Reduce Your Carbon Footprint Project - Jane Davidson AC - Amgylchedd, Cynaliadwyedd a Thai [Cy](2)
Reduce Your Carbon Footprint - Part of the Ramblers eTrails digital walking project. Jane Davidson AC - Amgylchedd, Cynaliadwyedd a Thai (2010)
Reduce Your Carbon Footprint - Part of the Ramblers eTrails digital walking project. Jane Davidson AC - Amgylchedd, Cynaliadwyedd a Thai (2010)
Reduce Your Carbon Footprint - Part of the Ramblers eTrails digital walking project. Featuring Hay-on-Wye Primary School, Wales, UK.
Created for a geography advert developed by Nikhil Atique Mohammed Luke
Ok so here comes the summer somewhere in the world, and with that on go all the air cons that contribute to our carbon footprint and in no way contributes to transforming our cities in sustainable empires. What good would one or two photovoltaic electric panels built from kits do for you, you may ask? Well, even if the panels you set up are not quite large enough in scale to take you completely off the power grid, they will surely help nonetheless. Powering even just a couple of lights and appliances with free, renewable solar energy is going to help both your power bill and the environment in the long run. This is precisely why more and more people are becoming interested in learning how to build your own solar panels. In comparison to premade sheets, these kits are less expensive and help to reduce the necessary initial outlay for the setups. Hence, they can more easily pay back their own costs, and you will start saving money faster. Even novices can take advantage of these packages since they are designed to be not too difficult to put together. Assembly of a panel from a certain package is a fairly short project that should not take more than a day or two, at the most. This also means that you can start using your arrangement to power your devices quickly enough, even though you have to build it yourself. This makes these kits a really feasible alternative to more expensive ready-made systems. Learning how to build your own solar panels is definitely a cost-effective …
An interview with Pierre R. Dubois, futurist and founder of Gaiaville by Leigh Carrico: Gaiaville LLC is a template or blueprint for the city of tomorrow created on an open platform that seeks to change our world. It will be a green, sustainable, zero carbon-footprint intentional village of 350 homes, where being green is not limited to architecture and building systems, but is rooted in an understanding of the interdependence, cross-fertilization and co-enrichment of all life forms and ecosystems on our planet. For more information, visit www.gaiaville.org.
John form Grants Pass Oregon has been Carbon Clenz for over 6 years. He swares by it and when You try it, You will too! This fuel catalyst has been rigerously tested and meets EPA approval. You can save money and save the environment at the same time. Go Further for Less!
The eCube is a patented device, made for commercial refrigeration systems. It will lower energy consumption, and lower compressor cycles by 85%, which will double the life of the machine. By lowering energy consumption by 20 to 35%, it lowers the electricity bill, which ultimately RAISES PROFITS!!!! www.gstarsales.com
www.telegraph.co.uk canadafreepress.com Agenda 21: www.crossroad.to More info on Climate Change / Global Warming: www.21stcenturysciencetech.com www.infowars.com www.infowars.com earthpro.info
The Bonneville Environmental Foundation, a national non-profit organization, sells BEF Carbon Offsets (formerly known as Green Tags), to replace traditional polluting sources of electricity with clean, secure, and renewable sources of energy that come from solar and wind power from across North America. To learn more, visit www.bef.org
Introduction into the work of the PCF World Forum from Jacob Bilabel (THEMA1), Rasmus Priess (PCF WORLD FORUM), Olivier Jan (BIOS) and Guido Axmann (Plattform Klimaverträglicher Konsum). The 6th PCF World Summit “Environmental Footprinting in Europe and Beyond: How Will it Shape the Corporate Agenda” took place at the Umspannwerk Kreuzberg, Berlin on the 26 — 27 October 2011. About 140 international delegates and speakers were in attendance, from fields of business, government, non-government organisations and academic institutions. The Summit explored current developments around environmental footprinting, ie standards, tools and initiatives that address the environmental performance of products and value chains, while keeping an eye on the global challenges and the business and policy imperative. More Infos here www.pcf-world-forum.org www.pcf-world-forum.org issuu.com