Archive for amazon.com

If you’ve ever purchased a book, a CD, a DVD or one of the numerous other products offered on Amazon.com chances are you shopped with them due to their selection and rapid shipping guarantees. In just 15 years Amazon have become the largest online retailer on the planet and as such they ship more items per year than many small countries. Naturally packaging and shipping materials are of great importance to the internet giant and there is now news that an eco-friendly choice of shipping may soon be available as part of the checkout process.

The exact details are still pending but Amazon have announced that a new patent has been granted to them which will allow for more environmentally friendly electronic transactions overall. What that will entail is still to be determined by expectations are that both the type of packaging used in the method of transport to get your purchase to you may eventually be determined by the customer. There is a sting in the tail however as choosing eco-friendly delivery could result in slightly slower shipping. This leads to the question of whether customers would select slower shipping if they knew that a more environmentally option was being used to forward the goods?

amazon-eco-shippingThe reality is this may be a few years in the future, particularly if the option to have packages delivered exclusively via hybrid vehicles is put on the table. It’s probably more likely that Amazon will switch to the most eco-friendly packaging in the marketplace as a first stage, the implementation of such a change could be achieved in the near future and generate a tangible impact upon launch. Like many eco-friendly alternatives the company will need to balance economic reality with such a transition in their services. A company as large as Amazon is certainly a position to manufacture its own shipping materials not only from selected raw materials such as their own replaceable tree farms, but can have the products made in a plant that supplies Amazon exclusively such is their buying power. That manufacturing facility could in turn be state-of-the-art in terms of energy efficiency .The registered patent allows Amazon to initiate a process that enables customers to choose the type of packaging, the amount of packaging and potentially the delivery method when the order is placed. Another option includes the potential for a customer to calculate the carbon footprint of the actual order an in turn be able to purchase carbon offsets.

I’m sure when Amazon was constructed the overall plan for eco-shipping it will be greeted with much media fanfare and customer reaction, I for one sincerely hope that what they look to accomplish will become normal practice for all companies involved with shipping massive amounts of products per day. Unofficial conservative estimates target daily Amazon sales in the region of 250 to 300,000 transactions each day, that equates to at least 91 million shipments per year, the impact of rethinking the way they ship things would be just staggeringly beneficial.

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Good Evening and Happy Thanksgiving if you are reading this in the States and Happy Thursday/Friday if you are elsewhere. I’ve got a few interesting pieces of news for the Green Gazette tonight if you can stay a short while. As for Thanksgiving, speaking as a foreign born person living in America I have to say it’s my favourite US Holiday. It’s a holiday where you’re not expected to rush to a toy shop, a card shop, a jeweler or elsewhere to purchase a gift (that the recipient may not even need) to show you are ‘celebrating’ the holiday. Instead it is the one time of the year where people seem to really slow down, choose to be with family and friends, and say thank you for what we have in our life instead of bemoaning what we don’t have. I’d argue that our overt sense of ‘entitlement’ here in the Western world is one of the biggest issues that has contributed to the eco-crisis we find ourselves in. The never ending quest for convenience and affordability has created wastefulness that is just impossible to excuse. I feel fortunate to have been born in a ‘first world’ nation and always lived in one – but it’s not my birthright to then waste as much as I can. We should be thankful for so many things we have that so many on the planet only dream of. Being more concerned with our environmental impact might be the best way of all to say thanks to the planet in general. Just a thought…

leavesHere’s a creation that I never even considered to be possible, I’m not even sure what you’d call it. Its not recycling as there is no reusing of a previous incarnation, its not farming as this would happen in nature anyway. What am I talking about? Well, there is a company called VerTerra who have created dinnerware that is created from fallen leaves! They have taken one of the most natural things imaginable and created a legitimate usable item that replaces wasteful chemical treated white paper plates. They are proud of using only two ingredients – leaves and water and run the nifty tagline ‘Dinnerware from fallen leaves’.  They start by collecting fallen leaves from plantations—no trees are ever cut down to make the dinnerware. The leaves are then brought to our factory, where they are sprayed with high-pressure water, steamed and UV sterilized. Over 80% of the water used is recaptured and reused, and the entire manufacturing process uses just 10% of the energy used in recycling. The plates are 100% free of chemicals, lacquers, glues, bonding agents or anything toxic. This is one of the coolest things I’ve read about in a while and the used plates are completely compost ready.

Amazon.com have had their kindle product on the market for about a year now and now a lighter (in terms of functionality) product is one the market by Sony as an e-book reader. If you’re not familiar with either product they are both e-book readers. The book sized electronic device sony-prs-505-e-book-readerthat allows you to download and read books without the eco-unfriendly aspect of a book being published and paper being consumed. The eco-reader is quite expensive ($200-$320) but can come with ‘classic’ books pre-installed and the memory capacity (512mb) allows you to download as many ebooks as your heart desires. I’ve seen these in use on a few flights and they look pretty handy and are very slim and lightweight. As with most technology it might be a few years until they enter the price range where they are considered a normal gadget to own, but until that time every e-book downloaded is saving paper wastage at a rate that would stagger you.  Check out the Sony e-book store to learn more or check out the readers here.

If you’re a regular visitor to our site and blog you probably already know how we feel about plastic bottles. It’s interesting to note that Coca-Cola are unveiling their new ‘plant bottle’ at the forthcoming Winter Olympics in Vancouver. Please check out this well written article by The Toronto Star. In my opinion it’s all a bit of a sham, the Coca-Cola company have one goal, so sell more Coke and other beverages – in plastic bottles and aluminum cans. Neither of which get recycled at anything approaching acceptable levels. At least they are trying but unless 100% of people recycle they are never going to be making much of a net positive contribution to the environment. Paying for bottled water in a plastic bottle from Coca-Cola is beyond understanding, we may as well pour petroleum down the drains. 16oz of water for $1.49 and not recycling the bottle is a clever spin from the soft drink giant but not a clever reality for our planet. Hopefully time will change this.

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