Remember This Site When You Need to Buy
Eco Gifts or Green Products for Your Home or Office
MAKE IT A 'GREEN' CHRISTMAS THIS YEAR

Friday, October 29, 2010

Green Power 4 Homes.com

The Best "Make Your Own Energy" Guide In The Market. Join Now to the affiliate program that pays out 75% ($31.25 of each sale. GreenPower4Homes.com - Learn How To Build Your Own Green Energy Systems. !!!Must Check It Out Now!!!


Check it out!
This post was made using the Auto Blogging Software from WebMagnates.org This line will not appear when posts are made after activating the software to full version.

The Green Clean Book

75% commission rate | Professional sales page with excellent conversions | No other product like it online | Best/Only natural health/homemade cleaning recipes book on CB | Unadvertised bonuses make refunds virtually nonexistant!


Check it out!
This post was made using the Auto Blogging Software from WebMagnates.org This line will not appear when posts are made after activating the software to full version.

How To create your Green Energy At home.

A new product on how to create solar panels and wind turbines at home. Green Energy For Everybody. Sales page already tested, conversion rate 3% from targeted traffic from green energy niche. No refund request from 50 sales.


Check it out!
This post was made using the Auto Blogging Software from WebMagnates.org This line will not appear when posts are made after activating the software to full version.

The Real Cost of Your Everyday Appliances and Devices

Amazon Green Blog: The Real Cost of Your Everyday Appliances and DevicesAmazon BlogsBooksMusicFood & KitchenCarsGadgetsMovies & TV Toys More Amazon blogsBlogs at AmazonAmazon DailyBabyAmazon GreenVideo GamesAbout this blog| RSS feedAmazon GreenMusings on making every day Earth Day« Celebrate Earth Day by Protecting O |Main| New ENERGY STAR® Televisions »

The Real Cost of Your Everyday Appliances and Devicesby Editor on July 14, 20106a00e54ed05fc28833013480867eef970c-800wi-6

 Image Credit: TreeHugger and GE

Found this on TreeHugger.com by Jaymi Heimbuch:

"GE and Pentagram's Lisa Strausfeld have come up with a fantastic way to visualize how good or bad our appliances and devices are when it comes to using up our home's energy. We know that homes suck up about 20% of all energy in the US, but the question is where that energy is funneled off to once it reaches our homes, and how much it's costing us to run that ceiling fan or that electric blanket. The interactive tool tells you how much energy that appliance or device uses in watts, dollars, or gallons of gas, as well as what one kilowatt hour yields for that device, and even better, it will rank each device so that you can see at a glance which you want to unplug.

Strausfeld told Fast Company, 'The hardest challenge was finding the right data, and making it engaging--ie, What the hell is a watt? It started out as a visualization of home energy consumption across the U.S. and became, essentially, a calculator.'" Read More.

One of the recommendations in the article is to find out what the worst offenders are in your home is to pick up a wattage calculator and plug in your devices to see how much power is being used when it is on or in standby mode.

Happy calculating!

~Amazon Green Scene

Posted in Environment, ScienceView blog reactions| Email this post|

CommentsPost a comment If you have a TypeKey or TypePad account, please Sign In.

You are currently signed in as (nobody). Sign Out

Name:

Email Address: (Not displayed with comment.)

URL:

Remember personal info?

Comments:

October 2010SunMonTueWedThuFriSat     12345678910111213141516171819202122232425262728293031      ArchivesOctober 2010August 2010July 2010TopicsEnvironmentScienceTelevision© 2009, Amazon.com, Inc. or its affiliates. All rights reserved.
The AmazonBlogs logo, Amazon Green and Musings on making every day Earth Day are trademarks of Amazon.com, Inc. or its affiliates.
Privacy Policy | Conditions of Use document.write(unescape("%3Cscript src='" + (document.location.protocol == "https:" ? "https://sb" : "http://b") + ".scorecardresearch.com/beacon.js'%3E%3C/script%3E"));COMSCORE.beacon({ c1: 2, c2: "6035669", c3: "", c4: "http://nozama.typepad.com/amazon_green_blog/2010/07/the-real-cost-of-your-everyday-appliances-and-devices.html", c5: "", c6: "", c15: ""});

View the original article here

Buying Greener Electronics with EPEAT

Amazon Green Blog: Buying Greener Electronics with EPEATAmazon BlogsBooksMusicFood & KitchenCarsGadgetsMovies & TV Toys More Amazon blogsBlogs at AmazonAmazon DailyBabyAmazon GreenVideo GamesAbout this blog| RSS feedAmazon GreenMusings on making every day Earth Day« Green Your Dorm Room with ENERGY ST |Main

Buying Greener Electronics with EPEATby Editor on October 11, 2010

Sarah O'Brien of EPEAT shares the results of EPEAT's 2009 environmental benefits reporting.

My job is to help business purchasers and consumers use the EPEAT  “green IT” ratings system to select more environmentally sustainable electronic products.  They’ve been doing so in growing numbers around the world since EPEAT’s launch in 2006 – and last year the trend continued, with more business purchasers and individual consumers using EPEAT to choose greener, more sustainable products. 

More manufacturers are participating as well.  EPEAT started 2009 with 30 manufacturers registering 975 products, and ended the year with 37 manufacturers registering more than 1400 products in the US and many more internationally. Currently (September 2010), more than 50 manufacturers register more than 2500 unique products in the 41 countries EPEAT covers.

That progress is great, but it’s the results, in terms of the environmental improvement motivated by that purchasing, that matters.  So I was thrilled to finish calculating the environmental benefits related to EPEAT purchasing in 2009 for our annual benefits reporting[1]:

EPEAT registered notebooks, desktops, and monitors purchased worldwide in 2009 will, over their life, compared to the purchase of products not meeting system criteria:

Reduce use of toxic materials, including mercury, by 1537 metric tons, equivalent to the weight of nearly 800,000 bricks Eliminate use of enough mercury to fill 372,000 average household fever thermometers Eliminate over 29,000 met­ric tons of solid waste, equivalent to more than 14,500 U.S. households’ annual solid waste generationReduce hazardous waste disposal by 72,000 metric tons

In addition, because EPEAT requires registered products to meet the latest ENERGY STAR® specifications, these products will consume less energy throughout their useful life than nonqualified products, resulting in:

Savings of over 10 billion kWh of electricity — enough to power 900,000 U.S. homes for a year  Reduction of over 2 million metric tons of greenhouse gas emissions — equivalent to taking nearly 1.4 million U.S. passenger cars off the road for a year Avoidance of 44 million metric tons of air emissions (including greenhouse gas emissions) and over 93,000 metric tons of water pollutant emissions

As a nonprofit organization, EPEAT’s mission is to advance environmental improvement, so all our marketing activities around EPEAT are aimed at creating change for the better. This level of benefits confirms EPEAT ‘s effectiveness at channeling purchaser demand toward products with reduced impact on the planet. 

By choosing EPEAT rated products (preferably those rated at the Silver or Gold which demonstrate really major improvements in product design and delivery) , consumers can reward manufacturers for the vitally important work of creating and supporting greener products. We’re grateful to Amazon for making EPEAT information available, and encourage you to use it to send a clear message to manufacturers of support for greener product choices when you buy your next IT equipment!

To learn more, you can download the Executive Summary of the 2009 Environmental Benefits report at www.epeat.net/docs/EPEATEBReport2009ExecSumm.pdf , find out much more about EPEAT at www.epeat.net , or view a recent  online discussion forum on green electronics set up by The World radio show at http://www.world-science.org/forum/green-electronics-epeat-united-pepper/  .  

EPEAT’s approach to environmental assessment — rating based on public standards, tiered rankings that encourage competition and continuous improvement, ongoing independent verification, and easy access to a single registry to compare and select among qualified products — continues to engage dozens of manufacturers of all sizes and differing nationalities, and thousands of purchasers worldwide in the process of creating and rewarding more sustainable products.  We hope you’ll participate and keep the momentum going!

 

We'd like to congratulate EPEAT on their accomplishments and thank Sarah O'Brien for this post! Check out Amazon's Green Electronics Store for more EPEAT qualified products.

-Amazon Green

[1] Because EPEAT’s underlying standard (IEEE 1680.1) was designed to reduce duplicative effort, some of EPEAT’s environmental criteria align with other requirements, such as ENERGY STAR® specifications and the EU’s RoHS regulations. Thus not all the changes in product design and delivery that qualify products for EPEAT registration result from EPEAT alone. However, each EPEAT registered product purchased results in environmental impact benefits specific to the products purchased – those are the benefits measured in this annual report.

Posted in EnvironmentView blog reactions| Email this post|

CommentsPost a comment If you have a TypeKey or TypePad account, please Sign In.

You are currently signed in as (nobody). Sign Out

Name:

Email Address: (Not displayed with comment.)

URL:

Remember personal info?

Comments:

October 2010SunMonTueWedThuFriSat     12345678910111213141516171819202122232425262728293031      ArchivesOctober 2010August 2010July 2010TopicsEnvironmentScienceTelevision© 2009, Amazon.com, Inc. or its affiliates. All rights reserved.
The AmazonBlogs logo, Amazon Green and Musings on making every day Earth Day are trademarks of Amazon.com, Inc. or its affiliates.
Privacy Policy | Conditions of Use document.write(unescape("%3Cscript src='" + (document.location.protocol == "https:" ? "https://sb" : "http://b") + ".scorecardresearch.com/beacon.js'%3E%3C/script%3E"));COMSCORE.beacon({ c1: 2, c2: "6035669", c3: "", c4: "http://nozama.typepad.com/amazon_green_blog/2010/10/buying-greener-electronics-with-epeat.html", c5: "", c6: "", c15: ""});

View the original article here