Introduction
Hook: Every time you turn around you hear something else about going green. The message is played often and loudly on TV’s, radios, advertisements, and much more. They all ask…What are you doing to go green? What changes to your life have you made to go green?
Need: With gas and food prices going up at a amazing rate, we need to think of ways to help out our economy and environment.
Credibility: I have been going green for the past couple of years. Although it might seem like a big waste of time. There are many benefits
Thesis: You can go green..
T.S.: Lets look at 5 ways you can go green.
Body:
1. The first way you can go green is to save energy. A. To save on heating and cooling costs, set your thermostat
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C. Drive Smarter. Set your cruise control on the highway for up to a 15 percent improvement in mileage. Driving less aggressively is the single most effective way to save gasoline, accelerate out of lights more gently, avoid rapid braking, and only drive as fast as you must.
4. The fourth way you can go green is to skip the plastics. A. Use a water filter to purify tap water instead of buying bottled water. Plastic bottles generate large amounts of container waste. If you think gas is high, do the math on how much a gallon of water is if you buy it one bottle at a time. B. Bring a reusable water bottle, preferably aluminum rather than plastic, with you when traveling or at work. C. If you go to the grocery store, make sure and use the paper bags instead of plastic because plastic bags clog the dumps and never decompose. D. You can make very effective, non toxic cleaning products whenever you need them. All you need are a few simple ingredients like baking soda, vinegar, lemon, and soap.
5. The fifth way you can go green is to shop in bulk or buy used. A. Consider going to garage sales or thrift stores instead of buying an item new. B. Go online to find new or gently used secondhand products. You can use sites such as e-bay or Craig list. C. Buy in bulk.
First and foremost, one of the purposes of Live Green is it encourages all ISU students, faculty, and staff to be fully committed. Also, it engages to make our campus to have a “green” environment. It takes some challenges for those who join this program. It leads in sustainability among land-grant institutions. It also recognizes that the involvement and dedication of every member in ISU is necessary to achieve the goal. (About)
Efficiency is not always the answer. David Owen explains that society is headed in the wrong direction, believing that to be greener we need to make our everyday lives more efficient when in reality we need to change our behavior. We as consumers want to be sustainable and take care of the Earth we live on while ironically expanding our collection of trinkets. Everything we believe in being efficient and green is misrepresented and to save the Earth the truth needs to be heard.
Imported grapes are $.75 cents per pound and local grapes are $1.25 which would you buy? B. Just because you saved $3.00 on your purchase the city just lost more than $3.00 C. That is why I buy locally. II. Thesis: Buying local produce will benefit the community we live in in many ways and benefit you as well.
Since its inception, bottled water has been a commonplace use by people on the go, but is it as valuable as people think? There have been numerous of concerns as to whether bottled water is safer than tap water. In addition to the questions of safety, bottled water can be extravagant in comparison to tap water and there are even alternative options for people on the go such as refillable bottles. In the Susan Casey essay “Our Oceans Are Turning into Plastic … Are You?” she describes the potential dangers of excessive use of plastic on our earth, especially the impact on the oceans. To further add another dimension to Casey’s argument, Andrea Fuller wrote an article for The New York Times “Quality of Bottled Water Questioned in Congress”, which
In my opinion we each can make a difference in our going green initiative, by doing small stuff like not littering and making sure we recycle, something small as our
Tap water and bottled water are used in peoples lives daily. Yet, barely anybody seems to care for the difference between the two. The quality, price, accessibility and many other aspects areover looked in the decision for tap or bottled water. Another topic that seems to be shoved under the rug is the safety of tap water in the United States. But from investigative information it proves that there is no problem with drinking tap water in the United States.
In Hot, Flat and Crowded: Why we need a Green Revolution—and how it can renew
Describe any “green” concepts the business might be using or plan on using in the future.
44) Which of the following product promotional activities would probably help make the supply chain more efficient?
Bottled water is a high revenue business with little to offer its consumers. Americans spent around $11.8 billion dollars on bottled water in 2012 (Boesler). It is surprising to discover that bottled water costs at least 300 times more than tap water (Boesler). Bottled water drinkers might assume this is an adequate price considering marketers convince them it comes from natural springs, but at least 25% of bottled water comes from municipal water supplies (“Bottled Water”). The company filters the tap water and sells it in misleading packaging at an outrageous price. However, with tap water only $ 0.004 a gallon, Americans can filter their own water and increase the productive opportunities for their money (Boesler).
Have you ever had any concerns about bottled water? Do you think that bottled water is better than tap water? Bottled water is water packed in plastic containers and sold for human consumption (Health Canada, 2013). Currently, the amount of bottled water consumed has increased considerably since many people feel it is safer drinking bottled water than tap water (Parent and Wrong, 2014). According to The Statistics Portal the global sale of bottled water took a leap from 161, 589 to 181, 608 liters from 2009 to 2011. In the United States, each American citizen consumed around 32 gallons of bottled water in 2013, thus meaning an equivalent growth of 15% over 2009 (Statistics & facts, 2014). In fact, due to good portability, bottled water has been helpful in both simple and complex situations such as daily exercises and natural disasters. Even though having those few considerable advantages, bottled water still have been less benefits; especially due to the negative impact in the socio-economic, health and environmental fields.
College campuses across the nation have taken action to participate in the Reduce, Recycle and Reuse initiative to help make their campus a better and more environmentally safe. The program encourages recycling in communities, schools and work place. Through this proposal I plan to implement the program “Let’s Go Green” at Savannah State University. This program would challenge the faculty, students and the university itself to implement eco-friendly activities into day to day operations or everyday lives.
Here's a good tip when selecting items for a yard sale... Try to be objective. Keep in mind that you're intent on reducing clutter, making extra space and earning a few dollars, too.
Until recently, many of the environmentalist policies of the Australian Prime Minister Julia Gillard have been quite moderate, such as encouraging children to turn off their game consoles when not in use. On the government-run Clean Energy Future homepage, the website proclaims: "Switching off video game consoles when not in use could save households up to $150 a year enough to buy several great new games." The website provides a link to tips for ordinary consumers about how they can save money on energy costs through conservation efforts. This is environmentalism marketed from a self-interested perspective. The message is that people can save money and save energy at the same time. While this is a helpful promotional campaign in some respects, it is also somewhat inaccurate, given that many of the measures that must be taken to save the planet will likely be more costly and result in the consumer having to give up certain things and to pay more money for others. Organic food and hybrid cars, for example, cost more than standard-grown food and standard vehicles.
Cornelissen, G., Pandelaere, M., Luk, W., & DeWitte, S., (2008, February). Positive Cueing: Promoting Sustainable Consumer Behavior by Cueing Common Environmental Behaviors as Environmental. International Journal of Re