Can Your Job Be Eco Friendly Without Working In A Green Industry?

Posted by Catherine - Under: Community, Environment, Food, General, How Did You Do?, Planning, Reduce, Transport, Wildlife

Can working in your local bakers be just as eco friendly as saving whales in the Pacific?

Yes, of course it can!  Just because you aren’t out there on the front line fighting deforestation and humanitarian crimes – doesn’t mean you aren’t making the best choices for your environment.

Don’t get ‘ethical’ issues confused with ‘environmental’ issues – the latter being active for the planet – and the people and communities benefiting from the ethical side of things.

How Can You Help?
Well, working closer to home is an easy one for starters.  Why travel miles to work if you can get a job within walking distance of your front door.  I mean, there will be people driving past you as they work in the offices or stores near your home, and you spend the day working close to their home!

It’s not always working for an eco friendly business that makes your individual job more eco friendly either.  I mean travelling 20 or more miles a day in your car to get to an eco friendly workplace by no means compares to someone who walks 5 minutes to work in a local bakers – even if the baker doesn’t use the most eco friendly equipment! Over a year the difference is more obvious.

And if you are eco minded – then you could help to implement changes to your workplace to make them more eco-friendly in themselves.  I mean if you could work locally to promote eco friendly practices in a locally run family business in your own community – what could be more eco friendly!

Look At Yourself Now:
Even if you aren’t planning on changing jobs – there are plenty of things you could look at in your current role and help to change.  And with the shortage of truly ‘green’ jobs about – you are probably better to become a mini activist in your current role!

However, it’s not all the same green!  Just because the charity you work for helps wildlife conservation – it doesn’t mean that everything else is a given.  For example, if you are working in a retail outlet on behalf or the many charities out there – is that really green at all?

Retail stores are a massive polluter and creator of waste – I mean you only need to look out the back of a store to see the tonnes of waste cardboard and other packaging being used.  All the pricing, stock holding and transportation add up to something huge – so can you really call this an ‘eco friendly’ job?

Ideas For The Future:
Start to think about everyday things in your job as well – rather than the large sweeping achievements of the great big companies.

I like to think that the people who are working for their community are making as much of a difference as those campaigners on the other side of the world.  It’s the people who just plod along day after day thinking of all the things they could do – but not doing them!

I know now isn’t the time to be giving up your job on a whim – but you could start to work through all those little things that have been nagging you.  Find out about local funding for certain projects that might apply to your business.  Promote communication methods that save energy and canteen options that can reduce food miles.

And, trying to find an eco friendly business improvement that can save your company money will always go down well with the boss – so try to find an cost effective eco friendly angle for everything!

Is Tinned Pet Food Eco Friendly?

Posted by Catherine - Under: Eco Basics, Environment, Organic, Pets, Reduce, Shopping

Do you know if what you feed you dog or cat is good for the environment or have you never even thought about it?

You have no doubt seen the huge array of pet foods available these days, either in the supermarket or the pet shop but is there much difference in their impact on the environment?

Basically there are a list of arguments as to why commercial wet food is not so good for anything really: it’s costs more to feed, it contains various sugars and salts, it costs more to transport, it uses a lot of metal and processing, and the standard of nutrition is less than in premium dry foods.

Lets take a look at the main points:

Packaging:
When you buy a tin of cat food; it will usually feed you pet for 1 or 2 meals – then you throw the can away or recycle it. When you buy a small bag of dry food it will feed your pet for many days or weeks, then you throw it on the compost heap or reuse it for rubbish. But how do they actually compare?

Lets use a cat as the example for this one. Basically a bag of premium dry food is usually around 3kg – that’s 3000g of food in the one bag. An average 3/4 kg cat would need around 40g of food a day, so the bag would last 75 days (nearly 11 weeks).

Needless to say that the same amount of days food in tins would be up to 75 cans per cat! Imagine the wasted packaging here!!! Lets break it down over a year.

The cost of making the tins:
The tins for the pet food need to be made in the first place. Because pets need to eat so many tins of food – there are thousands of tins made each day.

Wrapping the tins:
Each tin needs to have a label made, printed with the brand name and the ingredients and directions. This needs to then be glued onto the tins.

Packing the tins:
Pet food normally gets packed in bulk for transportation, and tins are normally sat on a cardboard (printed with branding) and plastic wrapped in a tray of 12. They are not usually displayed in this packaging so it is discarded before sale.

 Transporting the tins:
These trays will then need to be taken to a main distribution centre first and then transported again to a warehouse or supermarket warehouse when ordered. They will finally then be transported to the actual store that needs them.

Transport to your home:
When you buy the tins yourself (an average of 7 at a time because they are so heavy), you will need to package them up for transportation – usually in a plastic bag – and travel with them to your home.

Assuming you need those 75 tins, that is one 400g tin a day – that is 365 tins for the year. Bearing in mind you usually buy around 7 tins per shopping trip, that is 52 trips a year to the store, thats 52 journeys of your time and money to carry home your pets food.

If you live in a street where several of the residents also have a cat, (say a total of 10 cats) thats about 3650 tins a year that need to be produced for just your street. Your neighbourhood could need 5 times that – 13,322,500 tins a year for just 50 cats! Your recycling bins are going to be filled in no time!!

Water:
Dry foods do not waste money on transporting water half way across the world. They are dry foods because that is a better way to produce and transport high quality foods.

Wet foods can contain over 60% water – usually added back to the animal derivatives before canning – and you could argue that this is the same a real meat. But why should you pay for that water to be transported across the country when you can add your own water at home?

If up to 60% of a tin of wet food is water – then you are only getting 40% or less of actual ingredients – and bearing in mind most commercial wet foods contains vegetable material as well – how much of what’s left is actually meat?

Most cats prefer rainwater or water from your bathroom tap as they don’t contain as many minerals as our tap water – and will appear as though your pets are drinking more water when you start feeding them a dry food – but that’s not a bad thing. It just means that there was so much flavoured water in the wet food that it didn’t need to drink before!

Organic & Fair Trade?
Well, there isn’t really a commercially branded wet food that offers the choice of organic food for your pets – although there are several in the premium pet food market.

The pet food market in general is certainly lagging behind in the need for organic and fairly traded products and they will not start to branch out until people start asking and ultimately buying anything that does come out.

Don’t be fooled by ‘natural’ foods in the pet market, or ‘made with fresh chicken’ as all meat was fresh before it was cooked and all meat is natural too – they are false claims for a bit or ‘green-washing’. Never believe the advertising on the front of a product for the truth about a food – look at the actual ingredients so you can judge for yourself!

To Conclude:
Wet pet food uses a lot of packaging and wasted transport costs and energy – and you waste a lot of energy and money going out to buy it. If you want to reduce your impact – reduce your pets dependence on tinned wet food – and switch to dry – preferably a premium dry food (there are different types of dry food available).

Dry food is not bad for your pet, it is actually more nutritious. I know this because if your pet ever gets really ill or drastically overweight – your vet will recommend a prescription diet to fix the problem that is a dry food. So if vets use dry food to make sick dogs and cats better – why not use it when they are still healthy!!!