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Scientists study huge plastic patch in Pacific August 5, 2009

Filed under: Global Warming, Government Policies, Recycling, Wierd — bferrari @ 10:14 pm
Members of the SEAPLEX (Scripps Environmental Accumulation of Plastic Expedition) attend a training to use conductivity, temperature and depth instrument onboard the research vessel New Horizon in this handout taken August 2, 2009 and released to Reuters August 3, 2009. REUTERS/Scripps Institution of Oceanography/Handout

Members of the SEAPLEX (Scripps Environmental Accumulation of Plastic Expedition) attend a training to use conductivity, temperature and depth instrument onboard the research vessel New Horizon in this handout taken August 2, 2009 and released to Reuters August 3, 2009. REUTERS/Scripps Institution of Oceanography/Handout

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) – Marine scientists from California are venturing this week to the middle of the North Pacific for a study of plastic debris accumulating across hundreds of miles (km) of open sea dubbed the “Great Pacific Garbage Patch.”

A research vessel carrying a team of about 30 researchers, technicians and crew members embarked on Sunday on a three-week voyage from the Scripps Institution of Oceanography, based at the University of California at San Diego.

The expedition will study how much debris — mostly tiny plastic fragments — is collecting in an expanse of sea known as the North Pacific Ocean Gyre, how that material is distributed and how it affects marine life.

The debris ends up concentrated by circular, clockwise ocean currents within an oblong-shaped “convergence zone” hundreds of miles (km) across from end to end near the Hawaiian Islands, about midway between Japan and the West Coast of the United States.

The focus of the study will be on plankton, other microorganisms, small fish and birds.

“The concern is what kind of impact those plastic bits are having on the small critters on the low end of the ocean food chain,” Bob Knox, deputy director of research at Scripps, said on Monday after the ship had spent its first full day at sea.

The 170-foot vessel New Horizon is equipped with a laboratory for on-board research, but scientists also will bring back samples for further study.

Little is known about the exact size and scope of the vast debris field discovered some years ago by fishermen and others in the North Pacific that is widely referred to as the “Great Pacific Garbage Patch.”

Large items readily visible from the deck of a boat are few and far between. Most of the debris consists of small plastic particles suspended at or just below the water surface, making it impossible to detect by aircraft or satellite images.

The debris zone shifts by as much as a thousand miles north and south on a seasonal basis, and drifts even farther south during periods of warmer-than-normal ocean temperatures known as El Nino, according to information from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA).

Besides the potential harm to sea life caused by ingesting bits of plastic, the expedition team will look at whether the particles could carry other pollutants, such as pesticides, far out to sea, and whether tiny organisms attached to the debris could be transported to distant regions and thus become invasive species.

Source

 

How Green Is Recycled Plastic Lumber? January 7, 2009

Filed under: Green Building, Recycling — bferrari @ 8:41 pm
A recycled plastic walkway, as displayed on the Web site of the Plastic Lumber Trade Association. (Plastic Lumber Trade Association)

A recycled plastic walkway, as displayed on the Web site of the Plastic Lumber Trade Association. (Plastic Lumber Trade Association)

You can saw it, you can sand it and, if you want to, you can carve your sweetheart’s name into it. But beware: Mementos etched into this park bench won’t last forever.

That transient quality is one of the main selling points of recycled plastic “lumber” — vandals can’t touch it. Markers and spray paint can be sanded away, and the “woodworking” of idle teens can be melted off, and the reshaped lumber made to look as good as new.

Of course, the ultimate appeal of recycled plastic lumber is that it’s not really lumber at all. Though it looks and feels like hardwood, that picnic table you’re sitting on is really about 2,000 reconstituted milk jugs that never made it to the landfill.

“I certainly don’t condemn the use of treated wood,” said Bob Schildgen, a Sierra Club magazine columnist and “Hey Mr. Green” blogger. “Harvesting timber is not an inherently bad thing, it can be done in an environmentally sustainable way … but I would still give a nod to recycled lumber for the maintenance and material that would have been wasted.”

Many people do. Since the late 1980s, recycled plastic lumber has made gains on its hardwood counterparts on mostly “greenness” grounds.

A recycled plastic playground set sold by the AAA State of Play Web site. (AAA State of Play)

A recycled plastic playground set sold by the AAA State of Play Web site. (AAA State of Play)

“Obviously, a tree is a renewable resource,” says Alan Robbins, owner of The Plastic Lumber Company, Inc., in Akron, Ohio. “There certainly are a lot more trees than there are milk jugs in the environment. But a milk jug is a very stable part of the economy — they’re not going away.”

Robbins got into the business almost 20 years ago, about the same time chromated copper arsenate, the wood preservative that gave industrial-strength timber that certain greenish tinge, was either banned or replaced voluntarily throughout the preserved-wood industry after arsenic was linked to certain cancers.

“It’s been a crazy ride ever since,” Robbins told FOXNews.com.

“[Plastic lumber's] market acceptance has been so total that it is very difficult to find any natural wood used in current construction projects in park and playground applications,” he wrote in a 2007 report on the industry, though he noted that the housing bust was starting to hit home.

Recycled plastic lumber comes in your standard 2×4 and 4×4 planks, but can also be molded into 3-D shapes and curves unseen on the woodcutter’s block. It can be sawed, screwed and sanded just like wood, but without the sawdust.

A grain texture can give the surface a more woody appearance, and it’s available in many different “flavors” — redwood, cedar, mahogany, “weatherwood” and even “night glow,” which is phosphorescent and intended to hold up road signs.

It’s most often used in park furniture, hot tubs, decking and railings, signs, railroad and marine applications and the birdfeeder industry.

A recycled plastic picnic table on the British Recycled Plastic Web site.

A recycled plastic picnic table on the British Recycled Plastic Web site.

“‘No painting, no splinters, no rot’ seems to be the catch phrase,” said Robbins.

The Environmental Protection Agency is now warming to 100-percent post-consumer plastic lumber, reporting that the products last longer — indefinitely, at this point — and cost less to maintain than regular wood since they’re impervious to termites and are flame-, weather- and vandal-resistant.

But not everyone’s jumping on the recycled-plastic bandwagon. Plastic lumber, which costs three times as much as some wood, may be more susceptible to warping and discoloration and can melt under a tabletop camping grill. It’s also more likely to sag under a heavy load.

And, like the old plastic or paper quandary, the jury’s still out on which lumber is “greener.”

No comprehensive study has yet compared the life-cycle energy consumption of real versus plastic lumber, according to the Madison, Wis.-based Forest Products Laboratory.

There are two major “species” of recycled plastic hardwood. The most prevalent is made of high-density polyethylene — derived from milk and juice jugs.

The other comes from recycled polyvinyl chloride — the notorious PVC that Greenpeace dubbed “the single most environmentally damaging of all plastics.” Dioxin, a carcinogen and immune suppressant, is a by-product of vinyl production, as are many tons of greenhouse gases.

“The energy used in the manufacture of plastic and plastic wood composites is much higher than that used for manufacturing solid wood products,” Dr. Brian Bond, a professor at Virginia Tech’s Department of Wood Science, wrote in an e-mail exchange. “And many plastic wood composites still require a percentage of virgin plastic.”

The Healthy Building Network suggests buyers steer clear of fiberglass-reinforced “composite” lumber, even though these more rigid products lend themselves better to structural applications.

The EPA warns that, because composites are non-recyclable, “a growing plastic lumber market could actually increase plastics production and waste volumes.”

The promotion of plastics recycling in general boosts the production of virgin plastics, according The Healthy Building Network. But manufacturers argue their production line is greener than other kinds of recycling.

“It is mechanically ground, then it goes through a wash process,” said Brian Larsen, owner of Bedford Technology, LLC, a Minnesota-based manufacturer of recycled plastic furniture, speed bumps and marine pilings. “It changes state — kind of like water, it melts and then it refreezes again,” he said, adding that there are no heavy chemicals used, and no by-products.

He also said that since HDPE is so heavy, it’s not economically viable to process overseas. Most plastic lumber is therefore “grown” locally, shrinking its carbon footprint.

And even though it comes from non-renewable petroleum, the volumes of milk jugs diverted from landfills keeps the consciences of plastic lumber builders clean and green.

“We’re recovering that product and turning it into something else,” said Robbins. “A dairy bottle with a [two-week] life in the fridge can be turned into an infinite life for long-term use.”

 

Dutch Company’s ‘Ecofont’ Saves Printer Ink December 23, 2008

Filed under: Energy Ineffiency, Green Computing, Recycling — bferrari @ 2:47 pm

From the Maybe a Bit Over-the-Top Department:

AMSTERDAM, Netherlands — A Dutch company looking for ways to reduce the environmental costs of printing has developed a new font that it says cuts ink usage by about 15 percent.

In essence, the “Ecofont” has little holes in the letters.

Spranq, the Utrecht-based marketing and communications company that designed the font, struck on a Swiss-cheese design after failures with earlier experiments using thin letters and partial letters — like the stripes of a zebra.

“It turns out that it’s necessary to preserve the size and outline of letters to keep them readable,” company co-founder Gerjon Zomer says.

• Click here to download the Ecofont.

He concedes the font isn’t beautiful, but says it could be adequate for personal use or for internal use at a company.

Spranq offers the font free on its Web site. Zomer says his site saw a spike in traffic last week as word of the Ecofont began to spread. Much of the international traffic came from the United States.

He says that was kind of gratifying because “when you put something online you never know what to expect.”

The company is inviting developers to improve the Ecofont further under a free, open-source model, and Zomer says Arabic and Hebrew versions are already under development.

Source: http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,471088,00.html

 

A “Green Computing” Coming of Age November 20, 2008

Filed under: Green Computing, Recycling — bferrari @ 9:15 pm

By Bob Ferrari

Normally when a normal person is having environmental concerns over their carbon-footprint that they may be emitting their usual thoughts encompass the usual suspects – cars, electric generation, heating and air conditioning (HVAC), trash generation, or maybe even the unbelievable electrical consumption of the brand new black-hole creating Large Hadron Collider.

Whatever those thoughts might be, these people probably don’t spend much time considering just how much energy their computer is using, or the printer, monitor, television, VCR, DVD, XBox, or the Wii is using. When these devices are all “off”, most of them are still using electricity when they are in “standby” mode. Various electric companies estimate that current electrical usage from devices in “standby” mode is about 2% of total electrical consumption!

In a world where computers are everywhere, and environmental concerns are growing by the day, we need to consider how we can build, use and dispose of computers in a manner that is contributory to the health of the environment. That includes reductions in the use of lead and other hazardous materials in manufacturing, cautious energy consumption, lowering of paper waste by computer users, and concern for salvage or recycling of old computers. Millions of computers are dumped into landfills each year, which equates to a lot of mercury, lead, and cadmium that will leech into both water and air.

Practically Slave labor - Chinese imported hitech waste dumps

Practically Slave labor - Chinese imported hitech waste dumps

Chinese imports

Chinese imported computer graveyard

As to salvaging of old computers, there are many new companies formed simply around this idea. In the last few years there have been hundreds of small computer recyclers popping up all over the world that are actively engaging in the collecting of and recycling of old computer materials. A lot of this material is shipped overseas to China where people make 60 cents a a day rummaging through these imported waste heaps for precious metals and anything else of value. Currently it is unclear as to how much of this matieral actually is recycled. Yet at the same time, most computers end up in the regular waste stream directly from the homes and businesses they served for their few years of life. Current statistics in Britain show that only 10% of computers are actually sent directly to recyclers. 40% are given to friends and relatives with 10% of this number actually ending up being recycled. The other 50% end up being tossed directly into the normal waste stream… what a waste.

10% of British consumers actually recycled their old computers

10% of British consumers actually recycled their old computers

How Green Is Your Computer?

Thursday, November 20, 2008

We’re so dependent on our computers these days that most of us would be lost without them. They make communication, work and entertainment much easier — yet their negative effects on the environment are often overlooked.

The energy used in producing and operating personal and workplace computers is huge. Corporate IT equipment alone uses more than 22 billion kilowatt-hours per year, according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration, a branch of the Department of Energy.

But it’s not only computers’ energy consumption that’s noteworthy; the manufacturing process and the materials involved are also important factors.

About 4.6 million tons of computers and consumer-electronics waste are dumped in landfills each year in the U.S., according to Greenpeace, and fewer than 12 percent of discarded computers are recycled.

Aware of this problem, PC manufacturers are trying to go “green” by minimizing the use of toxic components such as lead and mercury and making the machines more energy-efficient.

But how can you know how green your computer really is?

Green Computers, or ‘Greenwashed’ Ones?

More of this story – “How Green is Your Computer” click here: http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,454928,00.html