Archive for Target
Green Gazette (Issue 40) Eco-retailing, Plastiki and winning the lottery
Posted by: | CommentsIt’s March! How did that happen – I’m sure I was just adjusting to it being a new decade just a few weeks ago and suddenly January and February have both come and gone. Nevertheless I’ll move forward with the latest installment of the Green Gazette where we share with you all the green news and ideas that are fit to print (in an online sense).
This is giant retail news from the UK – I can’t think of a good equivalent in North America (perhaps Target?) but the British retailer Marks & Spencer (M&S) has announced a green commitment that is beyond compare. You can read all about it via this link from the Environmental Leader but I’ll be happy to share the abbreviated version with you. M&S have made a statement that by 2020 every product that they sell must be able to boast of ‘at least one eco or ethical attribute’. Phase one is that 50% of suppliers have reached the threshold by 2015 and 100% by the end of the decade. It’s a fantastic step and part of the retailers huge ‘Plan A’ which calls for the company, by 2012, to become carbon neutral, send no waste to landfills and extend sustainable sourcing. The actual scope of the project is as ambitious as it is impacting, as the retailer currently carries some 36,000 product lines. Very exciting!

Plastiki
Do you remember Kon-Tiki, the (eco) boat/raft constructed by Norwegian Thor Heyerdahl from limited parts to demonstrate his theory that the native people of South America had constructed a craft to traverse the South Pacific many hundreds of years prior to the European golden age of explorers? No? I had to read the book in school and while many of the details escape me all these years later the name of the boat certainly remains. Thus I found it novel that banking heir turned environmentalist David de Rothschild has named his vessel ‘Plas-tiki’ as a modern day homage to the sailing Dane. Plas-tiki is a remarkable boat also, made up of some 12,000 recycled 2 litre plastic bottles. His mission is of similar stature and involves sailing from California to the infamous Great Pacific Garbage Patch in the middle of the Pacific Ocean. The giant garbage patch is a huge soup of plastic waste and other man made sludge that circles in on itself in the middle of our largest ocean. Estimates on size range from 700,000 square kilometres (270,000 sq mi) to more than 15,000,000 square kilometres (5,800,000 sq mi) (0.41% to 8.1% of the size of the Pacific Ocean), or up to “twice the size of the continental United States” The area may contain over 100 million tons of debris. His trip is aimed to bring attention to the growing area of the ocean that is essentially dying due to the poor water quality. If he sticks to his plans he’ll not be stuck in the patch and will continue onward to Australia. You can follow his eco-adventure via his blog. Incidentally Kon-Tiki was almost a success, read the book!
Finally a story of good luck and what a lucky couple then did with it. Winning a lottery of over £56 million in the UK (over $82 million) an

Lottery Winners Eco-Farm
English couple did what many winners would do and moved into a new home. After giving their old home to their cleaner (they had a cleaner) Nigel Page and Justine Laycock purchased a 400-year-old dairy farm. Where’s the green in that you might wonder? The farm was restored by developer Paul Lavelle, who spent £2 million transforming it into an eco-friendly home. It features a ‘solar park’ where 20 panels captured the (occasional) heat of the sun and store it in rocks in the ground and later distributed to the home. The house uses just 10% of the energy required to run a normal household. The farm is almost 100 per cent carbon neutral, you can read more about it in the Daily Mail.
That’s all for now!
Tags: carbon footprint, Climate Change, Eco Friendly, eco-friendly lifestyle, energy conservation, Great Pacific Garbage Patch, Green Living, greener lifestyle, kontiki, lottery winners eco house, M & S, Marks and Spencer, pacific garbage, planet forward, Plastiki, Sustainable Practice, sustainable sourcing, Target, thor heyerdahlGreen Gazette (Issue 12) Green retailers, The Big Bad Wolf and Oil Spills
Posted by: | CommentsThe weekend has its comforting arms around us but I still have eco-news to share with you. The green gazette is our attempt at linking out to some interesting, odd or inspiring planet friendly news. I won’t limit it to North America or giant international greenhouse gas reductions. I’m happy to focus on anything that might make a difference and the reality is everything makes a difference, we got to where we are collectively and the need for change is collective also…so please read on!
I noticed while driving around today just how many people have covered their homes in giant spiders, mini graveyards, inflatable pumpkins and things that burn fossil fuel in the night. All this to celebrate Halloween of course. It also means that in seven days time the same exhibitionists will be rigging up different lights, robotic snowmen and dancing reindeers to every treetop, roof and mailbox on their parcel of land. Naturally to honor December 25th you have to burn some more electricity right?? WRONG! I know I can’t stop the tide but I can at least endorse Home Depot who are running a promotion for a holiday lights trade in. For every old string of old lights you bring in they will offer a $3 off coupon good for a new string of LED bulbs to mark the festive season in an eco-logical way. These bulbs use 80% less energy to power your ‘display’, so if you must – at least do it in a clean green method. (Scrooge hat now off) Save a gallon of gas, don’t drive around looking at Halloween lights – I’ve got a video for you!
Fossil Fueled Halloween Display
More green retail action as Target and CVS have announced a program across all of their stores (7,500+ collectively!) that makes a small step in the right direction. For every reusable bag you use in place of a plastic bag each store will take 5 cents off of your bill. It’s not a huge financial saving but it’s a giant environmental one and thus should be applauded. I love statistics so let’s just run a few : 7,500 stores @1,500 customers per day (*easy when you consider Target) =That makes 11,250,000 customers per day.
If just 3% of all customers bring in a reusable bag for (1 bag per purchase) that equals 337,500 plastic bags not used tomorrow!! That’s huge!! In a week you have 2.3 millions plastic bags not used. It reiterates my sentiment that there are no small gestures so well done Target and CVS. Did I happen to mention we sell reusable bags also? Let’s reduce plastic wastage and Target?CVS will help pay for your bag!
Next an interesting story so long as you promise not to tell the big bad wolf.
News breaks that three little pigs (University Committee for Energy and Resource Conservation at a University in Kansas) are building a house entirely from straw (and stucco)! The chief designer lived in a home in Montana for 8 years made from hay bales. The hay bale home, which will be complete with a door and window as well as a stucco exterior, will consist of 60 bales and will be on display for the next year at the technology center. The theme of using alternative building methods will be used by future designers and builders. Several instructors in the CMCET department completed their LEED certifications this year and have been implementing green construction techniques into their curriculum.
Out of sight…out of mind? That should not be the case….a large oil spill into the ocean off of the coast of Western Australia is receiving no media coverage where I am…how about with you? We can’t wait for another Exxon Valdez disaster to exclaim that this isn’t acceptable. Just because it’s not on the coast of North America doesn’t mean it isn’t worthy of news coverage. Why do I need to go to overseas newspaper to learn of this? Are we that obsessed with the helium bubble boy in Denver to not have time to cover actual news? This ‘leak’ has been going on now for 60 days and is polluting the sea with hundreds of barrels per day!
More soon….
Tags: big bad wolf, christmas lights, CVS, eco friendly christmas lights, halloween light display, Halloween lights, Home Depot, LEED lights, Oil Spill, plastic bag reduction, plastic bags, reusable bags, straw house, sustainable products, Target, Target reusable bag program, three little pigs, Western Australia oil spill
When you operate more than 1,700 large retails stores that are visited by thousands of customers daily simple mathematics suggests that a difference will be made with every change you enact. To that end I’d applaud mega-retailer Target for adding multiple recycling bins to every single location of their empire. Each branch will offer bins for paper, plastics and perhaps most beneficially electronic devices. Seeing as many people choose to recycle from home for plastics and cardboard/paper I think the electronic option may be very popular. It’s more convenient for me to take old computer monitors or cell phones to a drive up bin at Target than try and schedule a drop off day in the township where I live. Needless to say Target will also be doing the rounds to collect the recyclables and dispatch to the appropriate centers. Better still – when you arrive at Target to shop do so 

