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Live Green, Die Green – Note on Greener Funerals
Almost 56 million people die every year with almost 155000 a day on average[1]. In addition to this, almost 1.6 tons of concrete is buried in the US while 16% of mercury emissions in UK are due to cement burials[2]. To add to this almost 50 million trees are cut every year in India for...

 
Happy Green Babies
 

 A new person entering the family can create a number of unexpected changes. With so much to do and so much shopping to complete, why not embark on a green lifestyle for your new loved one. The list of green products include cloth diapers, organic food, fair-trade clothing, etc. Read on to...

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Hartwell Paper—Seeking Solutions in wake of Copenhagen’s Debacle

Anubhav Kapoor

The Copenhagen Meet 2009 was unable to provide a unified platform to seek solutions for problems precipitated by the climate-change crisis. As a result, environmentalists and ecological conservationis...

Resolving your ‘Global Cooling’ Fears!

Anubhav Kapoor
Media coverage around the world seems overwhelmed with the theory that something parallel to the ‘Ice Age’, though a lot less extreme in terms of the intensity of freezing temperatures has been unleas...

Are consumers themselves suffocating green consumerism?

Anubhav Kapoor

Green lifestyle trends are being increasingly advocated around the world and every consumer-centric brand is becoming increasingly conscious of its ‘green’ image. Even the most conventional of consume...

Hotel in Rajasthan going green

Purva Bhandari

Fort Khejarla in Rajasthan, India has always been committed to sustainable development. Mr. Ramendra Bhandari, the Director believes every member of the team from the top-level Directors to the newest ...

Gustav Carlsson

Gustav Carlsson

Administrator
Gustav Carlsson-Finland-Swedish engineer and Geographes with the natural geography as a specialty. He lives in a medieval castle in France and divides his days between building boats and running Bed &...
Johan Ehrenberg

Johan Ehrenberg

Administrator

Johan Ehrenberg is CEO ETC Utveckling (production company), editor of the magazine ETC, CEO Egen El- alternative (electricity for domestic use, author etc...


Name: Johan Ehrenberg
Milk: Organic milk
Unkn...
Live Green, Die Green – Note on Greener Funerals

Live Green, Die Green – Note on Greener Funerals

Purva Bhandari
Almost 56 million people die every year with almost 155000 a day on average [1] . In addition to this, almost 1.6 tons of concrete is buried in the US while 16% of mercury emissions in UK are ...
Greener transportation

Greener transportation

Purva Bhandari
The need for transportation cannot be ignored. In all parts of the world, campaigns are being carried out to encourage people to use public transport and start car-pooling. However, using public trans...

Environmental Vegetarianism

Anubhav Kapoor

The entire world’s attention is focused towards the upcoming Copenhagen Meet wherein world leaders are expected to lay down a strategy of how nations will come together to prevent the certain, ecologica...

It's hard to be green in Santiago

For the last few years I have tried to be as green as my resources allow me, but even being very careful an conscious, living in Santiago de Chile, seems to be incompatible with my best intentions.

This is basically because the whole city system appears to sabotage recycling, proper use of water and electricity and disposal of polluting substances. Whether a matter of culture or simply a lack of common sense, it can be very irritating and it is certainly not doing any good to my mother country.

 

Here is a list of the most common issues I have to deal with everyday:

 

1.    NO RECYCLING BINS: The word “recycle” is just being heard of at schools, so only a few places in the city use separate containers for garbage and items to be recycled. Even if you do separate your trash, the collectors put it all together in the dump.

 

2.    NO COLLECTION OF ITEMS: Years ago special containers for glass bottles were placed outside the supermarkets. Other containers for the disposal of batteries were placed in downtown Santiago. At first, nobody collected the containers and now they can take months to do so. As for batteries, many homeless people steal the worn-out batteries to give them a “second-life” by heating up the bottom of each unit with a lighter.

 

3.    CONSTANT WASTE OF WATER AND ELECTRICITY: Just enter a public toilet here and you’ll see a water tap running and the light on when nobody needs it. I still remember one occasion at the cinema when I discovered that the guy doing the cleaning, used the running water (running for hours) to get rid of the smell of gas that concentrated in the toilets (they were placed in the basement).

 

4.    ANTI-POLLUTION POLICIES NOT RESPECTED OR NOT ENFORCED: The only time when people care about pollution in Santiago is when the smog is too thick. Then the authorities declare the city under environmental emergency and limit the traffic and ask people to stay home. On the same days I have seen municipal trucks sweep the streets with big brushes and no addition of water, so the resulting cloud of dust has been huge. I have also witnessed groups of planes freely performing acrobacies and helicopters flying very low because of their training. In fact, every time I have complained to the local authorities I have received either a very stupid answer like “the zone is under the jurisdiction of the air force” or no answer at all.

 

Santiago is a very nice and modern city, but in environment-friendly practices we are far behind any other city of the first world. Acoustic pollution is infuriating, but there is no legal way to protect yourself from harmful practices; local judges declare themselves incompetent in these and other pollution matters and leave the processes unattended. Government environmental protection offices on the other hand, never answer to individual complaints about trash disposal, gas emission, smoke and particles or any other form of pollution. They only act when there is an emergency going on and they have made us become used to that.

 

As for the air, the emission of particles and CO2 raise to alarming figures in winter, because of weather conditions and poor ventilation, due to topographic barriers. Every winter people die because the air is a disaster, and the actions taken to avoid this, seem to be pointless. Remedial actions, like changing the public transport system, have proved to be worse than the reason originating them, as no penalties are really applied for the breach of current regulations. The new buses and the freightliner trucks moving up and down Santiago produce a lot of fumes, but only a small percentage is penalized. The same happens with other sources of contamination, like kerosene heaters, ground movement or street sweeping. People are used to contaminating a lot, and even though they know it’s wrong, they don’t  suffer any direct consequences. Re-educating the population  will take years, so the only possible immediate solution seems to be the proper enforcement of the law. But if the auditing bodies stay blind to their responsibility, Santiago will continue to be one of the most polluted cities in the world.

Facts:

The environmental burden on health and life expectancy in Chile compared to the other 152 countries in the WHO studie (data from 2004)

  • Place 88: Disability Adjusted Life Years per capita and year is 0.8 compared to 0.0 in New Zealand
  • Place 96: Outdoor air quality: 62 μg pm10/m3 compared to 16 μg pm10/m3 in New Zealand.
  • 15 100 death per year could be saved by a healthier environment
  • 15% of the total burden in the country could be improved by a healthier environment

Data from WHO, presented by DoBeGreen.se

Download data from DoBeGreen

See the complete list

 

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