10:10 – Buying Yourself Green

Looking at the list of the Guardian’s 10:10 suggestions from yesterday’s post, I couldn’t help but think that there was an awfully high number of those pointers that suggested buying/installing something new.  Sure, they then (usually) said to recycle the old ones, but still, there was some significant investment involved in reducing that carbon footprint.

So, being a geek, I put the list into a table, and estimated some prices for those items with a cost…

(Click on the more link to see the table – it’s a biggie…)

Item Cost? Amount (Approx)
Heating
Major improvement in your home’s insulation Yes £500
New boiler if yours is more than 10 years old Yes £2,000
Cavity wall insulation Yes £200
Double glazing if you don’t have it Yes £2,000
Solar hot water Yes £2,000
Increase loft insulation, seal doors and skirting boards, etc Yes £400
Better controls for boiler, hot water tank and radiators Yes £500
Buy a wood-burning stove Yes £1,000
Reduce your thermostat temp by 1 degree
Heat one less room
Slow-flow showers, not baths
Electricity
Install 2 kilowatt solar PV panels Yes £5,000+
Buy a new A++ refrigerator if yours is more than 4 years old, and only use a small-screen TV. Yes £500
Use LED or fluorescent lights where you currently have halogen lights installed Yes £10 per bulb
Buy an automated system to turn off appliances when not in use; get a meter that shows actual energy use and use it to monitor your household Yes £1,000
Only use your washing machine and dishwasher when full to capacity and at lowest temperature
Never use the tumble dryer
Get rid of the freezer if you can, and replace your small appliances with “eco” varieties Possibly £1,000
Car
Cut your annual mileage in half
Sell the second car
Buy a new car with emissions in car tax bands A or B, then scrap the old one Yes £8-10,000
Join a car club or set up an effective local car-sharing scheme
Share car to work
Go on a day’s eco-driving course, fit low-resistance tyres and check air pressure every month Yes £250
Don’t ever use a car for shopping. Buy online
Work from home one day a week rather than commuting by car
Air travel
Never fly
Restrict yourself to one short-haul return flight a year on a carrier with a fuel-efficient fleet
Consumer electronics
Buy secondhand mobile phones and ensure that three of your electronic devices are recycled
Keep your electronic devices (eg phones, TVs, computers, DVD players, games machines) one year longer than you would have
Switch from a desktop computer to a laptop at home, and recycle the desktop Yes £600+
Food
Go vegan three days a week
Change to an almost entirely vegetarian diet, using mostly unprocessed wholefoods such as grains, seeds and nuts
Never buy processed food or ready meals
Buy more carefully and never throw food away
Grow all your own fruit and vegetables for July, August, September
Clothing
Buy 50% secondhand clothes
Reduce purchases by a more than a quarter compared to last year (eg buy four new T-shirts not the UK average of seven)
Buy only manmade fibres
Focus on new fabrics made from bamboo, hemp or other cotton substitutes
Water, sewage and waste disposal
Install a ‘grey water’ recycling system to take water from your washing machine into your lavatory Yes £2000
Use showers, not baths. Install a flow-reducing aerator for the shower head Yes £50?
Regularly use soap, a basin of water and a sponge instead of a shower
Buy ultra-low water use cisterns, new water-saving dishwasher, washing machine. Recycle old ones Yes £2,500
Install – and carefully monitor – a water meter. Put bricks in all the loos to reduce water. Carefully recycle all waste, compost all organic matter Yes £250
Install a composting toilet Yes £500+ ?
Public transport
Cycle everywhere Possibly £500
Always use coaches instead of the train
Work from home two days a week instead of taking public transport to work
Paper
Only buy newspapers, magazines, books, toilet paper and copier paper made from recycled materials.
Block direct mail, choose electronic bills and statements, buy secondhand books and share papers.

That’s 21 out of 51 lines that have a significant cost allocated to them. And the rough (very, very rough) estimate of how much those 21 lines would cost? A minimum of £29,250 , assuming the minimum in any price range, no halogen bulbs needing replacing, and not needing to buy a new bike to do the “Cycle Everywhere” option.

Talk about taking the piss…


2 Comments on “10:10 – Buying Yourself Green”

  1. Z says:

    I take your point regarding the huge capital outlay, but fair’s fair – are you going to estimate the annual savings made by taking up those and the other suggestions too?

  2. Blue Witch says:

    “Regularly use soap, a basin of water and a sponge instead of a shower”

    Now that really *is* a step too far.

    And that coming from one who does most of the others already…


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