Archive for the ‘Make a difference’ Category

Clean Planet Scholarship

Saturday, August 28th, 2010

At Clean Planet we are committed to initiatives that support the creation of a sustainable world – eco initiatives , education support , skill building and employment opportunities. Our idea is not just monetary assistance but to bring our professional and personal abilities , our extended community to the endeavors.

Education is essential in the goal towards a more equitable , sustainable world. The lack of opportunity to education changes the course of millions of lives. Naturally , access to education changes the course of the person’s life . Education benefits not just the individual – but his/her family and community too.

We’re pleased to share the news about Clean Planet scholarship to support education and facilitate mentoring for children and adults.

Exercise your power

Wednesday, August 25th, 2010

Do you know how POWERFUL you are ? Like a stone dropped in water that creates waves – you can start waves of joy – for a loved one , friend , co-worker , stranger, anyone . Genuine , conscious acts of kindness , love and thoughtfulness.

- Acknowledge someone for their presence in your life

- Express love and appreciation in unexpected , creative , genuine ways

- SMILE. Sometimes that’s all it takes to brighten up someone’s day.

- Be present to the person

- Listen

- Offer your time and help to someone who needs it

The list can go on . You’ll notice that none of this requires money (in any significant form ) . All it takes is the intention and the willingness to light the flame of joy.

Inspiring a Clean(er) Planet

Friday, August 20th, 2010

One of our Japanese retail clients recently informed us that their store team were mighty impressed by Clean Planet.

Inspired by Clean Planet they have done away with plastic bags , plastic clips, metal pins , plastic band for collar , tissue paper. Garments are soft packed and given to the customers in paper bags.

One of the many ways in which we are inspiring…and enabling a Clean(er) Planet !

We the customer(s)

Saturday, August 7th, 2010

Our voice as a customer matters. Often we find (in India) customers being passively tolerant of bad service , poor quality, waste. Or being aggressive.There is a mid path (and a necessary one) of being assertive and persistent.

When you encounter bad quality , poor service , waste – pl take a few mins to assertively voice your feedback. Equally important – Suggestions . If you’d like your local supermarket to stock organic products then ask to meet the section-in-charge or the store manager to share your views. Request your family n friends to do so as well. Doing this consistently improves the odds of the change you are seeking to manifest.

And hey , pl acknowledge good service and practices !

Remember , no one can do everything, but everyone can do something.

The story of cosmetics

Monday, July 26th, 2010

Pl watch this video and share with everyone you know.

Besides the problem of toxic chemicals there is the added factor that several products do not have the expiry date marked on them. The expiry date  is stamped on the packaging which naturally needs to be discarded . Lipsticks , eyeliners , mascaras etc don’t have the date of manufacture or the expiry date marked on them. This means that users are not only using products with toxic chemicals – some of them are past their expiry date adding to the health risks they pose to the users.

This def points to the need to create recreate sense of self , beauty which do not rely on toxic cocktails.

Stylishly green hotel

Thursday, July 15th, 2010

An Indonesian businessman contributes to environmental wellness on a bike connected to a generator inside the “100 percent green” Crowne Plaza Hotel in Copenhagen. The energy produced by pedaling guests is stocked in a battery before being injected into the hotel’s power supply.

The Crowne Plaza’s concrete and steel tower is covered in some 1,500 that produce 170,000 kilowatt-hours of electricity, which is enough to power 55 households. In the basement of the 86-meter (232-feet) skyscraper there is a geothermal well which covers the hotel’s heating and needs, slashing its energy bill by about 90 percent.

And in each of the 366 rooms, personal care accessories are biodegradable, taps are equipped with water-saving devices and all light bulbs are low-energy.

But that doesn’t mean the Intercontinental chain’s first “all-eco” hotel has clients roughing it.

“Everything was thought out with technologies respectful of the environment, without sacrificing quality, comfort, and the feeling of being at a four-star hotel,” spokeswoman Toemmergaard insists.

Wall coverings, carpeting, and even the feet on the design furniture are made from recycled materials and are guaranteed not to contain chemical products, while the computers have power-saving screens.

And the guests who redeem their electricity-production vouchers dine on organic food, and the high-tech kitchen grinds all its garbage and sends it to a local  biogass central to be transformed into fuel.

Brilliant idea .  It would taken the hotel meticulous effort to plan , create and source all the materials. The end result is an eco-hotel that’s an inspiring example to all businesses to think non-linearly and holistically about sustainability.

The eco-paradise wasn’t an easy sell to the slightly sceptical Intercontinental chain, Toemmergaard concedes.

“Often, when people think environmentally friendly, they think of smaller organic products that are less appealing than traditional offerings,” she says, adding that there had been a real fight “to convince the chain we had made the right choice.”

In the end, the franchises’s owners agreed to carry the project through because they believed Copenhagen needed a hotel that reflected its green ambitions, Toemmergaard says.

The bicycle-filled capital, which is “one of the world’s showcases for the environment and quality of life, which wants to become the first emission-free capital in 2025, should have a hotel that fits that image,” she says.

The carbon-dioxide neutral hotel cost some 125 million euros (156 million dollars) to build and is about five percent more expensive to run than a normal hotel, but the owners expect to make up the difference.

“In five or six years we will have a return on our investment that shows that it pays to make an effort for the environment,” Toemmergaard says.

( via physorg.com )

Flower power

Thursday, July 1st, 2010

The Ganesha at the small roadside shrine under a tree in Indiranagar is practically masked by jasmine and marigold flowers. “These are just the decorations for a regular day,” says IT professional V Vinod. “When there’s a festival, there’s at least five times this amount. Imagine the tonnes of flowers all the temples, large and small, across the city must be using and throwing away,” says Vinod.

..So Vinod’s idea is that temples should collect the flowers thrown away every day and turn them into manure. “It’s not expensive, it’s not hard, it’s not even a new idea. It’s just a simple sustainable solution to turn waste to wealth,” he says…

..He believes all temples, however small, can also turn their waste into manure. His idea is to have community collection and composting spots for the flowers from various smaller temples. “Even houses can go and dump their flower waste there,” he says, adding that his own house generates about two kg of flower waste during a festival. “Even parks can compost their leaves in these common bins,” he adds.

Florists , hotels , any place that has flowers to dispose should start to compost them instead of tossing it into the garbage pile.

Highly doable. Solutions like these definitely help make a Cleaner Planet.

p.s – political parties in India should take to composting flowers considering the quantity of floral garlands they use to garland not just their ‘live’ party bosses but also their statues and hoardings.

Eco Biz @ Japan

Saturday, June 12th, 2010

Japanese carry a lot of stuff . Most folks carry between 1-3 bags . Women on an average carry 1-2 bags (some 3 ) . Men carry at least 1 bag.

This is a country where bags are sold extensively . All kinds of bags – leather , cloth , nylon , polyester , faux leather . Yet , in my visits to retail stores I seldom see customers declining the retailer’s plastic bag and taking the product purchased in their own reusable bag . There must be folks who do so . I’ve not witnessed it yet whether in a dept store , convenience store , people buying lunch boxes from stalls or any retail format for that matter.

The Japanese are geniuses at making products that fold up into a compact size . The customers can easily carry a folding bag in one of their bags and use it to carry items purchased . Thereby reducing plastic  ( Japan is a HUGE consumer of plastic . More on that in another post ).

Japan has a very high literacy rate + bags are easily available in retail . It’s puzzling why using a reusable bag for purchases is not a widespread if not default behavior .

Until few years ago Japanese men wore suits to work . No exceptions . I suspect that the Wachowski brothers got their inspiration to dress the agents of Matrix in suits after a few rides in the Tokyo metro . Until Cool Biz came along it was unthinkable that a Japanese corporate male employee could turn up at work in any other attire . Cool Biz was almost like legalizing wearing just a shirt  and trousers to work. Possibly Japan needs an initiative similar to Cool Biz to make it acceptable / necessary / cool/eco friendly to take a reusable bag to stores and use it to carry products.

They can call it Eco Biz.

Calling all superheroes

Wednesday, June 2nd, 2010

The rate at which we are generating, consuming and disposing a non-bio degradable substance aka Plastic – it would spawn a new kind of fictional hero or at least add a new task to already created fictional superheroes.

Circa 1990 – Superman/ Spiderman rescues the world from the bad guy(s)

In the future the super hero would not only be fighting evil folks . He / she would be swooping in on the Pacific garbage patch and similar heaps of non-biodegradable , earth polluting material and flinging them into outer space. All the superheroes would need to team up to clear up the plastic choking the planet.

The superheroes like Superman/Spiderman are fictional . The plastic on the planet is real . We need billions of people to become eco heros by making sustainable , responsible choices. At this point in time there is no answer in terms of solutions to bio degrade the plastic that is choking land and sea. The least we can do is to reduce the rate of addition to the pile.

Ocean champion

Tuesday, June 1st, 2010

Superb talk by Roz Savage . Honest , inspiring.

She is rowing across the ocean to raise awareness on the perils of plastic . As she aptly points out we (i.e mankind ) haven’t gotten ourselves into the current mess due to big disasters. It’s the cumulative effect of daily choices made by billions of people.

The insights she shares from her journeys on the ocean and land – offer HUGE inspiration .

A true eco-hero.