Living Green and Healthy: 5 Health Benefits from Going Green

I spend a fair amount of time on Living Green and Saving Energy describing how to go green and save money as a result. But as important as saving money is for most people, perhaps it is not the most important benefit of a greener lifestyle. Green living can improve your health as well.

Here are five health benefits you can realize from creating a greener lifestyle.

1. A healthier heart: Regular exercise has obvious health benefits. By walking or riding a bike to replace your car for short trips, you get some cardio exercise and save gas and reduce carbon emissions all at once. Even taking the bus or train will help, since you can walk or bike to and from the bus stop or train station.

2. A healthier diet: Buying locally-produced food saves on fuel for transporting that food to the market, and smaller local growers are more likely to offer organically-grown produce that is fresher as well. Shopping at farmer’s markets is a good way to find these items, making sure your food is pesticide-free. In addition, reducing consumption of meat lowers your carbon footprint due to the greater amounts of energy, water, and resources used to produce meat compared to vegetables. And eating less red meat is good for almost everyone’s health. Continue reading “Living Green and Healthy: 5 Health Benefits from Going Green”

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Why I Don’t Buy Carbon Offsets and Why You Shouldn’t Either

How to go green in the best way is a question many serious-minded people ask themselves. Green living habits and environmentally friendly practices are worthwhile and should be encouraged.

Finding ways to reduce, reuse, and recycle are the cornerstones of a greener lifestyle, as is attempting to repair any damage done to the environment by our lifestyles. It is the latter goal that has given rise to the proliferation of carbon offsets.

Carbon offsets have become part of the current green lingo. In broadest terms, a carbon offset is a payment made to compensate for carbon emissions. In principle, this payment is directed toward an action or technology that precisely reverses the carbon emissions caused by something done by an individual. For example, a 500-mile flight on a Boeing 737 airplane produces a relatively well-defined  amount of emissions. Divide that amount by the number of passengers, and you can calculate the greenhouse gas contribution by each individual on that plane. Continue reading “Why I Don’t Buy Carbon Offsets and Why You Shouldn’t Either”

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Solving the World’s Energy Problem – Part 3

In Part 1 of this series on “Solving the World’s Energy Problem,” I made the case that fossil fuels are finite and must ultimately be replaced. Biofuels are a suitable substitute for fossil fuels, as both fossil fuels such as coal and oil, and biofuels such as alcohols and biodiesel, are essentially equivalent: both are energy from sunlight stored in a concentrated form. However, since our capacity to produce biofuels is unlikely to ever be at the level to replace more than a fraction of the fossil fuels now in use around the world, the development of alternative energy technologies is essential to enable human civilization to replace fossil fuels at some point in the future. Part 2 focused on possible alternative energy technologies that were based on converting energy from the sun into usable energy. Included on the list were solar heating technology, solar photovoltaic power, and wind energy.

But in addition to energy from the sun, there is another source of energy that could help fill the energy gap created by the reduced availability of fossil fuels. This other possible source for sustainable, renewable energy is energy derived from the earth itself.

There are three earth-generated technologies that, I believe, can serve as large-scale energy sources. Continue reading “Solving the World’s Energy Problem – Part 3”

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Solving the World’s Energy Problem – Part 2

In “Solving the World’s Energy Problem, Part 1,” I have argued that fossil fuels are essentially fossilized energy from the sun. Since fossil fuels take millions of years to create and their supply is finite, at some future time our fossil fuels resources will be exhausted (or the limited supply of fossil fuel that remains will become so hard to find and so expensive to recover that its use will become prohibitively costly). I further proposed that biofuels are a suitable substitute for fossil fuels, but our ability to produce biofuels will never be sufficient to replace the enormous amount of fossil fuels that the world is consuming.

Therefore, the world will need alternative renewable energy technologies. Without prejudging exactly what those new energy technologies will be, I believe the best types of alternative energy technologies will be those that allow us to capture and use more energy from the sun. In this way the world would have a sustainable energy supply for as long as the sun is shining.

What might some of those renewable energy technologies be? Based on what can be envisioned now, I can think of three technologies that are nearing the stage where wide commercialization will be possible, and a fourth technology that, with appropriate scientific advances, offers potential in the next decade.

The first is capturing and concentrating sunlight to produce energy in the form of heat. A large project has already been proposed for the California desert to produce electricity by concentrating sunlight using mirrors to heat water to produce steam, which can turn turbines to produce electricity. Continue reading “Solving the World’s Energy Problem – Part 2”

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Solving the World’s Energy Problem – Part 1

This is the first entry in a 3-part series called, “Solving the World’s Energy Problem.”

The world has an energy problem. This energy problem began developing the moment that man invented fire. At first it developed very slowly, imperceptibly, when there were very few people in the world and humans were relatively uncivilized. At that time, much of the energy expended by humans was energy spent on activities for survival.

Times changed, and humans grew in numbers and in technological prowess. Eventually, mankind learned how to burn fossil fuels – coal, natural gas, and petroleum – to produce energy in ever-increasing amounts. These fossil fuels were plentiful and could be extracted from the ground cheaply. To this day, civilization on earth runs largely on the burning of fossil fuels.

It is useful to put into perspective how these fossil fuels came about. Coal, gas, and petroleum are all the result of long-dead plants and animals that were converted during millennia into the deposits of fossil fuels that remained buried under the ground until mankind discovered them.

So here is the all-important question. What was the source of the energy that produced these fossil fuels?

It was the sun. Continue reading “Solving the World’s Energy Problem – Part 1”

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