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Posts Tagged ‘climate change’

Can War Posters Teach Us About Climate Change?

Written by Chris Coletta | August 27th, 2010 | Add a comment
What can war posters teach us about climate change?

It’s a provocative question: Can decades-old war posters inform our thinking about what people can do to fight climate change?

That’s being asked today on the blog Treehugger, which presents a photo gallery made up mostly of World War II-era posters in the U.S. The posters encourage Americans to conserve everything they can to help the Allied war effort against the Axis powers.

What’s striking is that these messages encourage actions that still have value today. Carpooling, driving less, recycling, even taking what modern society has dubbed a staycation – these are all valuable actions that individual people can take, today, to cut back on their carbon footprints.

(Seriously, the guy on that aforementioned staycation looks like he’s having the best time ever. A dog, a fan, a good magazine, and a huge glass of Scotch – what else do you need?)

We’re not saying that there’s a broad, political message to be gleaned here. But these posters are a fascinating reminder that resources are precious – whether your end goal is to win a war or to save the planet.

Want to do your part? Take our climate challenge today.

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Talk About Climate Change

Written by Chris Coletta | August 18th, 2010 | Add a comment (1)
There's much more to climate change than hot weather and sunny days.

Ever been unsure of how to talk to your friends or family about climate change? It can be tough. It’s a complicated topic even among people who understand it – and lots of people don’t understand it!

So we wanted to pass along this piece, from the Guardian newspaper in the U.K., because it offers a useful way of talking about one specific outcome of climate change: a rise in extreme weather.

Basically, the message is this. There have always been weird weather patterns around the world. What climate change does is increase the odds of those events.

What does this mean in practical terms? You can’t point to one event – even an event as devastating as the current flooding in Pakistan or the heat waves in Russia – and say, “Climate change caused this.”

But you can say that such events are part of a larger pattern.

Or as the author of the Guardian piece puts it:

It can still be problematic to blame a specific individual extreme weather event on climate change, because there have always been extremes of weather around the world. However, if the likelihood of a particular extreme weather event has changed it is possible to say something.

We’d add that it isn’t just possible to say something. It’s important to say something. Particularly with a bill to regulate carbon emissions now stalled in one of the world’s largest emitters, the U.S., it’s up to us to take action against climate change – for our economic prosperity, for our health, and for the planet.

Climate change is our challenge. But we have the opportunity to stop it. Our small actions can add up to major change in the world.

Will you join us?

Photo: http://www.flickr.com/photos/deniscollette/ | via Creative Commons

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Take Steps to Cut Back on Home Energy Use

Written by Chris Coletta | August 11th, 2010 | Add a comment

You might already know that your home energy use is a major part of your total environmental impact.

And if you’re anything like most folks, you probably want to use less energy. It’s good for the planet, and it can lower your energy bills.

But in the absence of a cool tool that helps you figure out exactly how to fix the problem, it can be tough to get started.

People can take small steps to cut back on their home energy use, saving money and helping the environment.

The Pyramid of Conservation is a tool developed for Minnesota Power, a utility company. The idea is that there are lots of small, simple, inexpensive actions you can take to cut your power use – steps you should take before you ever think about big actions like installing a new furnace or new insulation.

Those steps are at the bottom of the pyramid, and they aren’t always sexy. But they’re simple – as simple as changing your light bulbs, doing a home-energy audit, and turning things off when you leave a room.

These steps help your power savings , and your green actions, pile up. Then, if you decide to take further action, you can move up the pyramid, taking higher-level actions toward energy efficiency.

In the end, you save money. The utility company saves money because, with less electricity being used, it doesn’t have to build as many new power plants. And we help stop climate change.

How’s that for a win-win-win situation?

Get Started Today

  • Take a closer look at the Pyramid of Conservation at the Minnesota Power site. You can click on each level of the pyramid to learn more about the actions you can take.
  • Get involved with Team Earth – joining your voice to the more than 134,000 people who have pledged to Do More or Do Less for the planet.
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