be donated to communities across the country. DAILY DEAL: Get A Free Starbucks Coffee On Earth Day How To Recycle Anything

Old Navy, Office Depot Collecting Old Flip-Flops, Pens For Recycling

IKEA Sells Used Furniture (Only in Sweden for Now)

Photo: Flickr , CC Might Expand to Other Countries Speaking of ” Reduce, Reuse, Recycle “, IKEA Sweden wants to make it easier for owners of old IKEA furniture to give it a second life. Against their own commercial interest, the company is offering a free online platform where sellers and buyers can find themselves, and they aren’t even taking a cut of the transactions. Read on for more details…. Read the full story on TreeHugger

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IKEA Sells Used Furniture (Only in Sweden for Now)

Artists Recycle Lottery Tickets into Stuff They’d Buy

An H3 Hummer built with $39,000 worth of discarded lottery tickets. All photos via Ghost of a Dream . Each year, millions of lottery tickets are sold to people who dream of winning big — but the vast majority of the time, those tickets end up being just pricey bits of trash. One recycling artistic team, however, has begun transforming all those losing tickets into something with real value — the stuff a gambler may have purch… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Artists Recycle Lottery Tickets into Stuff They’d Buy

Hey Kids, It’s Time to Recycle That Skull-Shaped Vodka Bottle!

Screenshot from gpi.org/ehunt . This online scavenger hunt looks like it’s for kids. There’s the Glass Packaging Institute cartoon guy, smiling and urging us to recycle glass. This all sounds fine, except when you take a look around the launching page , which includes an ad for Crystal Head Vodka . The Institute is holding an online scavenger hunt, to educate people a… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Hey Kids, It’s Time to Recycle That Skull-Shaped Vodka Bottle!

Old Ink Cartridges Form Bike Path in Australian National Park

Photo via the Centralian Advocate The folks at West MacDonnell National Park in Australia had a brilliant idea for a new bike path connecting Alice Springs and Simpsons Gap. They made it out of junked ink cartridges. The material can last far longer than timber, and is a great way to reuse plastics. Plus, it looks great, and all for a fraction of the cost. … Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Old Ink Cartridges Form Bike Path in Australian National Park

Consensus Matters II: Blogging is not Science

Image credit: InfoThought When I wrote a post last week asking why so many people hate environmentalists , RecycleNot brought up a climate skeptic/denialist talking point I hadn’t heard in a while—that science does not work by consensus, and that argument from authority is a logical fallacy. On the face of it, it’s an attractive argument for those who don’t believe in man-made climate change, and one we heard many times when TreeHugger was inundated with ‘skeptic’ commen… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Consensus Matters II: Blogging is not Science

Viable renewable energy storage via giant gravel batteries

Energy sources like the sun and wind have the capacity to provide endless amounts of clean energy if we could only figure a way to properly store them when the sun isn’t shining and the wind isn’t blowing. A team of engineers from Cambridge University think they might have a solution: a giant battery that can store energy using gravel. Elevating the idiom “you’ve got rocks in your head” to a whole new level, these scientists hope to solve the sustainable issue plaguing renewables . About his battery Jonathan Howe, founder of Isentropic states that: “If you bolt this to a wind farm, you could store the intermittent and relatively erratic energy and give it back in a reliable and controlled manner.” Howe in order to prove his theories is designing and constructing a small pilot plant that could store 16MWh at full capacity, this could be enough energy to serve the electrical needs of thousands of homes. WorldChanging , in an article, describes how two properly outfitted silos of gravel 7 meters tall and 7 meters in diameter would be all that is needed for storage and retrieval of the renewable energy. Surplus renewable energy storage is a looming issue requiring a sustainably elegant solution, Isentropic’s battery may just prove to be one. (Photo credit: Seldom Scene Photography (was Old Dog Photo) on flickr ) Glossary: Renewable energy , Solar power , Water , Sustainable , Emissions , Lead, Renewable , Down , Trade, Technology, battery Products: Water

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Viable renewable energy storage via giant gravel batteries

How sweet the taste of chocolate lip balms

Three things to know about chocolate: Buying organic or fair trade chocolate ensures you are not contributing to child slavery and unfair labor practices . Mainstream chocolate makers haven’t quite caught up with fair trade sourcing yet (although some progress is being made ). You can savor the taste and smell of organic chocolate all day long with Eco Lips’ new line of Dagoba organic chocolate lip balms. I’m not big on flavored lip products, but as an advocate for fair trade and organic chocolate, I felt compelled to report on this important new development (ahem) in the world of chocolate lip balms. Eco Lips , a company known for its certified organic lip balms, has collaborated with Dagoba Organic Chocolate to create three lip balms that soothe your lips with organic ingredients while soothing your senses with the taste and smell of chocolate. Organic cocoa in your lip balm? If that sounds a little odd to you, you’re not alone. The new balms are a little too sweet for my own taste, personally—but the rest of my family thinks the review samples we tried are just fine, thank you very much. And there’s no denying these balms moisturize and heal chapped lips like champs. The new line comes in three flavors: roseberry (raspberry, rosehips and dark chocolate—my personal favorite and the most chocolatey); mint (a brisk mix of mint, rosemary and dark chocolate); and lavender (lavender, blueberry and dark chocolate). One of them will surely be the balm for your chocolate-craving soul—and lips. (Photo credit: Eco Lips ) Glossary: Organic , Fair trade , Fair wage , Sustainable

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How sweet the taste of chocolate lip balms

The Ides of March

Ah, Rome. The creators of “the road.” In honor of the great Roman murder of Caesar on this day, I thought it would be a good idea to discuss this great Roman invention…and how I think we should get rid of it. Okay, so that might be a little controversial, but look at it this way, it has been two thousand years since Rome was in power, surely we’ve got the great minds to move us to the next step of our transit evolution by now? What’s wrong with roads? Other than the pollution of cars, the resources and money needed to build and maintain them, and the continuation of the dependence on foreign oil that they support, plenty. The biggest problem is that they (and the suburbs and cul-de-sacs that come with them) are spreading like a cancer across our country. They take up too much space and interfere with ecosystems too much. It has to stop. They begin to cover everything. So how do we fix it? The goal is to get from point A to point B faster. Without the advent of teleportation (Come on, science, it’s 2010 already!) we are stuck with physically moving our bodies. Currently, the popular method of doing this is driving there. Where is there? Across the vast urban sprawl that is etching its way into the surface of America. So how can we get rid of roads? We condense cities. Portland, Oregon is the first city to go to battle for the restriction on building suburbs. The goal is to save the nature areas that draw people to Oregon in the first place from the builders and roads and strip malls and billboards. However, Portland’s plan has not been comprehensive or effective. The side effect has been to cause growth in the city to slow and to raise the prices of property within the city. Vancouver, BC has been battling sprawl and housing costs as well. Although they keep making provisions that momentarily keep housing prices in check, such as changing laws so that builders may now use all available space, including rooftops and alleyways, to build compact housing, and focusing on building one of the best public transit systems in the world. But with an estimated 2 million new people moving to the city in the next ten years, housing will be inadequate and the pressure to spread out will be on again. Are there any cities that are effectively dealing with this problem? Cities must be condensed, roads reduced, and cars eliminated. But how can we afford to live without them and maintain our standard of living?

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The Ides of March

Norman, Oklahoma Sustainability Classes

Want to know how to lessen your carbon footprint? Curious about solar power? Interested in recycling and saving energy? The Cleveland County Cooperative Extension will be holding weekly seminars about “sustainable” practices for the home. Learn from the experts! Every Tuesday in April 5:30 p.m.-6:30 p.m. April 6: ‘Rain gardens and Green roofs’, Dr. Reid Coffman, OU Landscape Architecture Department April 13: ‘Recycling in the Home’, Justin McConaghy, 4-H Youth Development Educator April 20: ‘How to Save Money and Live Green’, Sonya Meier, Family and Consumer Science Educator April 27: ‘Solar Energy for Homeowners’, Dr. Scott Frazier, Renewable Energy Extension Engineer Where: Cleveland County Fairgrounds Meeting Room 601 E Robinson, Norman, OK Please RSVP @ 405-321-4774

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Norman, Oklahoma Sustainability Classes