Shrink Your Ecological FootprintBy Portia Sinnott, LITE Initiatives, Copyright, 2007 The Ecological Footprint Quiz is a tool for calculating your impact on the Earth. It asks 14 simple questions about you and your lifestyle – your age and gender, where you live, what you eat, how much you waste, your energy use and how you get about. At the end it calculates how many acres of food and goods you need per year to maintain your lifestyle. I recently took the quiz at www.myfootprint.org. In 5 minutes I determined that my Ecological Footprint is 9 acres, and if everyone lived like I do we would need 1.9 planets. The US average is 24 acres. Given we only have one earth, neither of these lifestyles are sustainable. What can we do? The answer is to start integrating sustainable practices into our lifestyles and that of the average American. Start simple. Using the list below check off the techniques you already practice, draw a line through impossible ones and circle a few you would like to take on. Once you integrate the new ones, check them off and select a new one when you feel ready. It is okay if you occasionally get sidetracked - like driving to the movies when you could walk or buying some expensive imported item. What is important is that you get in the sustainability habit - not that you are 100% on everything all of the time. These prescriptions may sound simple but they are not easy - especially for those of us with busy active lives. The secret is setting a clear intention, coming up with a good plan and sticking with it for 14 days. Here are a few examples that hung me up for years - salad dressings and bag reuse. I prefer homemade salad dressing but found the idea of making them a bit daunting. When I finally blocked out some time, I found them easy to make and well worth the effort. The same thing was true with eliminating that irritating pile of bags next to the refrigerator. I set my intention, came up with a simple plan, and stuck with it: Right after unpacking the groceries, I hang my canvas bags on a doorknob. The next time I go out I put them in the car or bike bag so that they are always there when I need them. This habit has become second nature and I don’t even think about it except when I occasionally rush out and end up at the store without them. Every dollar is a vote. Why am I talking about dressings and paper bags when we are confronted daily with much bigger problems? Everybody has to start somewhere, and simple, straightforward practices - like preparing our own food, reusing bags and driving less, help us address complicated challenges like unwanted food additives, resource shortages, landfill closures and air pollution. The choices individuals make day-to-day really matter, and the sooner we shrink our individual footprints the better it will be for the earth and us. LITE Initiatives Simple, Sustainable Practices With Significant Consequences Car-Lite, Community Bikes, Green Mentor and Zero Waste Sonoma County. www.liteinit.org LITE at sonic.net 707 579-5811
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