How To Move The Needle On Climate Change – Forbes

Professor and researcher Raimundo Cláudio Souza Gomes installs equipment used in a project called … [+] ”Curupira” (a mythological guardian of the forest) developed by the State University of Amazonas (UEA) to help combat forest deforestation in Manaus, Amazonas state, Brazil. Small, artificially intelligent boxes are tied to tree trunks to identify the sounds of machinery used to deforest the forest and issue alerts in real time via a long-range communication network. Photo by MICHAEL DANTAS/AFP via Getty Images.
In July 2022, the Boston Consulting Group released a report on the use of artificial intelligence (AI) to combat climate change. Eighty-seven percent of the respondents said they believed that advanced analytics and AI are helpful tools in the fight against climate change. For those in the private sector, 67% said they wanted governments to do more to support the use of AI in fighting climate change.
From companies using satellite data to monitor deforestation to new climate change incubators, the private and entrepreneurial markets are tackling climate change differently.
Colin McCormick, Chief Innovation Officer at Carbon Direct, said satellite data has been used for several years to monitor deforestation events (mainly through Global Forest Watch/GFW).
“An important recent advance is newly available satellite data, particularly from the GEDI lidar instrument that can be processed with advanced AI algorithms to go beyond basic deforestation alerts,” said McCormick in an email interview.
“This approach makes it possible to quantify the actual amount of carbon that forests are absorbing from the air,” McCormick adds. “This data is at very high spatial resolution (patches as small as 10 meters), which makes it possible to monitor actual carbon removal from specific carbon dioxide removal forestry projects that have issued credits.”
McCormick says they are seeing excellent applications of AI to anticipate possible deforestation/illegal logging before it happens. This includes training AI models to detect newly cut forest roads in satellite imagery and leveraging data from on-the-ground acoustic monitors to detect the sound of chainsaws and other logging equipment.
“Washington State is starting to use drones to anticipate fires before they occur,” said McCormick. “They are also using on-ground monitoring systems to move resources close to high-risk areas, similar to how militaries move troops to key battlegrounds.”
But unlike satellite data, which shows deforestation after the fact, a project in Brazil known as the Curupira Project detects destruction before it starts.
Researchers from the State University of Amazonas (UEA) developed AI boxes to combat forest deforestation in Manaus, Amazonas state, Brazil. The team installed AI boxes on trees to identify the sounds of machinery used to deforest the forest and issue real-time alerts via a long-range communication network.
New York-based Montauk Climate is a new climate tech incubator focused on developing early-stage startups to tackle infrastructure tech, grid edge and electrification, clean energy, and other climate tech solutions.
The incubator has raised $8.5 million in funding.
The incubator says it’s dedicated to building high-impact technology companies focused on a sustainable, electrified and digitized future.
“The capital and incentives needed to move our economy into a clean energy future are finally here, and Montauk Climate is positioned to create companies that address the urgent challenges of climate-related impacts,” said Evan Caron, co-founder and CIO at Montauk Climate, in a press statement. “We recognize that fundamental change in energy and infrastructure systems requires a completely new approach to how we innovate in this category. It demands committed capital, policy changes and multi-stakeholder cooperation.”
Caron says the incubator is an organization to build companies to support a sustainable future.
World Fund, a Berlin-based VC fund focused exclusively on climate technology, raised €300 million in March 2024. Investors include EIF, KfW Capital, BPI France, PwC Germany, Wiltshire Pension Fund, the UK Environment Agency Pension Fund, Croatia’s Erste Plavi, and their first Ecosia.
The World Fund was founded in 2021 and invests in startups developing technology to decarbonize the energy, buildings, transport and agriculture industries.

source

Developing Electronic Sensors for Environmental Science – College of Engineering – uat vcastapi

« All Events
Join us at 9:05 AM in RUCH 103 for a presentation from Carol Baumbauer, the first of three research presentations in our seminar series.
Data about soils, ecosystems, waterways, and the atmosphere is critical for understanding and mitigating climate change, managing resources and food production. Natural systems are complex with significant temporal and spatial variation, so high-density networks of low-cost sensors are needed to map this variability. Carol will describe her current work developing a system of in-soil sensors which monitor factors that lead to nitrous oxide emissions. Nitrous oxide is a potent yet understudied greenhouse gas. It is emitted by soils and is driven by other soil factors such as nitrate, ammonium, pH, moisture, oxygen, microbial activity, and temperature. Sensors for these attributes are fabricated using solution processing which could scale mass manufacturing techniques. Building on these environmental sensors, Carol will describe her vision for a research group that develops low cost sensors for direct greenhouse gas measurements as well as factors that drive gas emissions and consumption.
Speaker Bio
Carol is a Postdoctoral Researcher in Electrical Engineering at the University of California, Berkeley. She earned her BS in EE from Montana State University in 2017. Her undergraduate research focused on nanofabrication and optics. She earned her MS in 2019 and PhD in 2022 from UC Berkeley. Her PhD work incorporated printed electronics, wireless communication, biodegradable materials, electrochemistry and agronomy to create a network of biodegradable nitrate sensors for fertilizer management.
© 2024 All Rights Reserved Boise State University.

source

EPA digs into Charlottesville Urban Garden during National Agriculture Week | US EPA – U.S. EPA.gov

An official website of the United States government
Here’s how you know
Official websites use .gov
A .gov website belongs to an official government organization in the United States.
Secure .gov websites use HTTPS
A lock () or https:// means you’ve safely connected to the .gov website. Share sensitive information only on official, secure websites.
JavaScript appears to be disabled on this computer. Please click here to see any active alerts.


PHILADELPHIA (March 19, 2024) – Today, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) Mid-Atlantic Regional Administrator Adam Ortiz and Charlottesville Mayor Juandiego Wade marked National Agriculture Week by visiting Charlottesville High School’s urban garden to learn from students about their sustainable agriculture practices and impact on the Charlottesville, Virginia community.  
During this visit, Ortiz and Wade engaged with students, CHS staff, and community members to explore the garden and learn about its impact on promoting environmental sustainability and addressing food equity in the local community. 
“The Charlottesville High School urban garden exemplifies the strength of aligning education, community involvement and environmental stewardship for a brighter, cleaner future,” said EPA Mid-Atlantic Regional Administrator Adam Ortiz. “Witnessing the students’ passion and commitment to building a resilient, sustainable and equitable community highlights the power these initiatives have in inspiring the next generation of leaders in agriculture and environmental conservation.” 
Ortiz spoke with the students about the agriculture community’s vital role as the backbone of the nation. He shared that local initiatives like the urban garden help contribute to clean air and water, while also helping farmers overcome extreme weather challenges for stronger food systems and healthier, more resilient communities. 
The leaders also recognized the students and the Urban Farming Program faculty for their focus on entrepreneurship, environmentally friendly practices and food security, as evidenced by their annual contributions ofup to 2,000 pounds of produce to the community. 
“It was such an incredible opportunity to have Adam Ortiz visit CHS’s urban garden and witness the students’ commitment to the protection and success of urban agriculture as an important climate adaptation and resilience strategy,” said Charlottesville Mayor Juandiego Wade. “A sustainable and food-secure future starts with our youth and that is evident based on the involvement and hard work of the students right here in Charlottesville.” 
This visit also allowed Ortiz and Wade to meet with leaders from Cultivate Charlottesville, a non-profit organization that helps manage the urban gardens, to talk about their role in using the garden’s produce to increase accessibility to healthy foods and create environmental resilience in underserved sections of the Charlottesville community. 
“We are honored to welcome the EPA and Mayor Wade to our school to witness firsthand the incredible work being done in our urban garden,” said Charlottesville High School Interim Principal Kenneth Leatherwood. “Our staff and students are doing great work, and we want our students to fully understand what the EPA does to help the agriculture community.”  
The EPA is committed to raising awareness about sustainable agriculture practices for continued environmental stewardship through continued environmental education and outreach engagements.  
Visit the EPA’s website for more information on Urban Agriculture 
Visit the Charlottesville High School Urban Farming website for more information.  

source

Tentree's CEO on the Apparel Company's Sustainable Business Model – Green Matters

Green Matters spoke with tentree's CEO to learn more about the company's mission and business model.
UPDATED Jul. 9 2019, 4:30 p.m. ET
PUBLISHED Feb. 26 2019, 4:00 p.m. ET
Ever since TOMS popularized the one-for-one business model, many other companies have followed suit and built brands around donating their products to people in need. The apparel company tentree also took a page out of that book — except instead of producing more apparel and donating it, tentree plants 10 trees for every item purchased. Tentree uses natural, recycled, and mostly animal-free materials to make its clothing, and the brand has a goal of planting 1 billion trees by 2030. To learn more about the company and how it strives to be sustainable, Green Matters spoke with Derrick Emsley, CEO and co-founder of tentree.
“We believe that planting trees is one of the most important environmental missions today. It provides jobs, protects eco-systems and wildlife, sequesters carbon, and more,” Emsley tells Green Matters in an email. “By planting ten trees for every item sold, every single tentree product will have an impact that long outlasts the lifespan of a t-shirt.” So far, tentree has planted more than 25 million trees, meaning the company hopes to plant 975 million more trees in the future. 
“When we started the brand we didn’t feel like any of the current environmental missions really resonated with us so, instead, we decided to build one,” Emsley says. “Before tentree existed, my brother and I actually started a tree planting company that planted over 150,000 trees and sold carbon offsets,” Emsley adds, referring to he and Kalen Emsley’s first business, Greenfield Carbon Offsetters Inc. “In many ways, it was that experience that led Kalen and Dave to land on the tree planting mission,” he explains, referring to his brother Kalen Emsley and buddy David Luba, who came up with the idea for tentree while exploring nature in Hawaii in 2012.
Derrick Emsley
Since the Emsley brothers already had the knowledge of the mass tree-planting space, it was a no-brainer for David and Kalen to bring Derrick Emsley onto tentree. “During our time planting trees, I saw the impact it had on the environment and was able to connect with people across the globe that were using tree planting to support under-privileged communities,” Emsley tells Green Matters, adding that since closing the carbon-offset business, he had been itching to work in the environmental world again.
To get customers invested in the whole tree-planting thing, tentree has made the process interactive. (No, you won’t actually have to go out into the field.) Each item comes with a tree code which you can enter on tentree’s website. You’ll then be prompted to choose where you want your trees planted: Madagascar, Senegal, Haiti, Nepal, Cambodia, Indonesia, the U.S., or Canada. You can learn more about tentree’s tree planters on its dedicated @treeplanters Instagram page.
And speaking of Instagram — tentree is well-known on the social media platform, with more than 2.3 million followers. The company has curated a clear image for itself over the past few years, consistently showing young and beautiful models exploring nature in tentree gear.
Planting trees is not the only way tentree shows its dedication to the environment. As explained on the company’s website, tentree makes its apparel from a variety of sustainable materials. Instead of using plastic or leather for fixtures, tentree uses coconut shells for buttons and cork for patches, trims, zipper pulls, and more. Additionally, some of the company’s clothes are dyed with natural, plant-based dyes.
Tentree’s clothing is made from natural materials including hemp, organic cotton, TENCEL lyocell, modal, and linen. A few items also include recycled polyester (plastic), as well as wool and recycled wool (the only non-vegan fabric the company still uses, since they phased out leather in 2018). Some people consider wool an eco-friendly fabric since it is natural and biodegradable; however, the process is often painful and cruel to sheep, as shearers are typically paid for how much wool they shear, leading to a lack of concern for the animals, according to Woodstock Farm Sanctuary. Not to mention, breeding sheep for wool also has a negative environmental impact, because the process contributes to land degradation, water pollution, and more, as per PETA.
“We don’t want to contribute to the waste that has been created from fast-fashion manufacturing,” Emsley writes to Green Matters. “We look to be a part of the solution and a big portion of that comes from creating product that will last.” 
Many conscious shoppers have distanced themselves from fast fashion, instead opting to buy clothes from sustainable brands or in secondhand stores. While shopping from fast fashion retailers (such as Zara, H&M, and Forever 21) may seem like a good deal in the moment, the environmental and ethical repercussions make those $12 jeans seem like a pretty bad deal. To learn more, the 2015 documentary The True Cost details the unsustainable and dangerous business model of the fashion industry today. Tentree’s products are manufactured overseas in factories, and the website has a page dedicated to its “ethical manufacturing” practices. Emsley adds that tentree is working to improve things like “fabric wastage, recycling programs, solar energy and more” in the company’s factories.
Tentree may not be perfect — but when comparing the company’s efforts to the numerous fast fashion brands that are destroying the planet, tentree is clearly a more sustainable choice overall. As tentree continues to grow, it will be interesting to see what other apparel brands start putting values ahead of profit.
If anything, Emsley wants customers to understand that tentree’s environmental mission is at the heart of the business, and not an afterthought. “What most people don’t realize about tentree is that we are tree planters first,” Emsley explains to Green Matters. “We didn’t originally found tentree because we wanted to create a clothing brand. We founded tentree because we wanted to create a positive impact on the world and we believe that tree planting is one of the best ways to do that.”  
Eco-Friendly 2019 Oscars Dresses Turned the Red Carpet Green
Fashion Sustainability Experts on How to Ask Brands to Be More Ethical
These Are the Best Places to Donate Clothes
Latest Home News and Updates
Opt-out of personalized ads
© Copyright 2024 Green Matters. Green Matters is a registered trademark. All Rights Reserved. People may receive compensation for some links to products and services on this website. Offers may be subject to change without notice.

source

Environmental Health Sciences Division – UC Berkeley School of Public Health

Bridging academia and industry to spark health innovation
Training future leaders to tackle public health threats from environmental exposure
We are on the forefront of research that characterizes how environmental exposures—industrialization, unplanned urbanization, effects of climate change and microbial and chemical contamination of water, air and food—affect human populations, particularly the most vulnerable members of society, such as young children, pregnant women, workers, and those lacking resources and power.
Our faculty and students develop and apply cutting-edge methods, build research collaborations with global and domestic partners, and lead major research centers and projects around the world. Through our programs of study, faculty educate, challenge and inspire tomorrow’s leaders in environmental health.
The field of Environmental Health Sciences encompasses many topical and technical areas, and is fundamentally interdisciplinary in nature. The Division of Environmental Health Sciences (EHS) at the University of California, Berkeley, draws on the expertise of our world-class EHS faculty, as well as that of faculty across the Berkeley campus, together with which we have achieved exceptional distinction in multiple areas of environmental health. The Berkeley Compendium of EHS Expertise provides current and prospective students an overview of our areas of distinction, our faculty and their expertise, related coursework at Berkeley Public Health and across the UC Berkeley campus, and recent Masters-level student culminating work within each area.
Microbial and chemical contamination of water and air, unplanned urbanization, industrialization, climate change, and other sources of environmental exposure affect human populations everyday. Through cutting-edge methods and multinational research collaborations, we prepare tomorrow’s leaders in environmental health to assess the impacts of environmental exposure and advance the means for their control.
Environmental Health Sciences PhD
Environmental Health Sciences MPH
Environmental Health Sciences MS
The most pressing and complicated health challenges facing the global community require a transdisciplinary approach from global health leaders. Our curriculum emphasizes a multipronged skill set to understand the pathways and control measures for environmental pollutants—including pesticides, air pollutants, industrial contaminants, and vector-borne and waterborne pathogens—at the household, community, regional and global levels.
Global Health and Environment MPH
Global Health and Environment MS
publichealth@berkeley.edu

source

Our Sustainability Approach – Total

Choose the interface language
Choose the interface language
Our Sustainability Approach
TotalEnergies has placed sustainable development in all its dimensions at the heart of its strategy, projects and operations, in order to contribute to the well-being of the populations.
TotalEnergies has structured its sustainable development approach for conducting its activities so as to contribute to the achievement of the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), to which TotalEnergies committed its support in 2016.
TotalEnergies actively works on each of its sustainability pillars in order to make its development a vehicle of progress that benefits as many people as possible and to be a factor of positive change for the societies and regions where it is present.
TotalEnergies is committed to various international initiatives such as the fight against climate change, promotion of social dialogue, preservation of biodiversity, transparency in the conduct of business.
TotalEnergies abides by the principles of the United Nations Global Compact. TotalEnergies is committed to respecting internationally recognized human rights wherever it operates, especially the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, the Fundamental Conventions of the International Labor Organization (ILO), the U.N. Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights, the OECD Guidelines for Multinational Enterprises and the Voluntary Principles on Security and Human Rights (VPSHR).
The Company believes that transparency is an essential principle of action in building a trust-based relationship with its stakeholders and enables a path of continuous improvement.
Pending the adoption of an international, standardized non-financial reporting framework, TotalEnergies ensures it is accountable for its performance on the basis of the various commonly used ESG reporting frameworks. As such, TotalEnergies refers to the Global Reporting Initiative (GRI) standards and those of the Sustainability Accounting Standards Board (SASB), for which detailed tables of correspondence are available on its website. TotalEnergies’ reporting includes the World Economic Forum’s core indicators(1) (please refer to chapter 11). Furthermore, the Company follows the recommendations of the Task Force on Climate-related Financial Disclosures (TCFD) for its climate reporting. TotalEnergies provides additional information on its website in pages specifically dedicated to its sustainability development approach.
(1) Measuring Stakeholder Capitalism: Towards Common Metrics and Consistent Reporting of Sustainable Value Creation, white paper, September 2020.
TotalEnergies has been present since 2001 in the FTSE4Good index series (London Stock Exchange) and was reintegrated into the DJSI World and DJSI Europe indices in December 2022.
In 2022, TotalEnergies obtained a score of A- on the CDP questionnaire on climate change.
In 2022, TotalEnergies obtained Platinum status for its commercial entities listed on the EcoVadis platform for TotalEnergies Electricité et Gaz France and Greenflex, the Gold status for TotalEnergies Marketing & Service, TotalEnergies Gas & Power Limited and Saft Groupe and the Silver status for TotalEnergies Refining & Chemicals.
 

source

Easily observing environmental pollution-causing harmful substances through a mobile phone camera – Phys.org


Forget Password?
Learn more
share this!
1
Twit
Share
Email
March 29, 2024
This article has been reviewed according to Science X’s editorial process and policies. Editors have highlighted the following attributes while ensuring the content’s credibility:
fact-checked
peer-reviewed publication
proofread
by DGIST (Daegu Gyeongbuk Institute of Science and Technology)
DGIST’s Physics and Chemistry Professor Park Jin-hee and her research team have developed a technology that allows easy detection of hazardous chemicals. Allowing one to detect harmful substances by analyzing color changes using a mobile phone camera, the technology is expected to be utilized for various purposes, such as the detection of environmental pollution and prevention of gas leakage.
“Volatile organic compounds” are harmful chemicals that are widely present in the environment. They enter the environment through factory gases, indoor air, and other sources and cause pollution and sometimes even illnesses. Therefore, it is vital to detect them quickly. Traditional detection methods are either expensive or can detect only a limited number of chemicals.
To solve this problem, Prof. Jin-hee Park and her team have developed a sensor that uses a material called “metal-organic framework” to induce color changes. The sensor has been created using six different solvents, which can distinguish between 14 volatile organic compounds and water. To enable the observation of color changes with the naked eye, the team has developed large-area films that can be easily produced at a low cost.
By analyzing color changes using a mobile phone, it is possible to detect, qualitatively and quantitatively, low concentrations of harmful compounds that are difficult to detect with the human nose. The sensors may be used for various purposes, such as environmental pollution detection and gas leakage prevention, as they perform well even in high-humidity environments.
“The sensors we have developed have great commercial potential because they are operable without power and implementable at low costs,” said Prof. Lee. “With these sensors, we look forward to securing source technologies to develop sensors for various purposes, such as environmental pollution detection, terrorism prevention, and safety accident prevention.”
The research is published in the journal Advanced Materials.
More information: Kangwoo Jin et al, Comprehensive Qualitative and Quantitative Colorimetric Sensing of Volatile Organic Compounds Using Monolayered Metal–Organic Framework Films, Advanced Materials (2023). DOI: 10.1002/adma.202309570

Journal information: Advanced Materials

Journal information: Advanced Materials
Provided by DGIST (Daegu Gyeongbuk Institute of Science and Technology)
Explore further
Facebook
Twitter
Email
Feedback to editors
6 hours ago
0
6 hours ago
0
Mar 30, 2024
0
Mar 29, 2024
1
Mar 29, 2024
1
38 minutes ago
38 minutes ago
38 minutes ago
38 minutes ago
52 minutes ago
1 hour ago
1 hour ago
2 hours ago
2 hours ago
3 hours ago
Mar 29, 2024
Mar 28, 2024
Mar 27, 2024
Mar 27, 2024
Mar 23, 2024
Mar 23, 2024
More from Chemistry
Jun 8, 2022
Jul 6, 2021
Feb 9, 2024
Oct 20, 2021
Feb 21, 2018
Dec 29, 2023
52 minutes ago
2 hours ago
5 hours ago
Mar 29, 2024
Mar 29, 2024
Mar 28, 2024
Use this form if you have come across a typo, inaccuracy or would like to send an edit request for the content on this page. For general inquiries, please use our contact form. For general feedback, use the public comments section below (please adhere to guidelines).
Please select the most appropriate category to facilitate processing of your request
Thank you for taking time to provide your feedback to the editors.
Your feedback is important to us. However, we do not guarantee individual replies due to the high volume of messages.
Your email address is used only to let the recipient know who sent the email. Neither your address nor the recipient’s address will be used for any other purpose. The information you enter will appear in your e-mail message and is not retained by Phys.org in any form.

Get weekly and/or daily updates delivered to your inbox. You can unsubscribe at any time and we’ll never share your details to third parties.
More information Privacy policy
We keep our content available to everyone. Consider supporting Science X’s mission by getting a premium account.
Medical research advances and health news
The latest engineering, electronics and technology advances
The most comprehensive sci-tech news coverage on the web

source

Sustainable and Vegan Sports Equipment: Balls, Gloves, and More – Green Matters

PUBLISHED Apr. 6 2022, 12:18 p.m. ET
If you strive to live a zero-waste, sustainable, or vegan lifestyle, there’s no need to ignore those values when it comes to buying sports gear. It’s true that a lot of athletic equipment is made from unsustainable materials, but there are a number of brands making animal-free and eco-friendly sports equipment, from balls to boxing gloves.
Keep reading for a look into just a few sustainable sporting brands changing the game!
Sporting goods company Eco Sports was founded in 2021 with a goal of making sustainable, vegan, and high-quality sporting equipment that is otherwise made from leather. Currently, the company produces basketballs, footballs, soccer balls, volleyballs, and baseball gloves (prices start at around $24.99), which are all composed of a biodegradable, recyclable, and vegan material called TPU.
Eco Sports believes that its TPU products are just as durable as leather-based professional balls and gloves, as well as far more durable than other, cheaper, leather-free equipment on the market. The company also packages its products plastic-free, and donates 10 percent of profits toward planting trees. According to Eco Sports, 35,000 cows’ hides are used to make NFL footballs every year — so opting for cruelty-free balls can make a big difference.
Sporting goods company Waboba has a line called the REWILD Eco-Friendly Series, which includes footballs, soccer balls and volleyballs, all made from natural jute and rubber. The collection also features a set of two paddles that are made with a blend of pinewood and basswood, which come with oak cork balls. The REWILD products range from $14.99 to $19.99.
Waboba also uses completely plastic-free shipping materials across its entire product line, which includes fun and unique products like Moon Balls, Wingman Discs, and Water Gloves.
Sanabul is a completely vegan company that specializes in vegan boxing and jiu-jitsu gloves and other accessories. Though boxing gloves are typically made from animal-based leather (a notoriously pollutive industry), Sanabul has perfected the recipe for professional-level vegan boxing gloves.
The company makes most gloves using Performance Engineered Synthetic Leather, but also offers a few styles made from two different kinds of sustainable, partially biodegradable plant-based leather: cactus leather and grape leather.
A post shared by Biodegradable Golf Balls (@biodegradablegolfballs)
When golf balls wind up anywhere other than a hole, they run the risk of becoming litter, as they are typically made from plastic surrounding a rubber core. Fortunately, a number of companies are making golf balls out of biodegradable materials like corn starch and wood. There’s even one company that has fish food in the center of its wooden golf balls, in case the ball winds up in a pond. Check out our guide to biodegradable golf balls here.
If you are struggling to find eco-friendly or vegan versions of the sports equipment you need, consider shopping for the gear secondhand. There are a number of stores and websites that sell used sports gear, such as Play It Again Sports or SidelineSwap. This is an eco-friendly option, it allows you to avoid directly purchasing unsustainable or animal-based gear, and it can save you money.
Renting sports equipment is another fantastic option, especially for items you just need for one trip, or for items that a child will quickly outgrow. Many local sports stores offer rental programs, so make sure to check with yours. We’re also fans of REI’s gear rental program, which offers gear rentals for a number of outdoor sports, such as skiing and rock climbing, at many stores across the country.
Green Matters’ new book, Green Living, is the perfect guide to living an eco-friendly lifestyle for people at every stage of the process. You can order Green Living here.
Biodegradable Golf Balls for a Low-Impact Hole-In-One
The Ultimate Guide to Recycling and Reselling Sports Equipment
If You’re Getting Into Rock Climbing, Eco-Friendly Gear Is Essential
Latest Living News and Updates
Opt-out of personalized ads
© Copyright 2024 Green Matters. Green Matters is a registered trademark. All Rights Reserved. People may receive compensation for some links to products and services on this website. Offers may be subject to change without notice.

source