Archive for BPA-free bottle
Eco-School Cuts Trash By 46 Percent with Waste-Free Lunch Challenge
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Anne Hathaway Public School green students recently participated in the Waste-Free Lunch Challenge and the results were impressive. Anne Hathaway Public School is located in Stratford, Ontario (that’s right, Justin Bieber’s hometown), with students from kindergarten to grade 6. “The Waste-Free Lunch Challenge is an elementary school program developed by the Recycling Council of Ontario in partnership with Metro Ontario Inc. and Tetra Pak Canada. The goal of the program is to help schools decrease the amount of garbage they produce and to educate students, staff and parents about waste reduction.” Twenty participating schools will win $1,000 and Anne Hathaway is in contention (good luck!).
According to the Recycling Council of Ontario, “School lunches are a major source of waste in Ontario with the average student’s lunch generating a total of 30 kilograms of waste per school year, or an average of 8500 kilograms (18,700 lbs) of waste per school per year.”
During the week prior to the challenge, Anne Hathaway Public School conducted a pre-audit of their waste which equated to 15.42 kilograms of garbage. Then during Waste Reduction Week from October 17 to October 22, 2011, Anne Hathaway’s green students brought waste-free lunches to school which resulted in a waste reduction to 8.27 kilograms. That’s a 46 percent decrease in waste and 7.15 kilograms of garbage that didn’t end up in a landfill.
The Stratford Gazette spoke to Tarra Green, the teacher that spearheaded and organized this green initiative at the school who said: “It’s important for the kids to take care of the Earth; they are in charge of their future.” It’s commendable that teachers like Tarra Green are inspiring and encouraging students to make greener choices for a sustainable future.
Packing a waste-free lunch is simple and can be accomplished through these 5 easy steps:
1. Pack food in reusable lunch containers
2. Wash and reuse real silverware and cloth napkins. Say no to plastic cutlery and disposable napkins!
3. Store juice, milk, water or other beverages in a reusable and sustainable BPA-free bottle
4. Control food portions to ensure that there are no ‘leftovers’ to dispose of; compost any scraps
5. Pack it all in a reusable lunch bag or tote
Waste Reduction Week is already set for next year – October 15 to 21, 2012. Let’s hope all elementary schools follow the lead of Anne Hathaway Public School and participate in the Waste-Free Lunch Challenge in 2012. If one school in one week can almost cut their waste in half, imagine what communities of schools across Ontario can accomplish.
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Posted by: | CommentsWithout a doubt you recall the appropriately placed concern last year when it was revealed that Sigg bottles contained BPA, naturally a consumer alert was sounded and an appropriate inquiry began. We wrote about the issue last August and again in September when the company issued an apology. At the heart of the matter was not just the potential hazards of the situation but the way Sigg handled the situation and reacted with questionable merits. Less than a year later another new report that links numerous companies to harmful BPA might be just scratching the surface of an even bigger problem.
In the middle of May a report was released that showed the occurrence of BPA in canned goods was not tangible but that it was in truth common. How can this be when you consider the recent high profile of the risks associated with BPA?
Officially only Canada, Denmark, and a small portion (5 states) of the US have restricted the use of BPA in selected products such as baby and infant formula can linings. At present numerous other countries and states are actively reviewing the implementation of BPA bans or at least restrictions and bans. This report provides new data about the amount of BPA that could be consumed from eating canned food and drinks
available in the U.S. and Canada, the reported data is not only bad news but the results have not improved. Test were conducted on the food and drinks contained in canned products purchased in 19 different US states in addition to Ontario, Canada. The report shows that BPA is routinely measurable in our canned foods, and while a single can is not cause for great alarm a continued pattern can lead to levels that have been shown to cause health effects in developing fetuses in laboratory animal studies.
The biggest point to stress is that this wasn’t the occasional product tested, but that over 90% of the cans tested had detectable levels of BPA,
with some showing higher levels than have been detected in previous studies. Nor is the report limiting the scope of the issue to one particular type of product as the tested goods included brand name (let me stress these were not generic or lower cost manufacturers) fish, fruits, vegetables, beans, soups, tomato products, sodas, and milks. Collectively these are products that sell by the million and are consumed on a daily basis by a very significant number of people. Trying to target the issue at present is a tricky business, unlike saying one brand of canned salmon from one specific maker poses potential risk – instead we are looking at most products of a huge variety are registering levels that are not acceptable.
“Canned food can play a significant role in contaminating people with BPA at levels linked to health problems in laboratory animals. The solution must be sustainable, non-toxic packaging“
State by state and international legislation is sure to follow, and a company by company damage control scenario can be expected as more tests are published. The products were purchased under normal circumstances from retailers or found in the home kitchen cabinets of different consumers. The full report ‘No Silver Lining’ has been published online and is available here. Rather than simply a whistle blowing report, the study shows just what is happening in the industry, what options can be used to replace BPA linings and who needs to act. It is not a problem that can be easily or rapidly fixed – but the report is very constructive as it looks at the part that retailers, manufacturers and government needs to play to reduce the danger of BPA from products in our shops and homes.
One can of DelMonte green beans had the highest levels of BPA ever found in canned food, at 1,140 parts per billion. This isn’t an isolated issue.
Tags: BPA, bpa in canned goods, bpa report on canned foods, BPA-free bottle, no silver lining, planet forward, SIGG Bottles, sustainable packagingGreen Tip Of The Week – Pack Waste-Free Lunches
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This green tip of the week simply involves packing a waste-free lunch for your kids or for your day at work. Did you know that the average American school-age child throws away 67 pounds of packaging a year? This includes plastic water bottles, sandwich baggies, and juice boxes. With the population of kids in the US alone accounting for over 70 million, that’s over 4.6 TRILLION pounds of packaging.
Here’s some other lunch waste facts courtesy of globalstewards.org:
Plastic Bottles: U.S. citizens discard 2.5 million plastic bottles EVERY HOUR
Aluminum Foil: More than 20 million Hershey’s kisses are wrapped with 133 square miles of foil every day
Aluminum and Tin Cans: In the time it takes you to read this sentence, more than 50,000 12-oz. aluminum cans were made
Juice Boxes: Most inorganic trash retains its weight, volume, and form for at least four decades
Paper Bags and Napkins: It is estimated that 17 trees are cut down for every ton of non-recycled paper
Styrofoam: U.S. citizens throw away 25 billion Styrofoam cups EVERY YEAR
It’s time to cut down on lunchtime environmental impact and pack waste-free lunches. Here’s the uncomplicated part, it’s as easy as these 5 steps:
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