A guide to speaking ‘green’ and leaving a small footprint
Posted on Saturday, May 10, 2008
URL: http://www.nwanews.com/adg/Style/225316/
Here’s a primer for those who want to improve their environmental-quality vocabulary.
Biodegradable: By U. S. government definition, 60 percent to 70 percent of a product’s ingredients must be able to break down and return to the environment within 28 days.
Black water: Water containing human waste from toilets and urinals. Typically black water, after neutralization to ensure safe use, is restricted to nonpotable uses such as flushing or irrigation.
Carbon footprint: A measure of the amount of carbon dioxide emitted through the combustion of fossil fuels as part of the everyday life of an individual or the everyday operations of a business. Calculation can include waste disposal, food grown and eaten, gas to get to work, etc. You can calculate yours at Web sites like carbonfootprint. com. See also ecological footprint.
CFL (compact fluorescent lamp ): An energy-saving light bulb that is a replacement for traditional incandescent bulbs that expend much of their energy in heat rather than light.
Closed-loop recycling: Products of better-grade material made from a recycled source such as ceiling tiles made from aluminum cans.
Compostable: Material that breaks down to become what is effectively dirt. It contains no toxins and can support plant life. Compost piles use a system: green (grass clippings, vegetable and fruit scraps, etc. ), brown (dead leaves, straw, hay, wood ), air and water to turn waste into a growing medium.
Daylighting: Use of natural light to supplement or replace artificial lighting.
Downcycling: Products of a lower grade that are made from a recycled source such as carpet pads from tires.
Eco-friendly: Little or no impact on the native ecosystem. There is no legal definition for ecofriendly.
Eco-savvy: Someone who is environmentally aware.
Ecological footprint: The area of land and water needed to produce the resources to entirely sustain a human population and absorb its waste products with prevailing technology. The concept of an ecological footprint is used as a resource management and community-planning tool.
Flat pack: Goods the end-user assembles. The unfinished product takes up less space, so more can be shipped, saving fuel and emissions.
Gray water: Wastewater from showers, kitchens, washers, etc. Unlike black water, gray water does not contain human waste. Typically gray water, after purification, is used for nonpotable uses such as flushing and irrigation.
Greenwashing: When more money and energy is expended on trumpeting eco-friendly practices than in making those commitments a reality. Secondarily, it’s when something is touted as “green” (a self-described movement to reduce waste and help clean up the earth ) because of an ingredient, component, etc., but overall, it isn’t. For example, a cleaning product that adds a natural ingredient but still contains toxic chemicals.
Locavore: Someone who tries to eat things that were produced locally. Usually restricted to food sources within 100 miles.
Off-grid living: Doing things without electricity or other artificial power sources. For example, using solar power, a push mower, or a clothesline instead of a dryer.
Organic: Generally, organic foods use plants grown without conventional pesticides or artificial fertilizers and processed without food additives; or food products from animals that have not been subjected to routine antibiotics or growth hormones. According to the U. S. Department of Agriculture, organic foods must come from farms or ranches certified by a state or private agency that has been accredited by the USDA. Foods labeled “100 percent organic” must contain only organically produced ingredients, excluding water and salt. Foods labeled “organic” must contain, by weight, at least 95 percent organically produced ingredients.
Sustainability: Can be traced back to Theodore Roosevelt who said in 1910, “I recognize the right and duty of this generation to develop and use the natural resources of our land; but I do not recognize the right to waste them, or to rob, by wasteful use, the generations that come after us.”
Vampire appliances, vampire energy: Appliances that suck energy even when you’re not using them. For example, cell-phone chargers, even when they’re not charging anything, the toaster when there’s no toast in it.