www.everythingsgonegreen.co.uk


Find Me a Milkman

Posted in Food & Drink, Recycling by Gone Green on February 12th, 2007

About a year ago now we were tipped-off about a website called Find Me a Milkman. Before we could even blog about the site or use it, there was a knock on the door and our local milkman was there drumming up business for the milk round. We signed up straight away and have been happy as hippies on a green planet since.

So why is having your milk delivered such a green option? Well, for starters, the milk-float is the classic green vehicle. Electric-powered and virtually silent, the milkman delivers your daily pint with very little in the way of emissions.

Secondly, every milk bottle goes back to the depot and is thoroughly sterilised before being re-used and re-filled. A milk bottle can be re-used between 12 and 40 times, better than tetrapak landfill cartons and HDPE re-cyclable plastic bottles. Now that’s green.


Goverment Must Help Us Go Green, Say UK Entrepreneurs

Posted in News, Commentary, Energy, Environment, Business by Gone Green on February 5th, 2007

UK owner managers are calling for stronger government incentives to encourage green behaviour.

New research by entrepreneur think tank, the Tenon Forum, reveals that almost half (48 per cent) of UK owner managers think the government isn’t doing enough to support their efforts to implement environmentally friendly policies in the workplace, with entrepreneurs citing tax credits as one of the most effective ways for the Chancellor to motivate green behaviour.

Most of the nation’s small businesses, however, are embracing environmental practices in the workplace. The Tenon Forum findings show that three quarters of SMEs recycle paper, eight in ten (81 per cent) entrepreneurs encourage staff to turn off equipment when not in use, and a quarter (24 per cent) promote car sharing and public transport to their employees. Nearly one in ten (9 per cent) small businesses have also measured their carbon footprint.

When it comes to decreasing their carbon footprint, business and finance and retail sectors are leading the way through recycling in the workplace, while the transportation and communication sectors are encouraging staff to turn off computers and printers when not in use.

Andy Raynor, Chief Executive Officer of Tenon, said:

“UK entrepreneurs are sending out a clear message to government. While most support implementing policies that reduce their environmental impact, they also cannot do so alone. SMEs need government to motivate and reward best environmental practices with tax credits so that green behaviour also makes a genuine difference to their bottom line.”

Here at EveryThingsGoneGreen we applaud any green moves by business and agree that government incentives may well help toward this goal. But to rely on government ‘handouts’ to enable green motivation is being lazy. We think that entrepreneurs should have enough get-up-and-go to be able to achieve green business ideals without the ‘green carrot’ being dangled in front of UK business.

Over at Startups.co.uk they report that Paul Allen, author of  Your Ethical Business: How to Plan, Start and Succeed in a Company with a Conscience, says:

“Do we really need government to give us an incentive when the incentives should already be there?” Allen told startups.co.uk. “One is the much wider picture of climate change and the other is the huge move towards ethical consumerism.

“People increasingly want to do business with companies that take their environmental impact and their carbon footprint very seriously.”

They also spoke with Dale Vince, the head of Ecotricity, who responded that he thought the claim was a “bit lame” adding:

“It makes you wonder, where’s the creative and dynamic flair that creates new opportunities and value? I think it’s probably that, for a lot of these guys, the environment is low down on their list of priorities, and blaming government is just a cover story for inadequacy.”

We tend to agree.


Factoid - Energy-Efficient Light Bulbs

Posted in Energy, Technology, Factoid by Gone Green on February 1st, 2007

Did you know?

To power an ordinary 100-watt light bulb for half an hour you’d have to cycle for 40 minutes.
To power the equivalent energy-efficient light-bulb that puts out the same light but is only 21-watts, you’d have to cycle for just 8 minutes.


Mexican Tortillla Protests

Posted in News, Food & Drink, Politics by Gone Green on February 1st, 2007

Tens of thousands of people have marched through Mexico City to protest at the rising price of Tortillas.

Tortillas, the flat corn bread and staple diet item for many Mexicans, has risen in price by over 400%. Many people blame the rise in demand for corn on the bio-fuels market where corn is converted to ethanol and used as an environmentally-friendly fuel in the emerging US ‘green’ car market.

The 1994 North American Free Trade Agreement allowed Mexico to receive cheap corn imports from the United States, but the demand for bio-fuels has diverted corn sales to the more lucrative ethanol production market and thus corn supply to Mexico is reduced and corn prices are up accordingly.

Not surprisingly, the tens of thousands who demonstrated in Mexico City were angry about the soaring costs of tortillas as there is the possibility of malnourishment amongst the poorest people in Mexico.