Archive for the 'Sustainability' Category



At Hotels: Green Key Cards on the Rise

Last month we blogged the introduction of Credit Cards in America made from biodegradable BioPVC and mentioned that this material has also been used in Hotel Key Cards, an industry that in America alone puts an estimated 1,300 tons of plastic into our landfills annually.

The good news is that in the last couple of years, biodegradable key cards have dramatically risen in popularity and availability. Last year the Marriot chain in the US started phasing in Key Cards made with 50% recycled material, soon all the 24 million key cards the company buys each year will be ‘Green’.

BioPVC, which contains enzymes that allow the material to biodegrade in less than 5 years, is not the only option hotels have when it comes to green key cards. The other 2 major offerings are Agri Cards, made out of plant material, and reNew Cards, which uses recycled plastics in its manufacturing process. These options are primarily distributed in the US through usfi Greenworks and Pineapple Hospitality.

green card types

Another option from Sustainable Cards that only last made its debut at the Democratic National Convention, are Wooden cards made from  PEFC (Program for the Endorsement of Forest Certification) certified wood.

With this much choice, it will be easy for hotels to find a variant to suit their environmental focus / message and with there being very little difference in costs when compared to the PVC option, they will have no excuse not to adopt these cards. 

More: GreenLodgingNews, Luxist, Environmental Leader

Ethical Fashion Show: It Travels!


If you could not get enough of Ethical Fashion at Estethica at London’s Fashion Week. Here’s an Ethical Fashion Show that comes to you! That is of course if you live in Paris, Milano, or Rio de Janeiro.

Running since 2004, the show presents a wide variety of designers (100!) from across the globe that ‘respect people, the environment and the precious traditional skills inherent to each culture‘. From Veja (France) to Eco Logika (Australia) and Samant Chauhan (India).

Organised by Universal Love, the show just wound up in Milano (1st – 3rd March) and will be in Rio in Summer (June 11th – 14th) and then wind up the year in Paris (1st – 4th October).

Also Blogged At: EcoFashionWorldCentre for Sustainable Fashion, MyFashionLife, YouthXChange

Press Release: Here

International Polar Year Celebrates Inuit Partners in Arctic Research

Last Wednesday marked the end of the International Polar Year (IPY 2007 – 2008), a year which saw 60 countries spending $1.2 billion on building knowledge around the polar ice caps, global climate systems, polar bears and equally important, the Arctic peoples.

Involving the Arctic communities was a key focal point of the 4th edition of the IPY, building on past efforts where “a typical Arctic family was 5: 2 parents, 2 children and 1 anthropologist” to include community education and research institutions as full partners.

Full partners that have been enthusiastically participating in activities ranging from climate monitoring to keeping track of local wildlife populations.

Now instead of helplessly watching the industrial world’s actions destroy their environment, Arctic communities, through efforts during the IPY, have been able to play active roles in developing knowledge that will dictate the world’s actions to address the urgent need to preserve our Polar regions.

Link: International Polar Year Celebrations

Bulgaria’s Energy Choice: Nuclear or Wind

 Green Choice
As individuals we often make choices that reflect how sustainable or green we want to be. Whether its buying local produce or choosing to subscribe to ‘green power’ from our power suppliers, we have choices.

Its quite confronting when a sovereign nation does not have the same freedom of choice, at least when it comes to energy sources.

Forced to Close

Kozloduy Nuclear Facility

Kozloduy Nuclear Facility

When Bulgaria ascended to the European Union (EU) in 2007, 2 of its 4 Nuclear Power Plants (NPPs) in Kozloduy, the country’s only operational nuclear power complex, were forced to cease operation due to Safety Concerns. This left the country with only 2 NPPs generating 2,000 Megawatts of electricity or 40% of the country’s electricity. A situation it did not have a choice in.
The EU did compensate the Bulgarian Government with funds of €500m but many in the country feel that this was grossly inadequate and would rather have the 2 NPPs back online. Nuclear power is not seen as a threat in Bulgaria but as a solution, and to many, the only solution. Kiril Nikolov, Deputy Director of Kozloduy, puts it bluntly, “Only nuclear power can provide the sheer amount of energy which mankind needs”

The Russian Option I

Inside Kozloduy

Inside Kozloduy, Source: BBC

This attitude has led Bulgaria to pursue its Nuclear Power strategy relentlessly, even in the face of one glaring problem. The country still has not developed a solution to deal with the vast quantities of Toxic Nuclear Waste generated from its plants. Until recently, the 2 remaining NPPs in Kozloduy were choking on their own waste and on the verge of shutting down.

Faced with desperation, Bulgaria again had no choice. It resumed a contract to transport its Nuclear Waste to Russia for processing. Russia’s high price coupled with Ukraine enforcing a substantial transit fee has kept other Eastern Europeans, like the Czechs, from considering this option and instead electing to develop solutions at home. 

Bulgaria is also keenly aware that the contract with Russia also states that one-day, all that Nuclear Waste will be re-imported into Bulgaria for storage, but it has no choice.

Cleantech

Or does it? 

Wind Farm in Kaliakra, Bulgaria

Wind Farm in Kaliakra, Bulgaria

In the last 2 years there has been a flurry of interest to build Wind Farms to generate electricity throughout Bulgaria and especially along its Black Sea coast. GE last week announced plans to build a $1 billion Wind Farm that will generate 500 Megawatts of Electricity.

This plant alone will generate 7 times more electricity that is currently being produced by Wind Power in Bulgaria, a paltry 70 Megawatts or 1% of the country’s electricity needs.

GE is not alone either, with AES (United States), EVN (Austria) and Alpiq (Switzerland) also announcing plans to build Wind Farms in the country. 

With this much foreign investment in Wind Farms, could Bulgarians finally be free of their reliance on Nuclear Power? After all, Bulgaria does have an obligation to an EU 2020 objective of 16% reliance on Renewable Energies.

The Russian Option II

Nuclear Plant Building Site, Belene. Source: BBC

Nuclear Plant Building Site, Belene. Source: BBC

In January 2008, Bulgaria’s government signed a contract with a subsidiary of Russia’s Gazprom to build… a $5.8 billion Nuclear Power Plant. A few years and 2000 Russian experts later, Bulgaria will play host to the 1st Russian Built Nuclear Facility in the European Union. A situation that makes Brussels very nervous, and not only because it is being built in Belene, a region extremely prone to severe earthquakes.

The Freedom to Choose?

In the years to come, Bulgarians will finally have a choice as Wind Power presents itself as a viable alternative to Nuclear Power. And if Bulgarian consumers do choose Wind Power, there will still be plenty of takers for Russian Bulgarian Nuclear Energy in the Region. Now if only the region would be as open to accepting Bulgarian Nuclear Waste when Russia ‘returns’ it.

Links:

Nuclear Dilemma in Bulgaria: BBC 1, BBC 2

GE Wind Farm in Bulgaria: Reuters, Greener Ideal

Deutsche Bank HQ Goes Green

Deutsche Bank HQ

Deutsche Bank HQ

Deutsche Bank has announced plans to give its Headquarters in Frankfurt a “Green Overhaul” which will deliver:

- 55% Reduction in Energy Use

- 55% Reduction in Carbon Emissions

- 43% Reduction in Water Consumption

- While recycling 98% of all Construction Waste

The 155m high buildings, known as ‘Debit’ and ‘Credit’, house 100.000 m2 of office space and was first occupied by Deutsche Bank in 1984.

Some features that Imtech, in charge of carrying our the ‘Green’ modernisation, will implement include:

- Opening Windows for Natural Ventilation

- Low Energy Facilities for Heating & Cooling

- Intelligent Building Management System

- Water Saving Systems

- Grey Water Recycling

- Intelligent Lighting

When it is completed in 2010, Deutsche Bank plans to obtain a Platinum award from the LEED (Leadership in Energy and Environment Design) program managed by the US Green Building Council.

This sounds like a great example of sustainability thriving in the financial crisis because it just makes better business sense.

But the real question is, can Deutsche Bank’s new HQ outscore another recently refurbished HQ in New York City (which LEED awarded the Highest Point Total in the world for any commercial interior) ?

More on Deutsche Bank HQ’s Modernisation at: Webwire, BusinessGreen, BuildingSustainability

Deutsche Bank’s Website: GreenTowers

Previous EvolvingChoice Article on Deutsche Bank’s new Middle East CSR Foundation

Wokai Launches!

Last week, Wokai officially launched its microfinance platform to provide support to rural entrepreneurs in China with a focus on women. The platform which has been in Beta in the last months has already attracted more than 200 contributors!

Definitely an organization to watch.

Wokai Website: Here 

Wokai Blog: Here

At Davos: Coca Cola on Top Sustainable Corporations List

Last week, Coca Cola (alongside BHP Billiton?!) appeared in the “Global 100: Most Sustainable Corporations” list released at the World Economic Forum in Davos. 

Has Coca Cola, which received significant criticism for the sustainability of its businesses in years past (some university campuses even stopped purchasing all Coca Cola products), turned around? 

If it IS Greenwash, they’ve been very thorough, in the same week Coca Cola was also awarded the Gold Medal for International Corporate Achievement in Sustainable Development from the World Environment Center.

This could be the real thing though with John Brock, Coca Cola’s CEO, in an interview with Knowledge@Wharton declaring that “Sustainability is no longer Niche” and highlighting his thoughts on High Schools removing Soda Machines and his firm’s new fleet of Hybrid Delivery Trucks.

What do you think? Can a company that uses up so much of the world’s sugar and corn to produce its beverages and then ship these drinks thousands of miles to their consumer be a Leader in Sustainability?

More on the Top 100 List at: Environmental Leader, Social Funds, GreenBiz, CorporateResponsibility.net

Tesco: Green from China to Czechia?

Tesco CZCan Tesco meet its CEO Sir Terry Leahy’s vision of halving its carbon footprint by 2020? 

If it will, surely its operations outside of the UK which account for nearly half of its 4 thousand strong array of global stores will have a pivotal role.

Solar Power in Czechia 

In the Czech Republic, Tesco is in the midst of building the country’s largest private Solar Power Facility to generate 30% of the energy for the 24,000 sqm Distribution Center it will set above.

Setting aside the Solar Power however, the Distribution Center itself does not seem to be the most environmentally friendly structure around. It runs 24/7 lights burning, is kept at an average temperate of 9 degrees Celsius and is home to a fleet of 250 trailer trucks.

Some sustainable features have been implemented however, including the switch to fluorescent and a cooling systems which releases air (pushed underground during the day) at night to cool the building.

More at Adrian Chen’s Article @ The Prague Post

Another Energy-Saving Store in China

This week saw the opening of China’s 3rd ‘Energy-Saving’ Tesco Store in Tieling, North-East China. It joins the 1st store in Shanghai and 2nd store in Tianjin as models for Tesco’s plans to introduce updated energy-saving initiatives to all its 59 stores in China.

The ‘energy-saving’ features in the new Tieling store seem a little less than inspiring and  focus on efficient cooling systems which Tesco estimates will reduce  the store’s energy consumption by 25% (halfway to 50%!).

More at: ChinaCSR, BizChina and China Retail News

Earlier Article about Banned Plastic Bags in China: EvolvingChoice

Update: Tesco has just opened a store in Cheltenham, Manchester with similar features to the Chinese ‘Energy Savers’ claiming a 70% reduction in an equivalent store’s carbon footprint. From: BusinessGreen & ClimateBiz

 

What do you guys think? Could Tesco halve its Carbon Footprint by 2020?

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