|
|
|
|
|
The day after the first sustainable practices class, I tried to check my everyday life.
 <recycled sketchbook>
I needed a sketchbook, and I found the green-sketchbook which reads "premium recycled" on it. However, I needed larger than the size, so I bought the left one. Need more size for green purchase.
 <lots of garbage after lunch>
I ate a bowl of salad and a bottle of juice. And, those were all packages. As you can see here about short descriptions, lots of waste. How can I and the store become sustainable?
1. prepare bins for separate disposal 2. say 'I don't eat bread' 3. say clearly, 'stay' (not to go) 4. use reusable bowl 5. don't give napkin, people can pick as much as they use 6. ... |
|
|
| Track this back : http://itp.nyu.edu/~yc581/blog/trackback/185 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Ecosystem Goods and Services Series: Valuation 101
(While reading the beginning, I wonder which way is more sustainable in reading on screen or reading a hard copy. The former consumes electricity while the latter spends paper.)
According to this article, there are two major valuation methods to measure sustainability : monetary valuation and integrate information valuation. The latter is more data-oriented valuation such as indicators or ecosystem models. The author points out that we should be well in financial planning plus indicators, models and simulation approaches.
I agree with the author's idea, however, don't decision makers such as politicians and executives or even ordinary people mainly concern about only money? I hope the latter valuation method can appeal to most of us. Or, we can make sustainable practices culture, we do without thinking about them. This thought reminds me of following quote.
Civilization advances by extending the number of important operations
which we can perform without thinking about them. - Alfred North
Whitehead, An Introduction to Mathematics, 1911 |
|
|
| Track this back : http://itp.nyu.edu/~yc581/blog/trackback/182 |
|
|
|