Over the last three weeks I’ve shared a handful of stories
from newspapers both international and local. This week I’ll just start the
column by referring to an article that appeared in the Herald in mid-March: Kiwis take more than fair share (Jamie
Morton, 15-03-13).
This headline may come as a bit of a shock to those who
consider New Zealand to be a fair, just, egalitarian nation. (But then again,
we do rank among the top countries in income inequality.) This headline refers
to a concept called Ecological Footprinting, which measures the overall
environmental impact of an individual, a family, a city, or, in this case, a
nation. In other words, as the article states: “If the entire world lived like
a New Zealander we’d need more than two planets to sustain us.”
The article reports on two papers released by the Royal
Society of New Zealand that looked at the following areas: food production,
water quality, biodiversity, fisheries, transportation, and climate change. The
combined direct and indirect impacts of all of these add up to the Ecological
Footprint, which can be reported in “fair earth shares.” A fair earth share is
calculated by taking the world’s total arable land, and dividing it by the
human population. The current figure is 1.7 hectares per person, while
estimates for New Zealand citizens fall between 5 and 8 hectares.
But even for those of us who have traveled to Africa, India,
or parts of Asia, and seen people existing on a fraction of an earth share (1.7
hectares), the concept can remain abstract. I’ll try to simplify it by using a
reference that may be more familiar, the 3 Rs: Reduce, Reuse, Recycle. It
should be fairly easy for anyone to recognize that ‘doing’ the 3 Rs would
shrink his or her ecological footprint.
Recycling, at this point in time, should be a no-brainer for
everyone in New Zealand as it saves money, conserves resources, and helps the
environment. This is the type of win-win-win situation preferred in eco-thrifty
thinking. Yet I am shocked at how little recycling takes place in many of our
public places and sporting venues around Whanganui. After the outstanding,
world-class waste minimization effort at the New Zealand Masters Games in
February, I was surprised to find out that the organisers of other large,
public events in our city have chosen not to make efforts at waste reduction.
Reducing and reusing, for me, go hand-in-hand. Put another
way, by reusing, we reduce. For example, nearly everything in our entire ‘new’
kitchen is second-hand, saving the mining and transportation of new resources,
the manufacture and transportation of new products, and the disposal of old
products.
New, second-hand kitchen
Another example is the second-hand flue pipes I bought for
our second-hand Shacklock 501. Reusing them saved me about 75% of the cost of
buying new flues, saved the large carbon footprint of steel production, and
supported a locally-owned and operated business, The Renovator’s Centre.
New, second-hand flue
One final example, although I could describe dozens, is our
hanging laundry cabinet that was once a floor cabinet, and came to us via
Hayward’s Auctions. Although Nicky, the cashier at Hayward’s, was rightly
horrified when we told her we planned to paint the rimu cupboard, it turned out
alright.
Before
Some tricks that I used when converting the floor unit to a
hanging unit were: 1) inverting it so the original top is now the bottom,
revealing the nice side, not the grotty side; 2) taking off the hinges and
taping the glass when painting helps to make second-hand items look first rate.
After
Reducing, reusing and recycling help keep dollars in our
community, extend resource reserves for our children and grandchildren, and
reduce our impact on the environment. The Win-Win-Wins keep piling up, a lot
like the All Blacks.
Peace, Estwing
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