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Table of ContentsSummary of Sustainabililty Policies . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3

Major Green Initiatives . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8

Environmental Issues & Trends . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 9Land Pollution . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20Air Pollution . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 48Ocean / Water Pollution . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 63Climate Change . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 79Food . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 1 3

What CSULB is Doing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13649er Shops . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 137Japanese Gardens . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 143Associated Students, Inc . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 154Green Campus Interns . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 6 1Academics . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 7 1Financial Management . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 196

CSU Buy Recycled . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 197E-Waste . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20 1Copier Duplex Program . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 205Office Supply Boomerang Boxes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 208Printer Cartridge Recycling . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2 10

Property Donations, Auctions and Sales . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2 1 6Recycled Paper . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 220Sustainable Transportation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 222Swap Surplus Supplies . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 232Writing Instrument Recycling . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 235Other Sustainable Practices . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 240

Physical Planning & Facilities Management . . . . . . .244Appliance Timers and Ipans . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 245Custodial Services . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 249Energy Efficiency . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 250LEED Green Buildings . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 257Lighting . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2 6 1Solar . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 269Recycling . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 273Landscape . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 295Water Conservation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 298Water Refilling Stations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 299Transportation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 302

What You Can Do! . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 305Food/Organic . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3 2 1Upcycle = Repurpose . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 348CSULB Brochure: What You Can Do To Create A Sustainable Community . . . . . 359

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Summary of Sustainability Policies

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Summary of Sustainability PoliciesFederal Government: Two executive Orders are in place (EO13423 dated 1/24/07 & EO13514 dated 10/5/09) that aid Federal facilities in developing and maintaining sustainable facilities and helping to develop and promote sustainable practices.

A few highlights within these orders are:

•Must reduce their total consumption of petroleum products by 2% annually through 2020.

•Must increase the total non-petroleum based fuel consumption by 10% annually.•Use plug-in hybrid vehicles when they are commercially available at a reasonable cost.•Reduce greenhouse gas emissions by using alternative fuel vehicles and optimizing the number of vehicles in the agency fleet.

•Reduce the quantity of toxic/ hazardous chemicals and materials acquired, used or disposed of.•Increase the diversion of solid waste as appropriate.•Divert at least 50% of non-hazardous solid waste, including construction and demolition debris, by the end of fiscal year 2015.

•Reduce energy intensity by 3% each year, leading to 30% by 2015•Ensure that at least half of all renewable energy comes from new renewable sources.•Reduce water intensity (gallons per square foot) by 2% each year through 2015 for a total of 16%.•Achieve 50% or higher diversion rate on non-hazardous solid waste by 2015.•Achieve 50% or higher diversion rate on construction and demolition materials and debris by 2015.•Ensure 95% of all new contracts require products and services that are energy-efficient, water-efficient, biobased, environmentally preferable, non-ozone depleting, contain recycled content, non-toxic or less toxic alternatives.

(www.fedcenter.gov)

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State of California:

Executive order dated 4/25/12 requires:•New or renovated state buildings larger than 10,000 square feet to achieve the U.S. Green Building Council’s LEED ‘Silver’ certification or higher;

•A target of zero net energy consumption for 50% of the square footage of existing state-owned buildings by 2025;

•A target of zero net energy consumption from all new or renovated state buildings beginning design after 2025.

Executive order dated 3/23/12 requires:•That all State entities support and facilitate the rapid commercialization of zero-emission vehicles.•A target for 2050 to reduce greenhouse gas emissions from the transportation sector equaling 80% less than 1990 levels.’

•The State’s zero-emission vehicle infrastructure will be able to support up to one million vehicles by 2020.•Electrical vehicle charging will be integrated into the electricity grid by 2020.•The State’s clean, efficient vehicles will annually displace at least 1.5 billion gallons of petroleum fuels by 2025.

(www.green.ca.gov)

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City of Long Beach:

Adopted the Long Beach Sustainable City Action Plan on February 2, 2010 to guide ‘operational, policy and financial decisions to create a more sustainable Long Beach.’ This includes:

•Having 100% of major city facilities LEED certified by 2020.

•Have 100% of city-owned vacant lots utilized with interim green uses by 2012.

•Plant at least 10,000 trees in Long Beach by 2020.

•Have 100% of suitable alley and parking lot projects use permeable pavement by 2020.

•Goal of having 50% of Long Beach residents work in Long Beach by 2020.

•Reduce future port-related emissions by 47% by 2011.

•Create 8 acres of open space per 1000 residents by 2020.

•Establish a community garden in every park 5 acres or larger by 2020.

•Increase bike ridership from 1% to 10% by 2016.

•Increase public transit ridership by 25% by 2016.

•Have 100% of taxi cab fleets on alternative fuel and/or low emissions by 2016.

•Reduce vehicle emissions by 30% by 2020.

•Reduce electricity use in City operations by 25% by 2020.

•Reduce greenhouse gas emissions from City facilities and operations by 15% by 2020.

S U S T A I N A B L E

L O N G B E A C H

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The California State University System:

Energy policy in place since 1978 (and revised over time) to reduce the use of non-renewable resources and increase energy efficiency.

Executive Order No. 987 dated 8/2/06 outlines energy conservation, sustainable building practices and physical plant management for the CSU.

CSULB President F. King Alexander signed the American College & University Presidents Climate Commitment on 5/31/11 which requires:

•Within two years of document signing develop an action plan for becoming climate neutral.

•The adoption of two or more of the following:

•All new campus construction to be built to at least the U.S. Green Building Council’s LEED Silver standard.

•All appliances purchased to be ENERGY STAR certified.

•Offset all greenhouse gas emissions generated by air travel

•Encourage public transportation for all faculty, staff, students and visitors

•Purchase at least 15% of our electricity from renewable sources

•Support climate and sustainability proposals at companies where our endowment is invested

•Participate in the Waste Minimization component of the national RecycleMania

www.calstate.edu/cpdc/sustainability/policies-reports/

Sustainability

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Major Green Initiatives

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Major Green InitiativesU.S. Postal Services The Postal Service is the only mailing and shipping company in the world whose shipping supplies are Cradle to Cradle Certified (eco-effective products that have been evaluated on every aspect – from creation to reuse or recycling – & chosen as one that is most efficient and waste-free), meeting established standards for human and environmental health and recyclability.

USPS is issuing 27 billion Cradle to Cradle Certified postage products, including the Go Green stamps, which promote environmental awareness and action. (about.usps.com)

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The Global Alliance for Cleaner Cook Stoves received a $50

million dollar pledge from Hillary Clinton on behalf of the

United States to help bring cleaner cook stores to the de-

veloping world. Currently, pollution from the widely used

crude, biomass and wood burning stores leads to millions of

deaths a year, mostly women and children, and emits millions

of tons of greenhouse gasses in the process. (www.treehugger.com)Page 10

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Banana Skin for Fuel• By admin, 2 April, 2012

Researchers at Nottingham University have managed to make banana peels into usable fuel, ridding the need to gather firewood for cooking, boiling water and heating.

Since there is an estimated 10 tons of waste (made up of skins, leaves and stems) for every 1 ton of bananas eaten, this new low-tech briquette can be extremely beneficial not just economically but also for the environment.

According to the BBC report, it was on a visit to Rwanda that Joel Chaney, a PhD student from the University of Nottingham came up with the idea of turning banana waste into an efficient fuel source.

He first mashes a pile of rotting skins and leaves. This pulp is then mixed with saw dust, compressed and dried to create briquettes that ignite readily and throw out a steady heat, ideal for cooking. “The banana skins bind other materials together really well, they act like glue,” says Mr Chaney.

Best of all, no machines are needed to make these banana briquettes which means that the locals can easily make them. This could be a great boon indeed for third world countries, especially the so called “banana republics”.

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Top Ten Green Initiatives from Global Automakers:Tesla motors is working on a 100% electric-run vehicle that can go from zero-to-60 in under four seconds. Renault, Nissan, Daimler and BMW have created a $42 million dollar initiative that supports the research and development of transportation solutions utilizing renewable sources of energy and includes the creation of more than 10,000 electric vehicle charging stations throughout the continent.Nissan’s Green Program objective is to reduce carbon dioxide emissions wherever Nissan has corporate endeavors, and they have dealerships with environmental staff that guarantees end-of-life vehicles are property disposed of.General Motors (GM) sponsors the EcoCAR initiative competition, which is a global vehicle engineering competition where university students are challenged to not only design, but build a vehicle where the main objective is to reduce the overall environmental impact associated with personal transportation.Volkswagen has invested in a plant to build TFSI engines, which are electronically controlled and reduce fuel consumption and carbon dioxide emissions by 20%.

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Honda had the first automobile in California to comply with the SULEV (Super Ultra Low Emissions Vehicle) requirements and is involved in a number of ‘Green Factory’ projects including recycling industrial water and installing solar panels at all their plants. Ford is involved in the TerraPass Program where Ford owners can calculate the total amount of carbon dioxide their vehicle gives off while driving, then buy a TerraPass between $30 and $80 yearly to fund projects like wind energy to decrease carbon dioxide emissions equaling the same sum as the vehicle.One of Toyota’s main initiatives is to reduce carbon dioxide emissions in technologies, improvement of traffic flows and the creation of clean-energy vehicles. They have also – through research and development – created two new species of plants derived from the gardenia and cherry sage that actually offset carbon dioxide emissions. In 2009 Hyundai Motor Group pledged $3.2 billion to develop environmentally friendly vehicles as well as reduce total carbon dioxide emissions coming from manufacturing factories. Some of this money will be used to develop hydrogen fuel cell and hybrid vehicles and for the improvement of engine and transmission fuel efficiency.

Fiat’s green initiative is known as the ‘Uno Ecology’ Concept, which is a proposal for a green car that will utilize renewable materials, reduce carbon dioxide emissions and improve overall fuel economy. Another feature is photovoltaic cells located along the roof of the vehicle that will utilize solar light for powering different car systems. And even the car itself was made with recyclable and renewable materials, including recycled PET and coconut fibers. (http://blog.cleantechies.com/2011)

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Walmart (world’s largest public corporation): goals are:

•to be supplied 100% by renewable energy•create zero waste •to sell products that sustain people and the environment. •They have also partnered with the National Fish and Wildlife Foundation to create Acres for America in 2005; this is a 10 year commitment to purchase and preserve 1 acre in the U.S. for every acre of land they develop. (corporate.walmart.com)

European Commission: Eco-innovation:

•This initiative provides funding for projects in various sectors that mitigate environmental im-pacts or promote a more efficient use of resources.

•Priority areas include material recycling, buildings, food/drink sector and greener business. •Projects must be environmentally beneficial, innovative and economically viable.•300 proposals have been received for 2012.

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Greening Kenya Initiative:Government of Kenya has rolled out a massive national tree planting campaign to restore the depleted Kodera Forest in Nyanza.

Target is to have some 7.6 billion trees planted over the next 10 years.

Initiative also intends to establish a million trees in 47 countries.

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Clinton Climate Initiative:Implementing programs that create and advance solutions to the root causes of climate change – while also helping to reduce our reliance on oil, saving money for individuals and governments, creating jobs, and growing economies. CCI, in partnership with the C40 Climate Leadership Group (C40), focuses on helping large cities reduce their carbon emissions.

Other programs aim to increase energy efficiency through building retrofits; to increase access to clean energy technology and deploy it at the government, corporate, and homeowner levels; and to reverse deforestation by preserving and regrowing forests.

C40 Cities Climate Leadership Group –a network of 59 large and engaged cities from around the world committed to implementing meaningful and sustainable climate-related policies and programs locally that will help address climate change globally.

Forest Conservation & Restoration:

The CCI Forestry Program assists projects that conserve or re-grow forests at the invitation of the following countries:

Cambodia: In Cambodia CCI works with local partners to bring together 13 community forestry sites in the country’s first effort to reduce emissions from deforestation and degradation (REDD+) through the sale of forest carbon credits.

Indonesia: CCI is currently supporting five projects in Indonesia, working with private investors in carbon-rich peatland forests.

Kenya: In a country where less than two percent of the total land area is forested, CCI is developing a reforestation project with local communities that seeks to employ carbon financing to protect a critical water catchment area.

Tanzania: CCI is working with 13 villages to design a REDD+ project that seeks to enable them to derive revenues from sustainable timber harvesting as well as carbon sales.

Guyana: CCI is helping the government advance a low-carbon development strategy that protects the country’s 18 million hectares of forests.

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Environmental initiatives, waste management and technology dissemination in BangladeshThe project aims to facilitate environmental and social consciousness and improvement through environmental initiatives and technology partnerships and dissemination, with a focus on waste management and recycling activities in selected areas in Bangladesh.

Four thousand selected household members in Gazipur District will directly benefit through awareness programs, training and skills development. Indirectly, all target area community members will benefit from increased awareness of environmental issues and better practices.

Main activities are:

1.awareness building, communication and knowledge/information sharing including EU-Asia partnerships;

2.introduction of alternative eco-friendly technologies and practices including demonstration activities;

3.training and skills development;

4.advocacy and lobbying for greater environmental controls at local, national, regional and international level.

Practical Action Bangladesh has started this project as a partner of BASA (Bangladesh Association for Social Advancement). It particularly focuses on supporting eco-friendly technology implementation, dissemination and development, including establishing a number of demonstration units. It also provides support for monitoring and evaluation of technology initiatives, plays a catalytic role to bring other partners together through training, back-up support and as a knowledge broker.

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Green Sydney government initiatives Sydney is fast becoming one of the world’s leading ‘green cities’. The City of Sydney Council is the first in the nation to become carbon neutral, while Tourism Australia (TA) maintains a ‘green checklist’ for planning events, and Business Events Australia (BEA) promotes the value of sustainable tourism.

Sustainable Sydney - green city livingThe City of Sydney Council has created an ambitious blueprint to deliver low-impact energy and water for the city - while connecting it via green networks and infrastructure hubs. Called ‘Sustainable Sydney 2030’, the plan responds to the challenges of global warming, rising oil prices, declining housing affordability and growth.

It incorporates five big moves, 10 strategic directions and hundreds of small steps that it hopes will transform Sydney into a ‘green, global and connected’ city by 2030.

But the Council is not wasting time or waiting for 2030 to arrive, and the numbers are stacking up. Council’s recent initiatives include:

• 1,000 trees planted in the inner city during 2008

• 30 rainwater tanks installed to provide water for the city’s green spaces

• 1,200 solar parking meters to save 1.4 tonnes of greenhouse gas emissions a year

• 49 water harvesting and recycling systems being built at key sites

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Environmental Issues and Trends

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Land Pollution

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Landfills are not designed to break down trash, merely

to bury it. When a landfill closes, the site, especially the groundwater, must be monitored and maintained for up to 30 years! (science.howstuffworks.com/environmental)

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Most of the trash that is not recycled ends up in a landfill.

(www.ehow.com)

L.A. County Landfill in La Puente 7-31-12

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In 2009 Los Angeles County disposed of 9.18 million tons or 29,621 tons per day of solid waste. Of this amount approximately 81%, or 23,881 tons per day were disposed in landfills located within Los Angeles County. (lacsd.org/education)

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Land can become polluted by household garbage and by industrial waste. In 2010 Americans produced about 250 million tons of garbage consisting of product packaging, grass clippings, furniture, clothing, bottles, food scraps, newspapers, appliances, paint and batteries. That’s about 4.3 pounds of waste per person per day, according to the Environmental Protection Agency. (Katharine Gammon, LiveScience Contributor)

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Trash production in U.S. has almost tripled since 1960. About 32.5% of the trash is recycled or composted, 12.5% is burned and 55% is buried in landfills. (EPA)

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Over 1 trillion plastic bags are used every year worldwide.

(reuseit.com)

About 1 million plastic bags are used every minute. (reuseit.com)

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A single plastic bag can take up to 1,000 years to degrade. (reuseit.com)

Plastic bags remain toxic even after they break down. (reuseit.com)

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Less than 1% of plastic bags are recycled each year. Recycling one ton of plastic bags costs $4,000; the recycled product can be sold for $32. (www.cleanair.org/Waste)

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827,000 to 1.3 million tons of plastic PET* water bottles were produced in the U.S. in 2006, requiring the energy equivalent of 50 million barrels of oil. 76.5% of these bottles ended up in landfills. (U.S. Government Accountability Office, 2009, June)

* Polyethylene terephthalate (PET) is a thermoplastic polymer resin of the polyester family and is used in beverage, food and other liquid containers.

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Roughly the equivalent of one quarter of a bottle of water in oil and 3 bottles of water are used for the production and transportation of each bottle. (Polarisinstitute.org)

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Every year in the U.S. nearly 200 billion beverage containers are sold, two-thirds of which are landfilled, incinerated or littered.

(As You Sow and Container Recycling Institute, 2006. U.S. Beverage Container Recycling Scorecard and Report.)Page 40

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Approximately 80% of what ends up in landfills each year could be recycled or reused. (pollutionworl.com)

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There are three major areas of concern when it comes to land pollution: it is believed that 80% of it is due to food production, the production of energy or the various methods of transportation. (pollutionworld.com)

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Due to industrial exploitations Honduras has lost 37% of its forests, Nigeria 36% and The Phillippines 32%. (National Geographic Society)

The biggest cause of deforestation is agriculture: farmers cut forests for planting crops and grazing livestock.

Other causes are industrial use, fuel and lumber. (National Geographic Society)

Deforestation: increases global warming, dries out land, lowers soil quality and triggers soil erosion & flooding, makes climate drier and destroys habitat for millions of animal and plant species.

(National Geographic Society; www.interestingfactsnow.com)Page 46

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The rate of deforestation in the tropics is approximately one acre

per second. (U.S. EPA, 2009)

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Air Pollution

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The air we breathe in many cities is being polluted by driving cars and trucks; burning coal, oil and other fossil fuels; and manufacturing chemicals. (www.cbsnews.com)

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Los Angeles, Long Beach and Riverside

are the #1 most polluted (by ozone)

cities in the United States. (As per the American Lung Association/2012)

According to the American Lung Association

Los Angeles-Long Beach-Riverside get a failing grade for:

High Ozone Days, 24 Hour Particle Pollution

and Annual Particle Pollution. (2012)

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Carbon dioxide (from cars, planes, power plants and other human activities that involve the burning of fossil fuels like gasoline and natural gas) is the main pollutant that is warming the Earth. (environment.nationalgeographic.com)

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Besides carbon dioxide, other greenhouse gases include methane – which comes from sources like swamps and gas emitted from livestock – and CFCs (chlorofluorocarbons) which were used in refrigerants and aerosol propellants until they were banned.

(environment.nationalgeographic.com)

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Pollutants create smog

and acid rain, cause cancer

and other serious health effects, diminish the

protective ozone layer in the upper atmosphere and contribute to the

potential for world climate change. (www.cbsnews.com)

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Breathing ozone can trigger many health

problems including chest pain, coughing,

throat irritation, and congestion. It can worsen

bronchitis, emphysema and asthma. Repeated

exposure may permanently scar lung tissue.

(epa.gov/airquality/ozonepollution)

Air pollution threatens the health of human

beings and other living things on our planet.

(www.cbsnews.com)

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Since the Industrial Revolution began in about 1750, carbon dioxide levels have increased nearly

38% and methane levels have increased 148%. (www.earthobservatory.nasa.gov)

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10/22/2012 8:15:09 AM http://www.stateoftheair.org/2012/city-rankings/most-polluted-cities.htmlPage 60

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BY OZONE BY YEAR ROUND PARTICLE POLLUTION BY SHORT-TERM PARTICLE POLLUTION#1: Los Angeles-Long Beach-Riverside, CA

#2: Visalia-Porterville, CA

#3: Bakersfield-Delano, CA

#4: Fresno-Madera, CA

#5: Hanford-Corcoran, CA

#6: Sacramento--Arden-Arcade--Yuba City, CA-NV

#7: San Diego-Carlsbad-San Marcos, CA

#8: Houston-Baytown-Huntsville, TX

#9: San Luis Obispo-Paso Robles, CA

#10: Merced, CA

#11: Modesto, CA

#12: Dallas-Fort Worth, TX

#13: Washington-Baltimore-Northern Virginia, DC-MD-VA-WV

#14: El Centro, CA

#15: New York-Newark-Bridgeport, NY-NJ-CT-PA

#16: Philadelphia-Camden-Vineland, PA-NJ-DE-MD

#16: Chico, CA

#18: Charlotte-Gastonia-Salisbury, NC-SC

#19: Phoenix-Mesa-Glendale, AZ

#20: Pittsburgh-New Castle, PA

#21: Birmingham-Hoover-Cullman, AL

#21: Cincinnati-Middletown-Wilmington, OH-KY-IN

#23: Stockton, CA

#24: Baton Rouge-Pierre Part, LA

#25: Atlanta-Sandy Springs-Gainesville, GA-AL

#1: Bakersfield-Delano, CA

#2: Hanford-Corcoran, CA

#3: Los Angeles-Long Beach-Riverside, CA

#4: Visalia-Porterville, CA

#5: Fresno-Madera, CA

#6: Pittsburgh-New Castle, PA

#7: Phoenix-Mesa-Glendale, AZ

#8: Cincinnati-Middletown-Wilmington, OH-KY-IN

#9: Louisville-Jefferson County-Elizabethtown- Scottsburg, KY-IN

#10: Philadelphia-Camden-Vineland, PA-NJ-DE-MD

#10: St. Louis-St. Charles-Farmington, MO-IL

#12: Steubenville-Weirton, OH-WV

#12: Birmingham-Hoover-Cullman, AL

#14: Indianapolis-Anderson-Columbus, IN

#14: Fairbanks, AK

#14: Cleveland-Akron-Elyria, OH

#17: Charleston, WV

#17: Dayton-Springfield-Greenville, OH

#17: Columbus-Auburn-Opelika, GA-AL

#20: Parkersburg-Marietta, WV-OH

#20: Wheeling, WV-OH

#20: Huntington-Ashland, WV-KY-OH

#23: Houston-Baytown-Huntsville, TX

#24: Davenport-Moline-Rock Island, IA-IL

#24: Hagerstown-Martinsburg, MD-WV

#24: Fairmont-Clarksburg, WV

#24: Atlanta-Sandy Springs-Gainesville, GA-AL

#1: Bakersfield-Delano, CA

#2: Fresno-Madera, CA

#3: Hanford-Corcoran, CA

#4: Los Angeles-Long Beach-Riverside, CA

#5: Modesto, CA

#6: Pittsburgh-New Castle, PA

#7: Salt Lake City-Ogden-Clearfield, UT

#8: Logan, UT-ID

#9: Fairbanks, AK

#10: Merced, CA

#11: Provo-Orem, UT

#12: Visalia-Porterville, CA

#13: Eugene-Springfield, OR

#14: Green Bay, WI

#15: Stockton, CA

#16: Las Cruces, NM

#17: Harrisburg-Carlisle-Lebanon, PA

#18: San Diego-Carlsbad-San Marcos, CA

#18: Chicago-Naperville-Michigan City, IL-IN-WI

#20: Milwaukee-Racine-Waukesha, WI

#21: Sacramento--Arden-Arcade--Yuba City, CA-NV

#22: Washington-Baltimore-Northern Virginia, DC-MD-VA-WV

#22: Philadelphia-Camden-Vineland, PA-NJ-DE-MD

#22: Davenport-Moline-Rock Island, IA-IL

#25: South Bend-Elkhart-Mishawaka,

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High Ozone Days Los Angeles-Long Beach-Riverside, CA Albany-Corvallis-Lebanon, OR

Ozone Grade: F DNC

Weighted Average: 127.8 0

Particle Pollution - 24 Hour Los Angeles-Long Beach-Riverside, CA Albany-Corvallis-Lebanon, OR

Grade: F B

Weighted Average: 28.8 0.3

Particle Pollution - Annual Los Angeles-Long Beach-Riverside, CA Albany-Corvallis-Lebanon, OR

Grade: Fail Inc

Design Value: 17 0

Groups at Risk Los Angeles-Long Beach-Riverside, CA Albany-Corvallis-Lebanon, OR

Total Population: 17,877,006 116,672

Pediatric Asthma: 302,853 2,125

Adult Asthma: 1,017,972 8,409

Chronic Bronchitis: 557,067 3,939

Emphysema: 228,858 1,855

Cardiovascular Disease: 4,109,427 30,968

Diabetes: 1,125,917 6,717

Children Under 18: 4,565,478 28,173

Adults 65 & Over 1,951,619 17,991

Poverty Estimate: 2,869,935 20,901Notes:(1) INC indicates incomplete monitoring data for all three years. Therefore, those counties are excluded from the grade analysis. (2) DNC indicates that there is no monitor collecting data in the county.

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Ocean/Water Pollution

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Some of the main causes of water pollution today are: Sewage and Waste- water, Farm Pollution (fertilizers, pesticides and waste), Gasoline/Oil, Chemical and Industrial Waste, Household Products, Marine Dumping, Mining, Chemical Waste, Radioactive Waste and Plastics. (www.waterpollution.com)

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Plastic does NOT biodegrade; instead it photo-degrades with sunlight, breaking into smaller and smaller pieces that never really disappear. (www.savemyoceans.com/plastics) (2012)

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Plastic particles are magnets for different types of toxic pollutants; organisms at the bottom of the food chain ingest the chemicals and are then consumed by larger fish and on up the food chain to have a devastating effect on human health. (www.savemyoceans.com/plastics)

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Plastic trash has already killed millions of sea birds and marine mammals.

(www.savemyoceans.com/plastics; www.engineering-resource.com)

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Plastic in the ocean breaks down into such small segments that pieces of plastic from a one liter bottle could end up on every mile of beach throughout the world. (www.savemyoceans.com/plastics)

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Did you know there is a floating garbage dump in the Pacific Ocean that is estimated to be twice the size of Texas??!! (newsfeed.time.com/2012/05/11)

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visualizedata.wordpress.com

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It is a ‘gyre’ (circular ocean current) called the Great Pacific Garbage Patch and it stretches from the coast of California to Japan. There are 5 main gyres in the world’s oceans and several smaller ones throughout Alaska and Antarctica. (treehugger.com)

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The Pacific gyre is estimated to be about 90% plastic and it goes 90 feet deep; and 80% of this garbage is from land. (www.oprah.com/world/Ocean-Pollution-Fabien-Cousteaus)

Plastic makes up approximately 90% of all trash floating on the ocean’s surface, and the U.N. Environment Program estimates that

each square mile of ocean carries 46,000 pieces of plastic litter. (newsfeed.time.com/2012/05/11)

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1.2 trillion gallons of untreated sewage, storm water, and industrial waste are discharged into US waters annually.

(dosomething.org; www.engineering-resource.com)

In 2009 there were over 20,000 beaches around the world closed due to land pollution. (pollutionworld.com)

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40% of America’s rivers and 46% of America’s lakes are too polluted for fishing, swimming or aquatic life. (www.ecocycle.org)

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Water pollution is a major global problem. It has been suggested that it is the leading worldwide cause of deaths and diseases, and that it accounts for the deaths of more than 14,000 people daily. (www.engineering-resource.com)

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Long Beach’s coastal waters slipped to failing grades within the month of September 2012 according to ‘Heal the Bay’ a nonprofit organization that monitors the quality of water at more than 350 beaches.

Grades throughout the summer averaged A’s and B’s but slipped dramatically within a single month. Out of the 15 test points within L.B. city limits, six of them received D or F grades, meaning they have some of the worst bacteria in the state. ‘It is believed that most of the bacteria found in waters is due to leaky septic systems, boat owners dumping raw waste into the ocean, and urban run- off carrying animal droppings directly into the ocean.’ (Long Beach Post, 10/1/12)

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Climate Change

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The National Research Council concluded that ‘climate change is occurring, is very likely caused by human activities and poses significant risks for a broad range of human and natural systems’. (www.epa.gov/climatechange/facts)

Many places have experienced changes in rainfall resulting in more intense rain, as well as more frequent and severe heat waves. (www.epa.gov/climatechange/facts):

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Heavy rains fell in B.C.’s Shuswap region in Canada, where more than 340 people were ordered out of their homes. A low pressure system dropped 3” of rain overnight in the area; almost three times more than expected within a month for this region. (www.disasterscharter.org)

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B.C.’s Shuswap region in Canada. (www.disasterscharter.org)

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8/29/12: Flooding in West Africa – more than 250 villages were flooded, 18 people died and several others were trapped by the heavy flooding in Adamawa State, Nigeria. West African nations experience torrential rains during their annual rain season, but this season has been reported as the worst in 50 years.

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8/27/12: Flooding in Senegal – 6 people died after

torrential rains flooded the Senegalese capital of Dakar.

Thousands have been left homeless and at least 13

lives were lost by August 29th. Exceptional rainfall has been experienced in

the region this season.

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JULY 8, 2012 JULY 12, 2012

During a four-day period in July, 2012, 57% of the surface of the Greenland ice sheet melted, bringing the total melted area to 97% of the surface, according to NASA. This is the worst surface melt in 123 years.

(latimes.com/news/science/sciencenow/la-sci-sn-greenland-ice-melts)

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Oceans are warming and becoming more acidic; ice caps are melting and sea levels are rising. All of these changes are evidence that our world is getting warmer. (www.epa.gov/climatechange/facts)

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Sea level has been rising significantly over the past century of global warming, according to a study that offers the most detailed look yet at the changes in ocean levels during the last 2100 years. This information firmly establishes that the rise in sea level in the 20th century is unprecedented for the recent geologic past. Rising sea levels are among the hazards that concern environmentalists and governments with increasing global temperatures caused by greenhouse gases like carbon dioxide from burning fossil fuels like coal and oil over the last century or so. (huffingtonpost.com, 2011)

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10/7/12: Floods in Russia:Page 88

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10/7/12: Floods in Russia: Torrential rains swept the Southern Russian Krasnodar region, killing 144 people. A foot of rain dropped in the Black Sea region forcing several residents to scramble out of their beds seeking refuge on trees and rooftops. Monday has be recognized as a day of mourning, this is the worst flooding seen by Russians.

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Global warming is the unusually rapid increase in Earth’s average surface temperature over the past century primarily due to the greenhouse gases released as people burn fossil fuels. The rate of temperature increase has nearly doubled in the last 50 years.

(www.earthobservatory.nasa.gov)Page 90

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8/13/12: Fires in North Algeria – As estimated 77 square miles of land have been ravaged by forest fires in the north of Algeria since June. These are a result of hotter than average heat waves that have been reported to reach as high as 122 degrees Fahrenheit.

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A small rise in sea level will increase the risk of coastal flooding for millions of people, many who would have to permanently leave their homes. (www.epa.gov/climagechange/facts)

Regions Vulnerable to Sea Level Rise

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About 3.7 million Americans live within a few feet of high tide and are at risk by coastal flooding in coming decades due to the sea level rise caused by global warming and the melting of the ice piled up in Greenland, Antarctica and elsewhere. Melting that ice would have a major impact by raising ocean levels. As temperatures rise so too will the sea level. (New York Times)

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For every 2 degrees of warming we can expect to see: 5-15% reductions in crop yields, 3-10% increase in amount of rain falling during heaviest precipitation events which increases flooding, 5-10% decreases in stream flow in some river basins, and 200-400% increase in area burned by wildfire in parts of the western U.S. (www.epa.gov/climatechange/facts)

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The World Wildlife Fund reports that ‘low-lying nations are particularly vulnerable to flooding, and rising seas have already swallowed up two uninhabited islands in the Central Pacific. On Samoa thousands of residents have moved to higher ground as shorelines have retreated by as much as 160 feet.’ (www.epa.gov/climatechange/facts)

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The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) is the leading international body for the assessment of climate change. It was established by the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) and the World Meteorological Organization (WMO) in 1988 to provide the world with a clear scientific view on the current state of knowledge in climate change and its potential environmental and socio-economic impacts. In the same year, the UN General Assembly endorsed the action by WMO and UNEP in jointly establishing the IPCC.

The IPCC is a scientific body. It reviews and assesses the most recent scientific, technical and socio-economic information produced worldwide relevant to the understanding of climate change. It does not conduct any research nor does it monitor climate related data or parameters.

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Global Warming Fast FactsYes. Earth is already showing many signs of worldwide climate change.

• Average temperatures have climbed 1.4 degrees Fahrenheit (0.8 degree Celsius) around the world since 1880, much of this in recent decades, according to NASA’s Goddard Institute for Space Studies.

• The rate of warming is increasing. The 20th century’s last two decades were the hottest in 400 years and possibly the warmest for several millennia, according to a number of climate studies. And the United Nations’ Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) reports that 11 of the past 12 years are among the dozen warmest since 1850.

• The Arctic is feeling the effects the most. Average temperatures in Alaska, western Canada, and eastern Russia have risen at twice the global average, according to the multinational Arctic Climate Impact Assessment report compiled between 2000 and 2004.

• Arctic ice is rapidly disappearing, and the region may have its first completely ice-free summer by 2040 or earlier. Polar bears and indigenous cultures are already suffering from the sea-ice loss.

• Glaciers and mountain snows are rapidly melting—for example, Montana’s Glacier National Park now has only 27 glaciers, versus 150 in 1910. In the Northern Hemisphere, thaws also come a week earlier in spring and freezes begin a week later.

• Coral reefs, which are highly sensitive to small changes in water temperature, suffered the worst bleaching—or die-off in response to stress—ever recorded in 1998, with some areas seeing bleach rates of 70 percent. Experts expect these sorts of events to increase in frequency and intensity in the next 50 years as sea temperatures rise.

• An upsurge in the amount of extreme weather events, such as wildfires, heat waves, and strong tropical storms, is also attributed in part to climate change by some experts.

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Are Humans Causing It?“Very likely,” the IPCC said in a February 2007 report.

The report, based on the work of some 2,500 scientists in more than 130 countries, concluded that humans have caused all or most of the current planetary warming. Human-caused global warming is often called anthropogenic climate change.

Industrialization, deforestation, and pollution have greatly increased atmospheric concentrations of water vapor, carbon dioxide, methane, and nitrous oxide, all greenhouse gases that help trap heat near Earth’s surface. (See an interactive feature on how global warming works.)

• Humans are pouring carbon dioxide into the atmosphere much faster than plants and oceans can absorb it.

• These gases persist in the atmosphere for years, meaning that even if such emissions were eliminated today, it would not immediately stop global warming.

• Some experts point out that natural cycles in Earth’s orbit can alter the planet’s exposure to sunlight, which may explain the current trend. Earth has indeed experienced warming and cooling cycles roughly every hundred thousand years due to these orbital shifts, but such changes have occurred over the span of several centuries. Today’s changes have taken place over the past hundred years or less.

• Other recent research has suggested that the effects of variations in the sun’s output are “negligible” as a factor in warming, but other, more complicated solar mechanisms could possibly play a role.

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What’s Going to Happen? A follow-up report by the IPCC released in April 2007 warned that global warming could lead to large-scale food and water shortages and have catastrophic effects on wildlife.

• Sea level could rise between 7 and 23 inches (18 to 59 centimeters) by century’s end, the IPCC’s February 2007 report projects. Rises of just 4 inches (10 centimeters) could flood many South Seas islands and swamp large parts of Southeast Asia.

• Some hundred million people live within 3 feet (1 meter) of mean sea level, and much of the world’s population is concentrated in vulnerable coastal cities. In the U.S., Louisiana and Florida are especially at risk.

• Glaciers around the world could melt, causing sea levels to rise while creating water shortages in regions dependent on runoff for fresh water.

• Strong hurricanes, droughts, heat waves, wildfires, and other natural disasters may become commonplace in many parts of the world. The growth of deserts may also cause food shortages in many places.

• More than a million species face extinction from disappearing habitat, changing ecosystems, and acidifying oceans.

• The ocean’s circulation system, known as the ocean conveyor belt, could be permanently altered, causing a mini-ice age in Western Europe and other rapid changes.

• At some point in the future, warming could become uncontrollable by creating a so-called positive feedback effect. Rising temperatures could release additional greenhouse gases by unlocking methane in permafrost and undersea deposits, freeing carbon trapped in sea ice, and causing increased evaporation of water.

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What is Climategate?In late November 2009, hackers unearthed hundreds of emails at the U.K.’s University of East Anglia that exposed private conversations among top-level British and U.S. climate scientists discussing whether certain data should be released to the public.

The email exchanges also refer to statistical tricks used to illustrate climate change trends, and call climate skeptics idiots, according to the New York Times.

One such trick was used to create the well-known hockey-stick graph, which shows a sharp uptick in temperature increases during the 20th century. Former U.S vice president Al Gore relied heavily on the graph as evidence of human-caused climate change in the documentary An Inconvenient Truth.

The data used for this graph come from two sources: thermostat readings and tree-ring samples.

While thermostat readings have consistently shown a temperature rise over the past hundred years, tree-ring samples show temperature increases stalling around 1960.

On the hockey-stick graph, thermostat-only data is grafted onto data that incorporates both thermostat and tree-ring readings, essentially presenting a seamless picture of two different data sets, the hacked emails revealed.

But scientists argue that dropping the tree-ring data was no secret and has been written about in the scientific literature for years.

Climate change skeptics have heralded the emails as an attempt to fool the public, according to the Times.

Yet climate scientists maintain that these controversial points are small blips that are inevitable in scientific research, and that the evidence for human-induced climate change is much broader and still widely accepted.

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National Geographic: Global warming is leading to such severe storms, droughts and heat waves that nations should prepare for an unprecedented onslaught of weather disasters, an international panel of climate scientists says in a report issued Wednesday. The greatest danger from extreme weather is in highly populated, poor regions of the world, the report warns, but no corner of the globe–from Mumbai, India, to Miami–is immune. The document by a Nobel Prize-winning panel of climate scientists forecasts stronger tropical cyclones and more frequent heat waves, deluges and droughts.

The 594-page report blames the scale of recent and future disasters on a combination of man-made climate change, population shifts and poverty. In the past, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change has focused on rising temperatures and oceans. This report by the panel is the first to look at extreme weather changes.“We mostly experience weather and climate through the extreme,” Stanford University climate scientist Chris Field.. He is one of the report’s top editors. The scientists say that some places, particularly parts of Mumbai could become uninhabitable from floods, storms and rising seas. Other cities at lesser risk include Miami; Shanghai, China; Guangzhou, China; Bangkok, Thailand; Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam; Yangon (formerly Rangoon), Myanmar, and Kolkata (formerly Calcutta), India. The report — the summary of which was issued in November – is unique because it emphasizes managing risks and taking precautions, Field said.The study forecasts that some tropical cyclones, including hurricanes, will be stronger because of global warming, but the number of storms should not increase and may drop slightly. The scientists also predicted more heat waves worldwide and increased downpours in Alaska, Canada, north and central Europe, east Africa and north Asia. Study coauthor David Easterling of the National Climatic Data Center said this month’s U.S. heat wave fits the pattern of worsening extremes.

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Source: Trends in natural disasters. (2005). In UNEP/GRID-Arendal Maps and Graphics Library. Retrieved October 3, 2011 from http://maps.grida.no/go/graphic/trends-in-natural-disasters.

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‘Recent heat waves that have triggered wildfires, droughts, and heat-related deaths in the United States and around the globe almost certainly would not have occurred without global warming – and will become more routine in coming years’ according to NASA climate scientist James Hansen. (http://news.nationalgeographics.com)

According to a new report released 10/10/12 by Munich Re, the world’s largest reinsurance (a company that buys insurance from other companies as a means of risk management).

• ‘The number of natural disasters per year has been rising dramatically on all continents since 1980, but the trend is steepest for North America where countries have been battered by hurricanes, tornadoes, floods, searing heat and drought.’

• This report represents the first finding of a climate change ‘footprint’ in the data from natural catastrophes.

• Shows trends that are ‘linked with changes in atmospheric conditions, such as more water content in the atmosphere due to global warming; additional water vapor in the atmosphere is the fuel for the big storms.’ (www.usatoday.com)

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Food

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Scientists believe about 2/3 of American cattle raised for slaughter today are injected with hormones to make them grow faster; and America’s dairy cows are given a genetically-engineered hormone

called rBGH to increase milk production. Despite the FDA, USDA & other health agencies

claiming these hormones do not harm humans, concerns

are rapidly increasing about human and environmental negative effects.

(www.sustainabletable.org)

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Many industry-funded studies show no risk, but there are independent studies that suggest a potential cancer risk from hormones in milk. The European Union has banned all hormones in beef, and Japan, Canada, Austraila, New Zealand and the EU have banned rBHG (a hormone given to dairy cows to increase milk production). No major studies are under way in the U.S. to evaluate the safety of hormones in meat and milk.

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Ranchers and farmers feed antibiotics in a daily low dose to their livestock. It’s not to stop them from getting sick, but to make them gain weight. But many doctors and researchers suspect that this practice is contributing to the rise of antibiotic-resistant bacteria, posing a serious danger to our health. (www.webmd.com)

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Pesticides are specifically formulated to be toxic to living organisms, and as such are usually hazardous to humans. Most pesticides used today are acutely toxic to humans. Pesticides cause poisonings and deaths every year and are responsible for about one out of every sixteen calls to poison control centers. Chronic health effects have also been reported from pesticides, including neurological effects, reproductive problems, interference with infant development and cancer.

(www.nrdc.org – natural resources defense council)

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The potential health problems from pesticide exposure can be divided into two classes: acute (short term exposure causing nausea, skin irritation and other minor problems) and chronic (long term exposure leading to cancer, mutations, birth defects, and immunological problems). Although gaps exist in scientific data, there is consensus that pesticide use is an endemic problem that threatens our health. Currently, an average of three California farm workers report pesticide poisoning each day.

(Agricultural Chemicals in Ground Water: Proposed Pesticide Strategy, Office of Pesticides and Toxic Substances, December 1987.)

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Pesticide use affects the health of farm workers and consumers and damages the environment. EPA’s experts rank pesticides as a more serious public health risk than hazardous waste sites.

(Johnson, Congress Again Tries Rewriting Pesticide Law, San Francisco Examiner, July 31, 1987.)

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Chemicals such as pesticides, antibiotics and hormones are used in plant and animal farming to boost production and ensure adequate food supply. However, residues can be harmful to humans if taken in large amounts. Chemical levels in food are set by law. Some people choose to buy organic produce to avoid pesticide residues. To reduce your exposure to pesticides and other chemicals:

O Buy organic produce O Thoroughly wash all fruits and vegetables O Grow your own vegetables O Peel vegetables or remove the outer layer of leaves O Cook vegetables, rather and eat them raw all the time O Trim visible fat from meats, as many residues are fat soluble O Cook meat and chicken thoroughly

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According to a 2006 report by the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) the meat in our diets causes

more greenhouse gasses to be released into the atmosphere than either transportation or industry! (www.scientificamerican.com)

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The current production levels of meat contribute between 14 and 22% of the 36 billion tons of CO2 equivalent greenhouse gases the world produces every year. (www.scientificamerican.com)

Producing half a pound of hamburger (the size of two decks of cards) for someone’s lunch releases as much greenhouse gas into the atmosphere as driving a 3,000-pound car nearly 10 miles!

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A report from the Stockholm International Water Institute showed

that “there will not be enough water available on current croplands

to produce food for the expected population in 2050 if we follow

current trends and changes towards diets common in Western nations

(20% calories coming from animal proteins). There will be just enough if the proportion of animal based foods

is limited to 5% of total calories.” (Reported by Dave Burdick in GOOD at www.good)

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Sources: Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO) 2010, Livestock and Fish Primary Equivalent, June 2, 2010, FAOSTAT on-line statistical services, FAO, Rome

Though meat consumption in the U.S. has dropped off slightly in recent years, at 270.7 pounds per person a year, we still eat more meat per person here than in almost any other country on the planet. Only the Luxumbourgers eat more meat than we do.

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U.S. meat consumption is more here than almost any other country on the planet at 270.7 pounds per person per year. (www.npr.org)

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And that’s not even including the animal’s waste or the methane emissions from its digestion.

(J.L. Capper, Journal of Animal Science, December, 2011)

What it Takes to Make a Quarter-Pound Hamburger.

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Animal Mistreatment Headlines:

‘Feds Close Slaughterhouse After Video Shows Abuse.’–NYDailyNews.com, 8/21/12

‘Undercover Investigation Exposes Shocking Cruelty at California Egg Factory Farm.’

–YubaNet.com, 5/6/08

‘Graphic Video: More Dairy Farm Animal Abuse?’ –abcnews.go.com, 5/26/10

‘Butterfall Farm Worker Guilty of Animal Cruelty.’ –ABC News, 8/29/12

‘A Protest Against Animal Cruelty at Ohio Dairy Farm.’ –Examiner.com, 6/1/10

‘Animal Cruelty Charges Filed Against Owner & Workers at Texas Cattle Farm.’

–Dallasnews.com, 5/26/11

‘Video Alleges Abuse at Pig Farm.’ –Newser.com, 5/9/12

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If just 5% of Americans’ food scraps were recovered it would represent one day’s worth of food for 4 million people. 34% of all methane emissions in the U.S. come from landfills. (CNN)

Food Waste

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According to a study conducted by the University of Arizona up to 50% of food in this country is thrown away, and says the country’s supermarkets, restaurants and convenience stores alone throw out 27 million tons every year.When food decomposes in landfills it releases methane, a greenhouse gas which the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency says is 20 times more damaging to the environment than carbon dioxide (CO2).Methane, the gas food waste produces, traps 23 times as much heat in the atmosphere as the same amount of CO2, the EPA says.

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Genetically Modified Foods (GMO)

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There is ongoing debate on the safety of genetically modified foods. The top 10 GMO foods to avoid are:

Corn – has been modified to create its own insecticide & mice fed this corn were discovered to have smaller offspring and fertility problems.

Soy – has been modified to resist herbicides & hamsters fed this soy were unable to have offspring and suffered a high mortality rate.

Cotton – designed to resist pesticides; it is considered food because its oil can be consumes. Thousands of Indian farmers suffered severe rashes upon exposure to this cotton.

Papaya – modified to be virus-resistant.

Rice – genetically modified to contain a high amount of vitamin A and has a tendency to cause allergic reactions.

Tomatoes – engineered for longer shelf life; some animal subjects died within a few weeks after consuming these tomatoes.

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Rapeseed – in Canada this was renamed ‘canola’ to differentiate it from non-edible rapeseed.

Dairy Products – 22% of U.S. cows were injected with rbGH (genetically modified bovine growth hormone). Scientists are concerned that this increases levels of insulin growth factors which is associated with colon and breast cancer.

Potatoes – Mice fed with potatoes engineered with a bacterium were found to have toxins in their systems.

Peas – found to cause immune responses in mice and possibly in humans.

The American Academy of Environmental Medicine has warned that GMO’s pose a serious threat to health, and they have advised doctors to tell their patients to avoid GMO’s due to its correlation to an alarming rise in chronic diseases and food allergies.

(NaturalNews.com)

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What CSULB is Doing

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49er Shops

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Meatless Mondays at Hillside, Parkside & Beachside Dining HallsDid you know that studies have shown that we can do more good for our planet Earth by consuming meat-free meals for only one day a week? Or that if each person ate meatless on just one day a billion fewer animals would have to be factory farmed in one year? And that the benefit for going meatless this one day even outweighs those of eating only 100% local foods?

Starting the Fall Semester 2012, our Forty-Niner Shops residential dining halls imple-mented a Meatless Monday program providing our students an array of delicious veg-etarian and vegan options for all of their Monday meals.

Meat-free meals give you all the nutritionally good stuff without all of the bad stuff which includes additional saturated fat and bad cholesterol. Eating this way can reduce the risk of subsequent strokes, diabetes, heart attacks and other medical issues. But more than that, it encourages our students to do something not only good for them-selves but good for our environment too!

For more information please visit humanesociety.org/meatfreePage 138

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Grounds for your GardenAs a way to keep used coffee grounds out of landfills and our community gardens thriving, the Library and University Dining Plaza Starbucks actively participates in the “Grounds for your Garden” program designed to promote a healthier planet. Why coffee grounds for a garden? Believe it or not, coffee grounds possess a nutritional additive for soil. During the brewing process, most of the acidity is removed, leaving used ground with an average PH of 6.9 and a carbon-nitrogen ration of 20 – to – 1. This can be used for nitrogen loving plants including most perennials and allium plants and makes a wonderful addition to compost. To learn more about Starbucks Shared Planet, visit starbucks.com/sharedplanet.

HERE’S TO A HEALTHIER PLANET!Page 139

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49’er Shops Water Refilling Station

Placed in the

University

Dining Plaza

Sept. 2012.

Filled 2,500

bottles in the

first week!Page 140

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49er Shops Green Bag Campaign

In support of the City of

Long Beach Plastic Bag

initiative, the Forty-Niner

Shops have partnered

with Associated Students

to eliminate the use of

plastic bags on campus.

Plastic bags have been

phased out in all Forty-

Niner Shops retail

operations at the end of

April 2012. As a part of

this transition, the Shops

now encourage customers

to forego bags altogether,

or to purchase alternative

paper or reusable bags. Page 141

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Trayless Dining ProgramIn an effort to understand the impact of food waste in the residential dining halls, the Forty-Niner Shops conducted a study to measure the amount of food and liquids that are discarded during a normal lunch period.

Our findings concluded the following trends:

• During a normal lunch period, over 200 pounds of solid food waste were collected in the dining halls.

• This would create over 17,200 pounds (nearly nine tons) of solid food waste in one semester!

• The average student generated over 50 pounds of solid waste, and nearly 50 gallons in liquid waste in a single academic year.

Shifting all three residential dining halls to trayless dining decreased these figures significantly. Our water consumption also noticeably decreased once we removed and were no longer cleaning the trays. Today, all three residential dining halls are trayless facilities.

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Japanese Garden

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established for this and future generations of students and citizens

Urban Oasis

Aesthetic Enjoyment

Active Learning Social Engagement

The Earl Burns Miller Japanese Garden Inspires …

and Supports University Priorities … Student Success

Research & Creative Activity

Sustainability Collaborations

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Recycling at the Garden: Supports Campus Sustainability Goals

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Garden volunteers follow best greenwaste practices.

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Weekly volunteers rake, weed, and generally beautify our garden, discarding the waste in the greenwaste dumpster. Greenwaste from CSULB is taken to a local processor where it is shredded in a tub grinder and used for a variety of uses, including fuel for power plants (50%), alternative daily cover at landfills (40%), and compost (10%).

Greenwaste at the Japanese Garden

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CSULB students, volunteers, and Garden staff team up for a rooftop moss installation research project aimed at helping to solve global warming.

Collaboration at the Japanese Garden

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Moss is known as “nature’s sponge” and performs like a drought tolerant plant, helping to stabilize the soil and prevent runoff of irrigation and rain water.

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Green Up at the Japanese Garden

CSULB Students, Faculty, Staff and Community Green Organizations Partner at “Green Up” at the Japanese Garden Sustainability Mixers.

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Green Up Projects at the Japanese Garden Landscape lighting goes LED

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Green Up Projects at the Japanese Garden Sustainable Bridge Materials

All 3 garden bridges have been rebuilt in the last decade and are made from ipe wood (Tabebuia), a dense, moisture-resistant wood found in tropical climates including Brazil.

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Green Up Projects at the Japanese Garden Koi Pond & Water Use Study

Fall 2012, a team (including representatives from CSULB Facilities Management, the Campus Sustainability Task Force, faculty, students and EBMJG staff) will collaborate to create a water use plan.

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Associated Students, Inc

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Associated Students Inc.

For additional information and to support the Recycling Center, contact ASI Development Office at (562) 985-2402 or via e-mail at [email protected]

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In 1970, ecology minded CSULB students founded the Recycling Center as they identified

a need for a campus-recycling facility.

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ASI operates 3 programs: - Campus Recycling - Community Drop-Off - Licensed State of CA Recycling Center

Separate bins located on campus for: • trash, • bottles, and • other

recyclables

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The Recycling Center Average Monthly Stats

Approximately 150,000 pounds, including approximately 300,000 beverage containers, collected and processed. • Aluminum cans recycled save the equivalent of 7,488

gallons of gasoline or enough energy to operate a TV 24 hours a day for 55 years.

• Soda and water bottles recycled conserve 88 million BTUs.

• Paper recycling conserves 213,500 gallons of water and 518 trees.

• Glass recycling saves 3,650 pounds of mining waste.

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The Recycling Center processes annually more than 1,000 tons of

recyclable materials, such as:

- used beverage containers,

- paper products and - plastics.

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Green Campus Interns

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CSULB PowerSave Green Campus

is focused on creating a more energy efficient campus.

Take a look around to see what our team is working on and how you can become

involved!

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- promoting green workforce development, - achieving energy savings, and - educating students, faculty, staff and the local community about the importance of energy efficiency.

The Green Campus Interns focus on …

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Green Office Certification • Created to monitor and improve campus sustainability from within offices. • Interns conduct a department walk-thru, evaluation and offer suggestions. • Departments implement and receive certification as appropriate. • Ready to become Green Office Certified? Contact

[email protected]

Platinum Certification received by Purchasing & Financial Services and Risk Management

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2012 Mega Energy Competition A multi-campus collaboration to encourage student's in the residence hall's to save energy and water. In October 2012, 5 Southern California teams (CSULB, CPP, UCLA, UCSB, and UCI) step up to try and take the coveted trophy and Grand Prize worth roughly $1000. Each week, the hall that has the biggest reduction in energy will receive a prize (pizza party, ice cream sundaes...). In 2011, CSULB saved more than Fullerton and took home the Grand Prize Foosball table.

Track your Hall's progress and standings during the month of October at: http://www.lbpowersavegc.com/energy-competition.html

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Soar’in over the Japanese Gardens

During summer of 2011 and 2012, the PowerSave Green Campus interns teamed up with SOAR and the Japanese Gardens to host events during the overnight SOAR Program. Incoming students were introduced to sustainability on campus and were able to meet various environmentally oriented groups and learn about energy efficiency concepts through interactive carnival style games. Students also had the opportunity to sign the Power Save Green Campus Program sustainability pledge.

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Green 101 Workshop

In Spring 2011, the PowerSave Green Campus Program interns collaborated with the CSULB University Honors Program to host a workshop called “It’s Easy Being Green.” The workshop focused on campus initiatives and methods to live sustainability as a student. The event concluded with a meet and greet with on-campus clubs and community organizations committed to making Long Beach a greener city. Students pledged to change one behavior in an effort to live more sustainably by signing a poster that hangs in the University Honor’s Program office.

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Energy Star Vending Machines The CSULB PowerSave Green Campus Program interns collaborated with the Forty-Niner Shops and Coca-Cola to replace old vending machines throughout campus with new ENERGY STAR machines. • The ENERGY STAR machine provides a 49% reduction in total energy use

compared to the older machine. • After identifying the energy savings, the Forty-Niner Shops replaced 19 machines

with ENERGY STAR models. • This upgrade will save 47,785 Kwh which equates to $4,779 per year.

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Classroom Occupancy Sensors • HOBO meters are light sensitive instruments that continuously record the time

and duration lights are on/off. • These meters were installed in classrooms to determine whether the sensor in the

classroom was working properly. • 27% of the classrooms on campus had malfunctioning sensors which now have

been replaced. • The green interns identified a potential savings of 31,000 kilowatt-hours per

year, which translates to $4,000 cost savings per year for CSULB.

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Academics

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Classroom Projects, MBA Program and Published Articles

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Biology 459 Conservation Biology Christine Whitcraft, Assistant Professor,

Department of Biological Sciences

Service learning students work with Tidal Influence (consulting company) and Friends of Colorado Lagoon to conduct a native plant restoration project at CO Lagoon.

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Biology 459 Conservation Biology Christine Whitcraft, Assistant Professor,

Department of Biological Sciences

Service learning students work with Palos Verde Peninsula Land Conservancy (PVPLC) to learn how to lead tours around the White Point Preserve.

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Biology 459 Conservation Biology Christine Whitcraft, Assistant Professor,

Department of Biological Sciences

Service learning students work with Tidal Influence (consulting company) and Friends of Colorado Lagoon to conduct a native plant restoration project at CO Lagoon.

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Biology 459 Conservation Biology Christine Whitcraft, Assistant Professor,

Department of Biological Sciences

Service learning students work with Tidal Influence (consulting company) and Friends of Colorado Lagoon to conduct a elevation and bathymetry survey as well as a native plant restoration project at CO Lagoon.

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Design 333B Industrial Design Methodology B

Professor Wesley Woelfel, Dept of Design

Student designed hydration station mockups and prototypes were used to obtain student and faculty input from across the campus.

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Locations included the Student Union, Library, Wellness Center and Japanese Gardens.

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DESN 300 – Designers in Their Words September 13, 2012 Guest speaker – R. Tourje, Founder of the ANEW Foundation, an organization which transforms corporate surplus into community service.

October 4, 2012 Guest Speaker – D. Saravis presents Designing for Change http://idsala.wordpress.com/duncan-anderson-lecture-series

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ENGR 302I Energy and Environment: A Global Perspective

Professor Reza Toossi, Dept of Engineering

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ENGR 302I Energy and Environment: A Global Perspective

Professor Reza Toossi, Dept of Engineering

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Student Sustainability Mixer Japanese Garden (Spring 2011)

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Design 333B Industrial Design Methodology B

Professor Wesley Woelfel, Dept of Design

2010 & 2011 student designed International E-Waste Design Competition Entries. These entries explored solutions for the prevention and reduction of electronic waste.

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Design 333B Industrial Design Methodology B

Professor Wesley Woelfel, Dept of Design

Student designs of hydration stations on display at the 2011 CSULB Sustainability Mixer.

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DESN 431B Industrial Design David Teubner, Associate Professor, Dept of Design

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DESN 431B Industrial Design David Teubner, Associate Professor, Dept of Design

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DESN 431B Industrial Design David Teubner, Associate Professor, Dept of Design

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Sustainability Studies Abroad Reza Toossi, Professor, Dept of Engineering

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CSULB MBA Program Sustainability and the Business Organization

The 9-unit course takes an integrative and in-depth look at issues and questions in sustainability and how they impact the business environment. The objectives are: • to engage students in an exploration of sustainable

development and collaboration with some of our community and university partners and

• to bring value added to their own company’s sustainable business practices.

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CSULB MBA Program Sustainability and the Business Organization

MBA students learn about the ‘greening’ strategies of 2 very important players in the Long Beach economy: The Port of Long Beach (POLB) and the Aquarium of the Pacific (AoP). MBA student teams work with community and university partners on sustainable development projects for 4 to 8 months.

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MBA Program Port of Long Beach (POLB)

Learn about important environmental and business strategies that are reducing the carbon footprint of the POLB, including: • the Clean

Trucks program, • the “cold-

ironing” project for ships, and

• wind turbines for power.

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MBA Program Aquarium of the Pacific (AoP)

Learn about the sustainability strategies of the Aquarium and the impact that humans & business have on the oceans and waterways of the world.

Green Business Practices: • Reducing Carbon

Footprint • Carbon Neutral

Exhibits • Solar Energy • Low Water Native

Garden

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MBA Program Projects • Aquarium of the Pacific project: The students will help develop

the procedures for ISO 14001 certification for the Aquarium. • Catalina Sea Farms: The students will help define and develop a

business plan and monitoring program for an aquaculture venture.

• Century Villages of Cabrillo: The students will develop a business plan for an urban community garden at CVC.

• CSULB - Physical Planning & Facilities Management: The students will identify and measure the carbon footprint of the tri-generation power source for the university.

• CSULB – Parking & Transportation Services: The students will conduct a feasibility study to develop a continuous bicycle path through the university that links up with the City of Long Beach network of bicycle trails.

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“The Dark Side of Development in Vietnam – Lessons From the Killing of the Thi Vai River”

This article discusses negative aspects of economic development in Vietnam

involving Vedan, a Taiwanese company caught poisoning the Thi Vai river in the South of Vietnam.

Vedan Vietnam’s general director, signed an agreement to fully compensate affected farmers in the three provinces.

Affected farmers. A fishery farmer from Dong Nai province, with abandoned fishery tools after the Thi Vai river had been poisoned.

Journal of Macromarketing, 32(1), 69-81 Hieu P. Nguyen, Department of Marketing, CBA, CSULB and Huyen T. Pham (2012)

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Financial Management

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CSU Buy Recycled Campaign Substituting more recycled and environmentally friendly products when economically and operationally feasible. The CSU Buy Recycled Campaign is a joint effort between the campuses and the Chancellor’s Office in support of the State Agency Buy Recycled Campaign (SABRC). The CSU Buy Recycled Campaign was developed to comply with State laws requiring the procurement of recycled content products. Campuses are encouraged, whenever feasible, to maximize the purchase of goods that contain recycled content or may be recycled or reused when discarded. Go to http://www.calstate.edu/CSP/recycle/recycle.shtml to learn more about the campaign.

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CSULB Buys Recycled Products - Plastic

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CSULB Buys Recycled Products Metal Glass

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CSULB Buys Recycled Products - Paper

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Recycling E-Waste E-waste is one of the fastest growing segments of our nation's waste stream. What is “e-waste”? E-waste is a popular, informal name for electronic products nearing the end of their "useful life." Computers, keyboards, televisions, VCRs, stereos, copiers, and fax machines are common electronic products. (http://www.calrecycle.ca.gov)

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At CSULB e-waste is picked-up by Property Management and/or delivered by campus departments to the Receiving Warehouse. Centralized Delivery (Receiving) coordinates pick-up with our local e-waste vendor.

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What happens to campus Computer (CRT) Monitors (e-waste)?

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What happens to campus hard-drives (e-waste)?

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Join the Duplex Printing Carpool • We encourage campus departments to join the

printing duplex carpool; stop procuring personal printers and instead print via the campus printer carpool (Copier Program) using “duplex” mode.

• All Division of Administration and Finance (DAF) department copiers are set to “duplex” mode.

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How can I “Go Duplex”?

Contact the Copier Program: [email protected] 562/985-7558

Go Duplex! Go Green! Go Beach!

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Save $’s and Preserve Trees

If all 6 million prints done by departments on Copier Program copiers last year were duplexed, the campus would have realized: • an annual paper cost savings of $18,600 and • the equivalent of preserving 360 trees per year!

(http://www.kyoceramita.eu/index/environment/green_it_tips_and/Green_IT_Tools.html).

Printing duplex (double-side) reduces the amount of paper used by half. Plus less document storage space is required.

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Office Max Reusable

Shipping Totes

Coming soon to your office

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Office Max reusable shipping totes will contribute to the campus sustainability efforts by reducing landfill waste.

Office Max Totes

Here’s how it works: • Office Max will deliver your office supplies in a

reusable tote. • The tote will be picked up from your department by

Centralized Delivery (Mail Services and Receiving) during their routine daily delivery/pick-up.

• Office Max will pick-up the totes from Centralized Delivery, to be used again to deliver office supplies.

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At CSULB, used printer cartridges are placed in out-going intercampus mail for collection by Centralized

Delivery (Mail Services) and then recycled.

Closing the Loop at CSULB

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Printer Cartridges are palletized by Centralized Delivery (Receiving) and trucked to a local manufacturer.

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Used printer cartridges recovered from CSULB

Year Quantity Tons 2002 599 .89 tons 2003 484 .72 tons 2004 639 .95 tons 2005 1018 1.52 tons 2006 1359 2.03 tons 2007 1802 2.71 tons 2008 1517 2.27 tons 2009 1670 1.68 tons 2010 1958 2.93 tons 2011 1896 3.66 tons 2012 to-date 897 1.73 tons 6.56 tons

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Ultimate end-product result of recycling CSULB printer cartridges:

– Undamaged outer shells = "new" toner cartridges. – Damaged/unusable shells = asphalt industry

ingredient in road surface. – All critical wear components = recycled. – Non-critical wear parts (i.e., screws, metal rods) =

inspected and reused to produce remanufactured printer cartridges or recycled.

– Packaging material = recycled.

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Use Remanufactured Printer Cartridges to close the loop.

To obtain remanufactured printer cartridges, go to the Purchasing & Financial Services website: http://daf.csulb.edu/offices/financial/purchasing/office_max/index.html

The Why We Care Event committee strongly recommends the use of Copier Program copiers for all printing and copying needs. However, if you require a printer, then please use a remanufactured printer cartridge.

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At CSULB, we chose local...

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CSULB Donations of Surplus Items to Local Organizations

• Goodwill • LA Shares • Lions Club

• Women Shelter of Long Beach • Palms Elementary School (LAUSD)

• Franklin Classical Middle School (LBUSD) • College-Ready Academy High School

• Starr King Elementary (LBUSD) • The City School (LAUSD Charter School)

• Downey Unified School District • Southern California Library for Social Studies and

Research

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Track Filing Systems

Chairs

Bookshelves

Surplus Furniture and Equipment Donated

Scanner

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With a focus toward sustainability and reutilization, the Property Office/Lost & Found held a sale/auction on September 19th, 2012.

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Property/Lost& Found Sale / Auction

The sale/auction consisted of University property which had been identified as no longer needed by the University and items which had been in the custody of the Lost and Found Department for at least three months and which had not been claimed.

Remaining items were donated to Goodwill.

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Campus-wide Utilization of 30% recycled copy paper

compared to using Virgin (non-recycled) Paper

…Each pallet saves 7.2 trees

By using 1 ream of the Copier Program recycled paper, you’ll contribute to: • Saving 20 liters water consumption • Reducing 0.1 lbs of emission of air pollutants • Saving 3.1 kwh electricity consumption • Saving 1.1 liters of oil consumption • Saving 40,500 btu heat energy

Data Source: Exceedo Premium Recycled Paper Packaging

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Is recycled paper better for the environment than virgin paper?

Yes!

It's common sense that making new paper from

old paper is easier on the Earth. • It helps preserve forests, because it reduces demand for wood; • It conserves resources and generates less pollution during

manufacturing, because the fibers have already been processed once; and

• It reduces solid waste, because it diverts usable paper from the waste stream. www.greenamerica.org

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U-Pass Ride free on LB Transit all year round

with CSULB ID.

http://daf.csulb.edu/offices/ppfm/parking/program/rideshare/

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CSULB U-PASS GHG Emission Reduction Stats

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Zimride Carpool Ridematch at CSULB Have a car? Split the costs of driving by networking with fellow CSULB community members.

Don’t have a car? Find a ride.

• Save money • Protect the environment • Obtain access to priority

carpool parking

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CSULB Zimride Carpool Ridematch GHG Emission Reduction Stats

Over 1,700 CSULB Zimride Carpool members to date • Vehicle Miles Traveled Saved 531,618 • Gallons of Gas Saved 20,847 • Pounds of CO2 Emissions Reduced 404,446 • Grams of VOC Emissions Reduced 225,406 • Grams of NOx Emissions Reduced 286,010 • Pounds of CO Emissions Reduced 5,847 • Grams of PM Emissions Reduced 115,892 • Grams of SO2 Emissions Reduced 37,744

http://www.zimride.com/csulb

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Zipcar Car Share at CSULB • Makes having a personal car,

not a necessity anymore! • Get 24/7 access to Zipcars

parked right on campus – Lot 3 and Lot 14!

• Simply join, reserve online, let yourself in a zipcar with your Zipcard and drive.

• Low hourly and daily rates always include gas and insurance.

• You only need to be 18 to join. http://daf.csulb.edu/offices/ppfm/parking/program/rideshare/

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CSULB Zipcar Car Share Program Over 600 approved campus members

http://www.zipcar.com/is-it/greenbenefits

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CSULB promotes Riding your Bike How to Start:

Take the Free Bike Traffic Skills 101 Class at CSULB

To register, go to: http://csulb.edu/rideshare

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Bike Friendly CSULB Awarded the following distinctions

CSULB Sustainable Transportation

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Bike Fix-it Stations

Located at: SRWC, Parkside and Hillside.

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Jax Bicycle Center supports CSULB • Jax Bike Clinics at SRWC

• continued donations for CSULB events

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Annual Swap Surplus Supplies In 2012, in an effort to promote and increase re-utilization at CSULB, Purchasing & Support Services held the 1st campus Swap Surplus Supplies Event. Here’s how it works: • Campus Departments contact

Centralized Delivery (Receiving) to pick-up their un-needed office supplies.

• All supplies are stored in the Receiving Warehouse until the annual event.

• During the event, staff and faculty can pick-up needed office supplies at no charge to for campus use.

• Items not swapped are donated to a local school.

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Estimated Cost Savings of $6K - $15K achieved at the 1st Annual Swap Surplus Supplies Event

(April 2012)

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Here’s what departments can do throughout the year to prepare for the annual Swap Surplus Supplies:

• Collect your un-needed office supply items in boxes

• Contact Support Services at [email protected] for your items to be picked up and stored for the 2013 event.

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Writing Instrument collection Program launched at CSULB in April 2012

To-date, CSULB has collected and diverted 85 lbs of used writing instruments from landfill. It is estimated that millions of used writing instruments are discarded and end up in landfills annually.

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Writing Instrument Collection Boxes Collection boxes are placed throughout the campus as a simple way for the campus community to become involved in sustainability efforts.

http://daf.csulb.edu/offices/financial/purchasing/terracycle.html

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Qualifying writing instruments include:

• Pens • Markers • Highlighters • woodcase pencils • mechanical pencils • dry erase markers • correction tape

products

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Pick-up and Shipment of the writing instruments is a coordinated effort between campus departments

and Centralized Delivery (Mail Services, Receiving and Lost & Found).

Writing Instrument Recycle Program

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Upcycling is the process of reusing waste to form creative new products.

The writing instruments we collect are “recycled” or “upcycled” by TerraCycle and turned into low cost consumer items that are sold by major retailers.

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Bursar’s Office On-Line Sustainable Practices

• Conducting campaign for students to agree to have their 1098T Tax Forms delivered electronically.

• 90% of Installment Payment Plans are completed online by students.

• 94% of Financial Aid Disbursement payments are processed by direct deposit to students bank accounts.

• 75% of all payments are made online.

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1098-T Tax Forms Delivered Electronically Go to My CSULB Finances, Select “View 1098-T” and click on “Grant Consent” to electronically receive your 1098-T tax form.

Grant Consent Page

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Financial Management Information Systems (FMIS) & Controller’s Office

implementing and maintaining Sustainable Practices

• All FM Office printers set to print in duplex mode --- reducing paper consumption

• Ipans installed in all FM Office workstations --- reducing energy consumption

• Vendor invoices being sent to campus departments electronically for approval of payment --- reducing paper consumption

• Document images being sent electronically from Financial System to Imaging System --- eliminating need to print various documents within FM (purchase orders, Awards …)

• Additional applications implemented into document imaging system --- preventing need for duplicate copies within FM (Financial Management)

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Just submit an “Employee Reimbursements Direct Deposit Authorization” form to Accounts Payable.

Form located at: http://daf.csulb.edu/forms/financial/controller/index.html#accounts

Promoting ACH deposits for employee reimbursements and

vendor payments in lieu of hard-copy checks.

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Physical Planning and Facilities Management

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Appliance Timers installed at CSULB to reduce energy consumption

• relatively inexpensive ($10-20). • range from simple mechanical units with a single

stop-start function, to more sophisticated digital models .

• can be programmed by the day or week. Consider using an appliance timer at home.

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Appliance Timer installed on Water Coolers to reduce

energy consumption

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IPANs plugged in at CSULB What is an IPAN? • IPANs are power strips that sense movement and

automatically power down devices when you’re out of the workspace.

• When a workspace is unoccupied for 30 minutes, the Power Strip shuts off power to selected outlets – leaving power on only for the devices that need it.

• As soon as movement is detected, power is restored.

An average savings of $40 in energy costs per year with each ipan.

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What can plug into an IPAN? • 1 outlet always on – use for a device that needs to

have continuous power (i.e., computer) • 1 master outlet and 4 energy saver outlets – use for

devices that can be powered off when not in use (i.e., Monitors, printers)

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Custodial Services • Utilizing “Green Seal” environmentally friendly

cleaning products and practices • Utilizing non paper based hand drying systems • Use of concentrated cleaning products to reduce

the environmental impact on shipping

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Energy Efficiency CSULB Central Plant

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Energy Efficiency & GHG Reduction • Became signatory of the American Colleges and University

Presidents Climate Commitment in 2011 • Registered 2006 Green House Gas emissions with California

Climate Action Registry through CSU system-wide reporting • Implemented Energy Efficiency and GHG reduction projects with

UC/CSU Energy Partnership • Reduced regional power demands via the Central Plant Thermal

Energy System • Installed energy saving solid state LED lighting in all campus

parking structures • Installed first wireless based smart lighting systems in 13 campus

buildings • Renovated first parking lot (Lot 18) to be fitted with LED lighting

and wireless control system • Implementing a campus-wide energy efficient lighting upgrade

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Cooling Towers

Centrifugal Chillers Variable Speed Pumps

Boilers w/ Heat Recovery

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Energy Efficiency Buildings

• HVAC Upgrades and Retrofits • Campus wide Control Systems Upgrade • Campus wide Energy Meters Upgrade • T5 , T8, and LED Lighting Upgrades • Building Retro-Commisioning (MBCx) • Building Envelope Upgrades i.e. Cool Roofs

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Wind Energy

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On Site Renewable Energy

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On-Site Generation Combined Heat, Power, and Cooling

Early stages of planning

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A green building is a facility that was designed and built or is currently being operated and maintained using sustainable practices to minimize the building’s negative impact on the environment and to its occupants.

What is a “Green” building?

CSULB Green Buildings • All new buildings will be designed and constructed to at least

US Green Building LEED (Leadership for Energy and Environmental Design) silver standard

• The new Hall of Science building is undergoing USGBC LEED for New Construction certification

• The Student Wellness and Recreation Center is the first campus USGBC LEED Gold building

• The Horn Center is currently undergoing USGBC LEED Certification for Existing Building Operations and Maintenance

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Student Recreation and Wellness Center

•75% of Construction Waste Diverted From Landfill •Energy Efficient Design (20% better than T24 standard) •Non Potable Water For Irrigation •Low VOC Emitting Materials •Low Flow Plumbing Fixtures •Designed to Minimize Storm Water Contaminants

•Interactive Kiosk for Sustainable Building Features

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Lighting Design and Retrofit Best Practices • Volumetric Luminaires • High Output T-5s • Bi-level Stairwell Luminaires • CFL Down lights • Digital Lighting Controls • LED Luminaires (Garage/Area) • Wireless Lighting Control

• Campus-wide Lighting Retrofit (35 Buildings) • 1.4 M kWh Savings and $145K Avoided Energy Cost

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New Energy Efficient Lamp System

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Bi-level Stairwell Lighting

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High Bay T5HO

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High Bay T5HO

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CFL Down lights

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Bi-level LED Garage

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Bi-level LED Area

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CSULB "Solar" Green Power Every year these systems generate over 500,000 Kilowatt hours of clean electrical energy resulting in the following equivalent environmental benefits: • 1,100 Metric Tons of Carbon Dioxide emissions averted • 200 passenger vehicles taken off the road • 207 acres of pine or fir forest planted • Energy to supply 78 homes • 1800 barrels of oil use averted

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CSULB Solar Photovoltaic Systems

Vivian Engineering Center 50KW Page 270

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FM Corporation Yard 100 KW Page 271

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Brotman Hall Administration 200 KW Page 272

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State-mandated Recycling Requirements

AB 75 required all state agencies to divert 50% of solid waste

AB 341 establishes goal that not less than 75% of solid waste be source-reduced, recycled or composted by 2020

2001 26 % 2002 34 % 2003 40 % 2004 70 % 2005 77 % 2006 72 % 2007 70 % 2008 92 % 2009 72 % 2010 75 % 2011 75 %

CSULB Diversion Rates

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Materials Recycled at CSULB Batteries Landscape debris Wood Cardboard Mixed paper Scrap metal Construction & Demolition

debris Surplus Property Pallets & Tires Cans & Bottles Electronics

How CSULB is achieving 50%+ diversion rate:

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Batteries Used batteries that have exhausted their life span should not be thrown in the trash, as they may contain toxic materials that can contaminate ground water when landfilled or cause air pollution when incinerated. All dead batteries (rechargeable and non-rechargeable) should be placed in a battery collection box.

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Battery Drop-off Locations Brotman Hall Purchasing Department (BH-346) Brotman Hall ITS Supply Room (BH-195) Carpenter Performing Arts Center Production Office (S-141) Design Department Safety Office (DSN-123B) Education Building 2 - Staff Photocopy and Supply Room Facilities Management Warehouse Facility Management Customer Service Office Horn Center Information Desk K-JAZZ Radio Station Parkside Commons Dorm Office Residence Commons Dorm Office Residential Learning Center Science Safety Office (MIC-001) University Audio Visual Department (LA1-103) USU Information Desk University Bookstore - 2nd floor Women's Resource Center (LA3-105)

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Landscape Debris Landscape debris is hauled offsite for grinding and reuse. Tree trimmings are chipped onsite and used for mulch.

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Landscape Debris Recycling 4,375 tons recovered 2001 - 2011

0

100

200

300

400

500

600

2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011

32

300

423 395

420 435

538 533

383

478

438

tons

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Wood Debris Recycling

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Wood Debris Recycling 688 tons recovered 2002 -2011

0

20

40

60

80

100

120

2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011

0

42 45 41

58

81

98

118

75

42

88

tons

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Cardboard Recycling Cardboard picked up from collection points throughout campus and flattened into 40 cy roll-off at main yard

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Cardboard Recycling 479 tons recovered 2002 - 2011

0

10

20

30

40

50

60

2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011

0

30

45

41

46

55 55 52

46 49

60

tons

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Mixed Paper 3,000 deskside containers and 250 intermediate containers are distributed to staff and faculty. Recycling Collection Containers are distributed to all residents living on campus

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Mixed Paper Recycling Custodians collect paper in clear bags and place at collection points throughout campus. Clear bags of mixed paper are emptied into 40 cy compactor. Paper is taken to local Material Recovery Facility.

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Mixed Paper Recycling 1,554 tons recovered 2002 - 2011

0

40

80

120

160

200

2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011

0.2

46

181 173

184 177

196 199

138

122

138

tons

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Scrap Metal Recycling 3 cubic yard tilt hoppers are emptied into 40 cubic yard roll-off at laydown yard

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Scrap Metal Recycling 1,441 tons recovered 2001 - 2011

0

50

100

150

200

250

2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011

95 113

80

103 93

167 175

237

137

67

174

tons

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Construction & Demolition Debris Contractors required to haul C&D debris to sorting facilities

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Surplus Property Excess property is either re-used on campus, donated (government or non-profit organizations), auctioned, or scrapped for recycling

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Surplus Property 477 tons auctioned 2001 – 2011

0

15

30

45

60

75

2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011

51

36

56

23

67

38 35

51 51

46

23

tons

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Pallet & Tire Recycling 14.4 tons of pallets recovered in 2011 2.1 tons of tires recycled in 2011

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Cans & Bottles 55-gal Pyramid barrels and containers for class rooms & special events are located throughout campus.

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Cans & Bottles 95 tons recovered 2001 - 2011

0

2

4

6

8

10

12

14

2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011

0.7

2.4

6.4

7.8

12.4

11.3

10 9.58

11.6

10.6

12.7

tons

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CSULB Recycling Website

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Green Landscaping Practices • Developed and began implementation of a

Sustainable Master Landscape Plan • Utilizing a weather based irrigation system • Utilizing and have expansion plans for

reclaimed water for irrigation • Implemented a Green Waste to Mulch

program • Implemented Integrated Pest Management

Control strategies

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Sustainable Landscape Estimated Water Savings

• Parking Lot 8 - Replant, 122 Drip Emitters: 69% • VEC - 706 Drip Emitters: 57% • Nursing - 200 Drip Emitters: 84% • Cole Plaza - 616 Drip Emitters – 64%

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Water Conservation

• Installed over 300 waterless and low flow urinals

• Installed touch free faucets in restrooms to improve hygiene and eliminate water waste

• Installed a centralized weather based landscape irrigation system

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These stations provide the CSULB campus community a means to eliminate/reduce their use of plastic bottles, resulting in a long lasting impact on the environment.

Water Bottle Refilling Stations

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Approximately 75% of empty plastic bottles end up in our landfills, lakes, streams, and oceans.

There are currently 20 water bottle refilling stations on campus and 11 more to be installed by June 30, 2013.

1 of the 5 Water Bottle Refilling Stations located in the Student Wellness and Recreation Center (Picture taken October 3, 2012)

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Transportation • Maintains campus fleet of electric powered

vehicles • Fleet of electric powered vehicles recharged

from solar power

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In August 2012 CSULB unveiled its first publicly accessible

Electric Vehicle Charging Stations

We are grateful to Adopt A Charger and the sponsor ‘Friends of Doug Korthof’ for their contribution to campus sustainability.

• located in Parking Structure 1 • free public charging on campus

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What You Can Do!

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STEP #1 Reduce: Don’t buy as much – ask yourself if you really need it?

STEP #2 Reuse: Before you dispose of something try and think of a way to reuse it, or give it to someone else who can use it.

STEP #3 Recycle: Before throwing something away be sure there is no way to recycle it!

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•Have your office machines plugged into a power saving device as applicable. CSULB Offices can contact Paul Wingco for more info. at x.58167.

•Turn off the printer and copier at the end of the day (if not set to turn off automatically).•Remove personal printers and use shared copiers that automatically print on both sides.•Save files and emails electronically, and don’t print out a hardcopy of everything.•Use a lunch box or insulated cooler and bring your lunch to work.•Keep a reusable coffee mug, water bottle and utensils at work.•Be aware! Learn about and use all available recycling containers and programs.

AT WORK

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Transportation:Combine errands into one tripBe sure tires are properly inflated

• Walk, bike, skateboard or rollerblade whenever

• Use the bus, carpool and drive a fuel efficient car.

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Household Operations

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What You Can Do.

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•Weatherize your home with insulation and double-paned windows•Switch to compact fluorescent bulbs•Adjust your clothing, not your thermostat•Install low-flow devices for toilets, showers and faucets•Run full loads in the washing machine and dishwasher•Use a clothesline•Conserve water – turn off the tap when running water is not necessary•Use natural (non-toxic) household cleaners like vinegar, lemon and baking soda or

store-bought green cleaning products•Wash clothes in cold instead of hot water •Use the ‘air dry’ feature on your dishwasher instead of energy-hungry ‘heated dry’•Aerosol cans are not recyclable – buy in pump spray bottles•Do not use disposable dishes, utensils and napkins•Use in-home water filtration and reusable water bottles instead of buying bottled water•Use rechargeable batteries or recycled your used batteries•Have your appliances plugged into energy saving power strips as applicable•Make sure your water heater is properly insulated and set at correct temperature•Use and reuse sponges and dishcloths instead of paper towels

(you can sanitize sponges in the microwave: sponge must be wet, microwave for 30 seconds at a time until hot & steamy)

•Start composting. For more information on free workshops: www.longbeach-recycles.org

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What You Can Do.

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What You Can Do•You can apply to the Long Beach Water Department to receive up to $2500 for replacing your lawn in their ‘Lawn-to-Garden Turf Replacement Program.

•Replace water=guzzling grass lawn with a water-smart landscape

•Conserve vast amounts of water and save on your bill

•Reduce water use per square foot by 70% or more

•More information at: http://lblawntogarden.com

Before After

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Before After

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Household Hazardous Waste & E-Waste•Household hazardous waste is labeled toxic, poisonous, corrosive, flammable, combustible or irritant

• Purchase non-toxic/less hazardous products and only what you need

• Finish all unused products and recycle the containers or donate what is leftover

•NEVER throw HHW into your household garbage, toilets or sinks; never dump on the ground or pour down storm drains–it is illegal–and can seep into groundwater waterways and oceans

•Dispose of HHW/E-Waste properly at a FREE Los Angeles County Roundup or a permanent center near you: www.CLEANLA.com (Current schedule posted.)

•Most, if not all household hazardous waste products have an eco-friendly alternative

•HHW includes: abrasive cleaners, air fresheners, antifreeze, asbestos, automotive products, bug spray, car batteries, chlorine bleach, compact fluorescent light bulbs, disinfectants, drain cleaners, fertilizers, floor/furniture/shoe polish, fluorescent light tubes, fungicides, herbicides, weed killers, furniture/paint strippers, gasoline and diesel fuel, glass/window cleaners, hair spray, hair relaxers, dyes, permanents, herbicides, household batteries, insecticide, medicine, mercury thermostats, nail polish and remover, oven cleaners, paints, pet products (flea collars and sprays), pool chemicals, small propane tanks, insect/rodent poisons, medical needles, rug/upholstery cleaners, solvents, stains and varnishes, transmission and brake fluid, thinners and turpentines, tub/tile/toilet bowl cleaners, use motor oil and filters and weed killers.

• E-Waste includes: cell phones, computers, electronic games, fax machines, light switches, printers, t.v.’s stereos, VCR’s and DVD players and microwaves, which should always be recycled.

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•Use native and drought-tolerant plans and grasses

•Use compost to fertilize

•Mow grass high and leave clippings to fertilize

•Don’t overwater; and water in morning or evening to avoid evaporation

•Use a broom or rake rather than a hose to clean sidewalks and driveways

•Use mulch in garden to control weeks and retain moisture

•Participate in local beach clean-ups

LandscapePage 317

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Food•Eat Less Meat!•Buy and eat more locally grown organic fruits and vegetables

•If shopping at a supermarket buy certified organic products•Start a garden•Carry reusable bags to the store•Take a reusable container with you when you go out to eat for leftovers

•If you buy drinks on the road, bring your own cup and/or patronize places that provide refillable containers

•Shop at local farmer’s marketsPage 321

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Don’t buy more than you need

Don’t cook more than you need

Don’t put large amounts on your plate

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Extra Food? Ways to Start Preserving At Home

Perhaps the most famous form of food preservation – and also the most complex – is canning. Canning is a very effective method because foods can be kept for a long time without spoiling. The canning procedure kills bacteria that causes food to spoil. It also creates a vacuum seal, which keeps air away from the stored food.

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You may not think too hard about throwing leftovers into your freezer, but freezing is still considered a food preservation method. Not surprisingly, it is one of the most popular options since it’s so easy to do. Keep in mind, though, that freezing is a technique, so there are guidelines you should follow so that your food will emerge from the freezer as fresh as possible.

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Depending on the type of food with which you’re dealing, drying can be a good option. It works well for fruits and also for vegetables and herbs. Even jerky has been preserved by drying. Dried foods don’t take up too much space and they don’t weigh much, either. They can also supply a crispy (or chewy, depending on the food) snack.

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Consume a variety of foods (including

meat alternatives like legumes, tofu, nuts and eggs) to

reduce your intake of antibiotic-resistant

bacteria, hormone and pesticides.

(www.betterhealth.vic.gov)

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Maximize your intake of health-promoting foods.

Organic produce contains, on average, 25% higher levels of 11 key nutrients compared to conventionally grown produce. (www.organic-center.org)

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Know where your food comes from and support local farmers.

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They welcome all friends, volunteers, donors and supporters!Volunteer workdays: Wednesdays 9-3, Fridays 9-3, 2nd Saturday 9-3

Opportunities for entry-level jobs and internships.

Farm Lot 59 is a One-acre community farm in Long Beach at 2714 California Av. (www.longbeachlocal.org)

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$30 buys a box full of their

current produce.

Sample of boxes offered on 9/5/12:

Cucumber, Heirloom tomato,

Amaranth, Zucchini, Bell

peppers, Watermelon, Passion

fruit, Basil and Parsley.

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Their goal is to grow and eat locally grown organic food and train young farmers.

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ORGANIC MEANS: no toxic synthetic pesticides, herbicides or fumigants; no chemical fertilizers or sewer sludge used as fertilizer; no intentional genetically modified organisms; no hormones, antibiotics, artificial ingredients or trans fats and no irradiation (being exposed to radiation). (www.generationsoforgamoc/org)

Organically produced crops must be grown on land which has been free of prohibited substances for three years prior to harvest (www.organicitsworthit.org)

Imported produce, on average, poses pesticide risks over three times higher than produce grown in the U.S. (www.generationsoforgamoc/org)

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WHY BUY ORGANIC?Cleaner Water

Cleaner Air

Soil Erosion Prevention

Reduce Pesticide Reliance

No Growth Hormones or Antibiotics

Humane Treatment of Animals

Organic Feed for Animals

Protects Farmers Health

Supports Small Farms

Chemical Free Food

Taste! (www.greenster.com)

Yes, organic foods cost more, but it’s a matter of responsibility. Each bite that you consume, each dollar that you spend provides an opportunity to make positive change for a sustainable future. (www.webmd.com)

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Organic regulations provide assurance that organic products are produced in a manner that supports animal well-being. (www.organicitsworthit.org)

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Fundamental Organic Principle:Healthy soil = Healthy plants = Healthy animals

= Healthy people = Healthy earthPage 338

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offers a sustainable solution that addresses

the world’s hunger problems and the long-term health of the planet. (www.organicitsworthit.org)

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Know where your food comes from and support local farmers.

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• Food Day takes place annually on October 24 to address issues such as hunger, nutrition, educa-tion, agricultural policy, animal welfare and farm worker justice

• Food Day is a nationwide celebration and movement toward healthy, affordable, and sustainable food

• Was created by the nonprofit Center for Science in the Public Interest (CSPI)

• Is not just a day, it’s a milestone on the way toward a better food system, a long-term partner for existing projects and a catalyst for new ones!

• Major goals:Promote Safer, Healthier Diets (annual medical costs for diet-related diseases are over $100 billion; more than 2/3 of American adults are overweight or obese; 1 of 3 children born after 2000 will develop diabetes in their lifetime.)

Support Sustainable and Organic Farms (Only 1.6% of all fruits and vegetables sold in the U.S. are locally grown; Ag-ricultural practices are responsible for 70% of all pollution in U.S. rivers and streams)

Reduce Hunger (50 million Americans are ‘food insecure’ or near hunger; in 2009, 20.7% of American children un-der the age of 18 lived in poverty.)

Reform Factory Farms to Protect the Environment and Animals (Only 9 states have laws mandating that some farm animals be given enough room to stand up, sit down, turn around, and extend their limbs; On average about ½ of a pound of fertilizer, 1,900 gallons of water, and 7 pounds of grain are required to produce one pound of grain-fed beef.)

Support Fair Working Conditions for Food and Farm Workers (Almost 90% of restaurant workers don’t receive a single paid sick day. Because of this, 2/3 report cooking, preparing, or serving food while sick; Immokalee, Florida is ground zero for modern-day slavery; if you’ve eaten a winter tomato purchased at a supermarket or on a fast food salad, then you have eaten fruit picked by a slave. That’s not an assumption. That’s a fact.)

WANT A CHANGE? BE A CHANGE! CHECK OUT WWW.FOODDAY.ORG FOR WAYS TO GET INVOLVED; LIKE FOOD DAY ON FACEBOOK & FOLLOW @ FoodDay2012 on twitter (hashtag: #foodday2012).

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Upcycle = Repurpose

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Products•Buy only what you need•Borrow or rent (for infrequently used equipment) instead of purchasing new•Repair rather than replace•Buy previously owned products•Support locally-owned and independent businesses•Buy locally made products•Stay healthy& keep the earth healthy: avoid toxic cleaners, paints, stains, adhesives•Buy products in bulk, concentrate and/or refillable containers•Buy recycled - this encourages manufacturers to make more of these products•Buy ‘energy star’ rated equipment and appliances•Buy vintage clothing to reduce waste•Use cloth reusable shopping bags even when not required

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Upcycle = Repurpose: We should prevent wasting potentially useful materials by making use of existing ones. This reduces the consumption of new raw materials when creating new products. Reducing the use of new raw materials can result in a reduction of energy usage, air pollution, water pollution and even greenhouse emissions.

Look at some of these creative ideas for reuse and come up with some of your own!

Wine bottle chandelier

Metal drink can becomes earrings

TV tray becomes mini ironing board

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www.notjustahousewife.net

New life for old jars

Broken pottery planters

Plastic drink containers become plantersPage 353

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Bike chainsbecomecandle holders

Tie - cell phone & credit card holder

CD cases for ribbon storage

New life for an old wagon

Coasters from floppy discs

Bottles become bracelet holders

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Diaper boxes become decorative storage

Reuse food packaging at home

VHS tape cases = photo frames

Another use for utensil organizer

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Mobile from children’s books

Bottlecapwindchime

Ladder becomes kitchen organizer

New life for an old dresserKiddie pools become mini gardensPage 356

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Crib becomes storage desk

Room divider made from old album covers

Bottle bird

feeder

Sweater sleeves

become bottle wrap

Cake pans & candle holders = food trays

Drawers get wheels and go under the bed

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Page 359

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ar.•

Comb

ine er

rand

s into

one t

rip•

Be su

re tir

es ar

e pro

perly

infla

ted

Food

•Ea

t Les

s Mea

t!•

Buy a

nd ea

t mor

e loc

ally g

rown

orga

nic fr

uits a

nd ve

getab

les

•If

shop

ping a

t a su

perm

arke

t buy

certi

fied o

rgan

ic pr

oduc

ts•

Start

a gar

den

•Ca

rry re

usab

le ba

gs to

the s

tore

•Ta

ke a

reus

able

conta

iner w

ith yo

u whe

n you

go ou

t to e

at fo

r lef

tover

s•

If yo

u buy

drink

s on t

he ro

ad, b

ring y

our o

wn cu

p and

/or p

atron

ize

place

s tha

t pro

vide r

efilla

ble co

ntaine

rs•

Shop

at lo

cal f

arme

r’s m

arke

ts

Hous

ehol

d Op

erat

ions

•We

ather

ize yo

ur ho

me w

ith in

sulat

ion an

d dou

ble-p

aned

wind

ows

•Sw

itch t

o com

pact

fluor

esce

nt bu

lbs•

Adjus

t you

r clot

hing,

not y

our t

herm

ostat

•Ins

tall lo

w-flo

w de

vices

for t

oilets

, sho

wers

and f

auce

ts•

Run f

ull lo

ads i

n the

was

hing m

achin

e and

dish

wash

er•

Use a

cloth

eslin

e•

Cons

erve

wate

r – tu

rn of

f the

tap w

hen r

unnin

g wate

r is n

ot ne

cessa

ry•

Use n

atura

l (no

n-tox

ic) ho

useh

old cl

eane

rs lik

e vine

gar,

lemon

and

bakin

g sod

a or s

tore-

boug

ht gr

een c

leanin

g pro

ducts

•Wa

sh cl

othes

in co

ld ins

tead o

f hot

water

Use t

he ‘a

ir dr

y’ fea

ture o

n you

r dish

wash

er in

stead

of en

ergy

-hu

ngry

‘hea

ted dr

y’•

Aero

sol c

ans a

re no

t rec

yclab

le –

buy i

n pum

p spr

ay bo

ttles

•Do

not u

se di

spos

able

dishe

s, ute

nsils

and n

apkin

s•

Use i

n-ho

me w

ater fi

ltrati

on an

d reu

sable

wate

r bott

les in

stead

of

buyin

g bott

led w

ater

•Us

e rec

harg

eable

batte

ries o

r rec

ycled

your

used

batte

ries

•Ha

ve yo

ur ap

plian

ces p

lugge

d into

ener

gy sa

ving p

ower

strip

s as

appli

cable

•Ma

ke su

re yo

ur w

ater h

eater

is pr

oper

ly ins

ulated

and s

et at

corre

ct tem

pera

ture

•Us

e and

reus

e spo

nges

and d

ishclo

ths in

stead

of pa

per t

owels

(y

ou ca

n san

itize s

pong

es in

the m

icrow

ave:

spon

ge m

ust b

e wet,

mi

crowa

ve fo

r 30 s

econ

ds at

a tim

e unti

l hot

& ste

amy)

•Sta

rt co

mpos

ting.

For m

ore i

nfor

matio

n on f

ree w

orks

hops

: www

.lon

gbea

ch-re

cycle

s.org

•La

ndsca

pe:

•Us

e nati

ve an

d dro

ught-

toler

ant p

lans a

nd gr

asse

s •

Use c

ompo

st to

fertili

ze•

Mow

gras

s high

and l

eave

clipp

ings t

o fer

tilize

•Do

n’t ov

erwa

ter; a

nd w

ater i

n mor

ning o

r eve

ning t

o avo

id ev

apor

ation

•Us

e a br

oom

or ra

ke ra

ther t

han a

hose

to cl

ean s

idewa

lks an

d dr

ivewa

ys•

Use m

ulch i

n gar

den t

o con

trol w

eeks

and r

etain

moist

ure

•Pa

rticip

ate in

loca

l bea

ch cl

ean-

ups

Prod

ucts

•Bu

y only

wha

t you

need

•Bo

rrow

or re

nt (fo

r inf

requ

ently

used

equip

ment

) ins

tead o

f pu

rchas

ing ne

w•

Repa

ir ra

ther t

han r

eplac

e•

Buy p

reviou

sly ow

ned p

rodu

cts•

Supp

ort lo

cally

-own

ed an

d ind

epen

dent

busin

esse

s•

Buy l

ocall

y mad

e pro

ducts

•Sta

y hea

lthy&

keep

the e

arth

healt

hy: a

void

toxic

clean

ers,

paint

s, sta

ins, a

dhes

ives

•Bu

y pro

ducts

in bu

lk, co

ncen

trate

and/

or re

fillab

le co

ntaine

rs•

Buy r

ecyc

led -

this e

ncou

rage

s man

ufac

turer

s to m

ake m

ore o

f the

se pr

oduc

ts•

Buy ‘

ener

gy st

ar’ r

ated e

quipm

ent a

nd ap

plian

ces

•Bu

y vint

age c

lothin

g to r

educ

e was

te•

Use c

loth r

eusa

ble sh

oppin

g bag

s eve

n whe

n not

requ

ired

•Ho

useh

old H

azar

dous

Was

te &

E-Was

te:•

Hous

ehold

haza

rdou

s was

te is

labele

d tox

ic, po

isono

us, c

orro

sive,

flamm

able,

comb

ustib

le or

irrit

ant

•Pu

rchas

e non

-toxic

/less

haza

rdou

s pro

ducts

and o

nly w

hat y

ou

need

•Fin

ish al

l unu

sed p

rodu

cts an

d rec

ycle

the co

ntaine

rs or

dona

te wh

at is

leftov

er•

NEVE

R thr

ow H

HW in

to yo

ur ho

useh

old ga

rbag

e, toi

lets o

r sink

s; ne

ver d

ump o

n the

grou

nd or

pour

down

stor

m dr

ains–

it is

illega

l–an

d can

seep

into

grou

ndwa

ter w

aterw

ays a

nd oc

eans

•Di

spos

e of H

HW/E

-Was

te pr

oper

ly at

a FRE

E Los

Ang

eles C

ount

y Ro

undu

p or a

perm

anen

t cen

ter ne

ar yo

u: w

ww.CL

EANL

A.co

m (C

urre

nt sch

edule

poste

d.)•

Most,

if no

t all h

ouse

hold

haza

rdou

s was

te pr

oduc

ts ha

ve an

ec

o-fri

endly

alter

nativ

e•

E-Was

te inc

ludes

: cell

phon

es, c

ompu

ters,

electr

onic

game

s, fa

x ma

chine

s, lig

ht sw

itche

s, pr

inter

s, t.v

.’s ste

reos

, VCR

’s an

d DVD

pla

yers

and m

icrow

aves

, whic

h sho

uld al

ways

be re

cycle

d.

Wha

t ca

n I

do?

Su

stai

nab

ility

Mak

e a Li

st!

Cre

ate C

hang

e!

Page 360