Archive for the ‘Sustainability’ Category

Cityhop wins SBN Design & Innovation

Sunday, November 13th, 2011

Cityhop won the Sustainable Business Network’s Design & Innovation award last Tuesday. Thank you Pure Advantage and SBN. Sustainable Showcase, last Wednesday was an all day exhibition of samazing ways to be more sustainable at Shed 10 Queens Wharf. There are so many sustainable ways for us all to do better and greener!

On winning, Victoria Carter, CEO and Co-founder said, “This award is for all our members. Without them we wouldn’t be here. In particular thank you to EECA, Isthmus, AUT and Aecom, all the individuals who believe it is good to not own a car, that it is good to drive less and who make Auckland a more liveable city.

HungryBins won the Judges Highly Commended prize. Cool worm farm we will write more about in another blog.

 

See sustainable.org.nz  for more. 

 

Sustainable Network showcase

Monday, November 7th, 2011

The Sustainable Business Network has its first ever showcase on Wednesday  9 November. It’s a free public event  to highlight the many eco-friendly and sustainable choices business and individuals have to improve the way we live.

Cityhop will have a car on display to show people how easy it is to carshare and why they might like to consider it.

Come and meet  New Zealand businesses, government, community and non-profits leading the way towards a collective sustainable future.

When: Free public open day on 9th November

Where: Shed 10, Queens Wharf, Auckland

See  a 2 day celebration of sustainable business, technology, innovation and lifestyles. Spend a day in the life of our sustainable city, network, connect and learn from New Zealand’s sustainable champions and social innovators.

Smart cities say no to water bottles

Friday, October 28th, 2011

San Francisco began the ban and now Seattle has followed, announcing a ban on bottled water being served at meetings and events. While it sounds like an eco-friendly step it’s also got a financial benefit.

Last year the City spent $58,000 on bottles of water and that isn’t even counting the true cost, i.e., the cost of disposing of the plastic let along the making of the bottles or the carbon footprint.

No reason why Auckland Council couldn’t do the same, it would be a vote for the fine quality of the water we get out of our tap! Take note Watercare, maybe you could start advocating to the Council to drink more of your stuff!

This could be Len Brown speaking  but it’s actually the Mayor of Seattle: “We own one of the best water supplies in the country, every bit as good as bottled water and available at a fraction of the price. When you add up the tremendous environmental costs of disposable plastic bottles clogging our landfills, the better choice is crystal clear.”

Less space = more happiness

Sunday, October 9th, 2011

Having spent much of weekend clearing, sorting and throwing out the concept of having a little less is resonating with me. I know I collect too much, my husband will tell you that. I do have trouble throwing things away because nearly everything I have has a story!

However it is also hugely satisfying sorting out cupboards and deciding it’s time to let something go. Our local St Vincent de Paul shop is filling each week! Trade me has  a pile of listings and the present drawer is getting some order as I decide to finally give something away that I probably bought because I wanted it!

The point of this blog is that while I searched for Steve Jobs amazing speech on living to Stanford University, I stumbled on Graham Hill, Less Stuff More happiness on TED.

He points out how we need three times the space we did 50 years ago. With all ths extra space we have we still don’t have enough space for all the stuff we buy. One of the biggest growth businesses is ‘storage.’

And of course all this extra stuff means we are making a bigger carbon footprint and impacting on our environment as we build bigger houses.

 Ironically even though we have three times more stuff our happiness levels have flat lined for the past 50 years! Hmm maybe buying things doesn’t make us happy!

 Makes you think, the less stuff we have the less space we need the less Co 2 we produce and the more money we have. Sounds a bit like carsharing.

 Back to emptying another cupboard!

Sustainable finalist

Monday, October 3rd, 2011

What a great way to start the week! Cityhop has got an email from the Sustainable 60 awards advising we are a finalist in the Marketplace and Small Business category.

Run by Fairfax Media and PwC the awards showcase sustainable business practice in NZ.

Says Unlimited Editor, Mark Revington, This is the third year for the awards, this year’s finalists know that sustainability isn’t an add-on or achieved by an annual tree-planting day. This is about sustainability across the board not an energy audit.”

 Says Victoria Carter, Cityhop co-founder, “We are so pleased. We were established on the premis of making it easier for others to be more sustainable. Virtually everything we do considers what is the best way of doing this. Only last week we did a video conference on ‘what is car share’ to a dozen Wellington larger employers and government departments instead of getting on a plane and presenting!”

The Sustainable 60 Awards finalists are:

  Strategy and Governance: Anguillid Consulting, Auckland Airport, Beca, BNZ, Soar Printing

 Marketplace: Anguillid Consulting, Auckland Airport, Beca, Cityhop, Jasmax, LanzaTech,Ziptrek Ecotours

 Workplace: Auckland Airport, Beca, BNZ, NZ Sugar Company, OMEGA, Soar Printing

 Environment: 3R Group, All Good Organics, Antarctica NZ, Auckland Airport, Beca, Soar Printing

 Community: 3R Group, Anguillid Consulting, Auckland Airport, BNZ, Mana Recovery Incorporated, Meridian Energy

 Overall – Small Business: Anguillid Consulting, OMEGA, City Hop, Clean Planet

 Overall – Medium Business: 3R, Soar Printing

Overall – Large Business: Auckland Airport, Beca, BNZ, NZ Sugar Company

The winners will be announced on November 30 2011.

Plastic into oil

Tuesday, August 23rd, 2011

We all know oil is used to make plastic. Now a clever Japanese inventor has come up with the technology to turn plastic waste into oil!

In this u-tube clip, he says until he had children he hadn’t given much thought to the environment. Now the places he used to enjoy as a child are no longer there or are filled with rubbish.

He  reminds us of the huge piles of plastic waste being dumped all over the world. Then he shows us the machine he invented. He stuffs everyday plastic household rubbish in to the box and after a while oil is created. He says it could be turned into petrol, kerosene and so on.

You can find him going around under-developed countries, visiting schools showing children how what is rubbish could have another purpose.

The machine produced in various sizes, for both industrial and home uses, can easily transform a kilogram of plastic waste into a litre of oil, using about 1 kW·h of electricity but without emitting CO2 in the process. The machine uses a temperature controlling electric heater instead of flames, processing anything from polyethylene or polystyrene to polypropylene (numbers 2-4).  Comment: 1 kg of plastic produces one liter of oil, which costs $1.50. This process uses only about 1 kW·h of electricity, which costs less than 20 cents!

No plastic bags please

Friday, August 12th, 2011

Good News! Checking out the Council recycling statistics we have doubled how much we recycle in seven years. I sat on the Works Committee at Auckland City Council for a few years and have always been bit of an ardent recycler making my parents drive to deposit newspapers and bottles at the local school!  Today we have 2 blue wheelie bins for recycling and a worm farm and am quite proud of the fact the red bin is often only a third full!

The bad news! Too many people put plastic bags in the bins or think that if they put their bottles or other rubbish in a plastic bag in their blue bin they are ‘playing their part’ But they aren’t. Plastic bags jam the machines used to sort the papers, cans, bottles and other plastics.

Plastic bags basically contaminate the rubbish trucks and put at risk all the other recycling we’ve have separated. Wise up people, if you aren’t sure what can be recycled have a read of the excellent page on what can be recycled at Auckland Council.

Not sure what to do with your plastic bags? Recycle, use them for dog poo bags, take them back to the supermarket, or better still use cloth bags and then you won’t get so many plastic!

Sharing – the new trend

Monday, August 1st, 2011

 

Colloborative consumption is the fancy word for sharing! It’s what neighbours did in our great grandparents day. It’s what Cantabrians have been doing successfully  as a result of the earthquake.

As we have become more of a consumer society we’ve tended to buy all the gadgets we might need once a year and store them without thinking of asking our neighbour would they let us borrow theirs.

I know I’m guilty of it after I saw my neighbour use his water blaster I used my frequent shopper points to get one myself and I’m sure if I had asked I could have borrowed his.

Northern Western University profiles Chuck Templeton, founder of the new website, ohsowe.com in Chicago encourages  bartering, trading and sharing goods and services in local communities by bringing people into contact with neighbors who have what they need and live close by.

Chuck points out there are 60,000 drills in homes throughout the US used on average for 4 minutes every year. If we shared, he says, we wouldn’t need to manufacture the vast quantities still being made, we just need to provide access.  We could move from needing to own to sharing. (wow what an idea!)

Roo Rogers who wrote “What’s Mine is Yours: How Collaborative Consumption is Changing the Way We Live,” says,”Collaborative consumption is basically a very old, traditional behavior that has been put on steroids today and allows for mass coordination and efficiency.”

“In this analogy, steroids represent the Internet, a highly efficient tool for linking people to one another on a small-scale, neighborhood level. Websites such as ohsowe.com and others like it allow people to network in ways that haven’t been possible until quite recently. For instance, swap.com, a forum that allows users to trade their old goods for second-hand stuff they want

Even less tech-heavy models, such as car-sharing operations, wouldn’t have seemed so feasible several years ago.

Cityhop is NZ’s only car share company providing customers with shared, fuel efficient alternatives to car ownership. It takes an expensive individual asset and makes it available to lots of people via a membership scheme.

Many people can’t imagine not owning a car. Read here, how easy it is.

Kathy Harget of Baltimore went car-free  to have a “low-carbon life” that includes shopping at public markets for locally produced foods. She said about 75 percent of her local travel is by bike — For other trips, she takes the bus and uses a Zipcar two or three times a month.

Harget also has been saving a bundle on car payments, insurance, parking fees and maintenance. She tracked transportation costs rigorously for her first six months without a car and found that her spending had been cut by 50 percent

This sharing thing might just catch on.

Aussies know how to share & save!

Wednesday, July 13th, 2011

Bruce Jeffrey Co Founder Go Get with cityhop

Our mates at Go Get are growing fast. Admitedly they are big older than us! Nearly five years older. It helps that Sydney and Melbourne Councils are all getting the ‘carshare’ thing and putting parks on street too. This has really helped all the car share operators draw attention to how easy it is to live without your own car.

If you drive less than 10,000 kms a year car share will save you money. Find out more about how Aussies are saving money and still getting around!

With carsharing the petrol is included in the hourly rate of getting about. “Most members of carshare programmes, adds Victoria Carter, co-founder of Cityhop,”have no idea what it costs to fill a tank. They aren’t paying!.”

Carsharing not only works for residents but businesses can also save thousands of dollars in transport costs by cutting their taxi bills and car lease costs.

Not only is it cost effective but carsharing is a greener transport alternative to owning a car and then adding to traffic congestion and the subsequent impact on the environment and green spaces.

Read more at

http://blacktown-advocate.whereilive.com.au/lifestyle/story/car-sharing-catching-on/

One Watch – One Tree – One Planet

Thursday, June 2nd, 2011

The best time to plant a tree was 20 years ago, the next is now.One of our juicifiers, Ryan, recently bought one of these amazing We Wood watches. They are fast becoming a status symbol amongst stylish and thoughtful people. The watch  is 100% natural wood, hypo-allergenic, completely free of toxic chemicals but still functional thanks to its Miyota movement 

We love the fact these watches are so wholesome. For every watch bought they plant a tree.

WEWOOD from Italy, is fast becoming  an emblem of eco-luxury and design, committed to the health of our planet; the avant-garde approach to sophisticated sustainability.

 Says the website WEWOOD lets us rediscover nature in its beauty, its simplicity and inspired design. It reminds us of a tree’s powerful way of life; rooted, yet reaching.

With no toxic materials the watch is as natural as your wrist.  What a way to make a difference, one watch plants one tree, and helps to ensure the health and survival of the natural world.

The website reports: This year, American Forests’ Global ReLeaf Campaign will plant 4.8 million trees in 43 projects in 14 states and 10 countries to help restore forests important for wildlife, clean water, and carbon sequestration.

There are two types of Global ReLeaf projects:
1) In urban areas, trees are planted through the Global ReLeaf Fund. The program also encourages individuals to plant trees around their homes and businesses or join community groups to plant trees that shade, cool, and beautify their neighborhoods.

2) Most of our trees are planted in ecosystem restoration projects called Global ReLeaf Forests. Many of these areas have been damaged by natural or human causes. These trees help clean the air and water, filter polluted runoff, slow global warming and erosion, and provide habitat for wildlife.