Greening your summer barbecue


While summer time barbecues may invoke images of vibrant yards full of heaping platters of hotdogs and burgers, the aftermath is not always quite a sight.

The remains frequently look like a wasteland of smoldering charcoal, abandoned food scraps and crumpled plastic cups.

It might be among America’s favorite traditions, however the summer time barbecue usually is not the greenest. But almost every factor of an outside gathering could be changed with eco-friendly options.

For environment journalist and Huffington Publish writer Jennifer Grayson, tossing a eco-friendly barbecue means thinking ahead.

“40 % of food within the U.S. is really tossed out each year,Inch she states. “Certainly be conscious

when you are shopping, and when you purchase an excessive amount of, then send your visitors home with leftovers.”

Try organic

Grayson stated hosts do not have to quit burgers for tofu. Rather, she recommended purchasing organic hotdogs in the supermarket or buying meat from the local maqui berry farmers market.

If you do not mind going the veggie-centric route, Laura Theodore, vegan chef and host from the approaching public television cooking show “The Jazzy Vegetarian,” has numerous recommendations for meat-free foods.

“Everyone loves grilled asparagus, grilled zucchini, grilled eggplant,” she states. “An excellent factor to complete about the grill is portobello mushrooms. Just marinate them first inside your favorite marinade, anything you would

marinate meat in normally, after which worn the grill exactly like you would a hamburger.”

Go meatless

For individuals who wish to balance traditional with Earth-friendly, the classics are also made of meatless versions.

“If you opt for a soy-based hamburger or waitress or substitute, make certain it’s USDA organic,” states Crissy Trask, author of “It Is Not Difficult Being Eco-friendly: A Guide for Earth Friendly Living” (Gibbs Cruz, 2006), within an email interview. “Nonorganic soy items will in all probability be produced with genetically modified soy unless of course the label states otherwise.”

Additionally to scrumptious food, no barbecue is complete without cold beer.

“Organic beer is a touch difficult to find, but you can find local beer. That’s important, since it is in glass bottles many of the time which increases the waste and also the fuel cost when you are shipping it across the nation,Inch Grayson states. “If you look for a brewery that you simply love that’s local, why don’t you serve that beer?”

A eco-friendly grill

In the centre of each and every barbecue may be the actual grill. However when combined with regular charcoal this crucial cooking device requires a toll on earth.

“The standard charcoal is stuffed with lighting fluid. It’s not necessary to be an environmentalist to understand that,” Grayson states. “You light that stuff also it smells horrible.” Although Grayson stated photo voltaic grills are the most useful option, she acknowledged that it could ‘t be probably the most practical method and recommended using natural lump charcoal.

You will find other available choices, too. “Charcoal briquettes produce dangerous smoke when burned, therefore if possible, make use of a gas or propane gas grill for cleaner barbecues,” Trask states. “An electrical grill will produce no pollutants in the source, but when your energy is coal-produced, pollutants just occur elsewhere — in the energy plant. If you are planning to make use of charcoal, do not complicate matters by utilizing oil fuel starters. A charcoal chimney is definitely an efficient method to start your fire with no oil items.”

Shun disposables

Another common concern for outside party hosts is the quantity of trash in the finish from the evening, many of which originates from guests’ paper plates and plastic cups. As a substitute, Grayson recommended Preserve, that provides two lines of plastic dinnerware ($4.50-$85, world wide web.preserveproducts.com).

“They appear like traditional disposable plastic plates and cups, except that you could clean them 1000’s and 1000’s of occasions,” Grayson states.

Theodore recommended searching in your cupboard. “Consider simply using your day-to-day plates as well as your everyday silverware, particularly if you are just likely to be out lying on your back deck,” she states, adding that unbleached paper or cloth serviettes will also be advisable.

Re-think adornments

Aside from the tableware, adornments may also lead to some barbecue’s waste.

Sophie Uliano, author of “Beautifully Eco-friendly: 8 Easy Steps for an Earth-Friendly Existence,” (Harper Collins, 2008), states it is best to go ahead and take do-it-yourself approach. “It isn’t eco-friendly or wise to buy a lot of really costly party adornments which are most likely likely to finish up within the trash after,” she states. “It’s far better if you’re able to make ad banners or flags or whatever you are likely to do. Make sure they are from recycled materials. Get really kind of innovative.”

Rather than purchasing flowers, Uliano suggests using what’s already inside your backyard. “Obtain a Mason jar and grow it with some greenery and lots of fresh herbal treatments, like lavender or tulsi and mint, such things as that. It’s really, really pretty,” she states. “I believe simplicity may be the type in everything so far as adornments are worried.Inch

Eco-savvy cleaning

Following the happy and satiated visitors have remaining, it’s the perfect time for eco-conscious cleaning.

“If there is a label on the rear of the bottle that states ‘don’t make use of this inside a closed space’ “…, that’s most likely your clue it’s full of some kind of toxic chemical,” Grayson states. She suggested buying safer items, like the Method line ($3.99-$16.76, world wide web.methodhome.com), or just in what you’ve throughout the house, for example water and vinegar.

“If everybody made slightly better options, then with each other, it might possess a large impact,” Grayson states.

Greening plastic cards

I was going through my wallet yesterday looking for a particular debit card and it dawned on me how much plastic I carry around with me – debit cards, credit cards, membership cards, health care cards and others – 9 in total.
All these cards have a limited lifespan before they expire and are replaced with updated ones.
I searched for a resin code on all the cards to try and determine what sort of plastic is used.
Plastic resin codes are usually represented by a number within a triangle made up of three arrows that is stamped onto the plastic.
I couldn’t find any indicators, but it turns out the plastic in these cards is mostly
Polyvinyl Chloride
(PVC).

PVC isn’t the most environmentally friendly plastic, either in its manufacture or as a final product. The way that PVC breaks down is through granulation, so the pieces just become smaller; which can cause problems for creatures that may ingest the pieces.
It may seem like a trifling issue, but according to the Sierra
Club, six billion of these plastic cards are produced each year around the world. I’ve read other figures putting it at
a staggering 17 billion when gift cards, cell phone top up and other cards are also incorporated into the figures.
Aside from PVC generally being non-recyclable; in some cases you certainly wouldn’t want to be putting cards into a recycling bin without at least attacking them with a pair of scissors first; particularly in the case of cards with information encoded on a magnetic strip on the back.
So, there’s certainly a problem here – the cards need to be durable; but usually only for a few years. Yet we have a product that will be around for many years more than it will be used.
There has been some progress made in the area of gift cards. A few years back I wrote about a major retailer trialing
bioplastic
gift cards made from corn sugar and I believe a few other retailers have followed suit. However, this option also raises the thorny issue of using food crops, or crops on land suitable for food production,  for something other than food.
I’ve also read about PET (Polyethylene Terephthalate) being used – PET is one of the easiest plastics to
recycle and is most commonly found in the form of soda bottles. The barrier to uptake appears to be cost, with PET costing about 20% more. But really, how much would that add onto the cost of the base materials a card? Not much I suspect.
The International Card Manufacturer’s association says there is growing consumer and card issuer demand for green transaction and identification cards and has introduced the
EcoLabel Standard
Program.
To receive the ICMA’s certification, cards need to be made with either a 25% reduction in used materials, contain 25% recycled content, be
compostable or have a minimum of 40% biobased content. It’s a positive step, but
one that looks to be still trying to gain traction as currently there are only a handful of licensed manufacturers it lists.
What can we do?
As so many big brands like to proclaim their green street cred, this is an area where we as consumers can apply a little pressure. A good place to start is with banks in relation to ATM and credit cards and stores that offer gift cards.
If you visit the web sites of these companies, they will usually have a sustainability section and contact details for that department. Shoot them an email and ask them what they are doing about the plastics impact of their gift/credit/debit/whatever cards and perhaps point them to the ICMA’s EcoLabel Standard
Program. This isn’t necessarily to get them to participate in that particular program, but just as a way of underlining that you’re not the only one who feels it’s an important issue within the power of the company to rectify.
Repurposing old cards
Quite a few people have found interesting ways to repurpose these cards. If you run a search on Google using terms such as “repurpose gift card” and “repurpose credit card”; a bunch of pages
with ideas will show up.
As mentioned, for security’s sake, be a little careful how you repurpose cards that have a magnetic strip on the back as that strip may contain personal information that could be used in identity theft. You can “scramble” the information by running a strong magnet over the strip, but to play it safe, you really should just cut them up into little pieces. Hopefully in the not too distant future all plastic cards will be “green” and you’ll be able to recycle or maybe even compost what’s left.