Shoppers may have a chance to make it to the top of Santa's green gift list this season. All they have to do is consolidate their shopping trips and make smart purchases.
The researchers at Carnegie Mellon University's Green Design Institute, after 10 years of hard work, have compiled their own holiday checklist to see if consumers are "naughty or nice" when it comes to reducing the environmental impact of holiday shopping.
"Around this time of year, we routinely get asked questions about how best to protect the environment during the holiday rush, so we put together this suggested shopping advice," said Chris Hendrickson, a professor of civil and environmental engineering at Carnegie Mellon, in a press release.
"For the average consumer, generally the two biggest sources of your environmental footprint come from your residence, and the kind of car your drive," said H. Scott Matthews, a CMU professor of civil and environmental engineering and engineering and public policy, in a statement. "For example, our previous work shows that about two-thirds of your carbon footprint comes from these two categories. So, if we are really trying to reduce your impact, those are the places that matter the most. And these are just two pieces amidst thousands of decisions that a household makes in a year."
During their study, researchers found out that there are relatively few holiday gifts that one could buy (or not buy) that have a significant effect on shoppers’ "footprint" despite all the marketing messages saying otherwise.
The green holiday season and shopping tips include:
- Bike, walk or take a bus to the store. That activity lessens the carbon footprint of purchases by about 50 percent.
- Buy and eat less red meat and dairy, since environmental impacts of both are larger than other foods.
- Recycle gift-wrap.
- Shop in advance. Buy multiple items at the same store or choose the slowest online delivery service since overnight transport increases transportation and fuel carbon footprints by 20 percent.
- Buy replacement appliances, lights and cars that are energy efficient.
"If you have an artificial Christmas tree, use it as long as possible — the higher impacts of manufacturing it 'pay off' in environmental terms compared to a natural tree in about 10 years. Similarly, look for efficient lighting. Households use about 20 percent of their electricity on lighting. Energy efficient bulbs, including Christmas tree lights, are a great thing to buy," Matthews added.
Rahul Arora is a TMCnet contributor. He has worked as an editor and freelance writer for several reputed organizations in India. To read more of his articles, please visit his columnist page.
Edited by
Tammy Wolf