WATER:
Do's and Don'ts Around the Home
What you don't know can hurt the environment. When rain falls or snow melts, the seemingly negligible amounts of chemicals and other pollutants around your home and premises get picked up and carried via storm drains to surface waters. The ramifications include polluted drinking water, beach closings, and endangered wildlife.

Learn about your watershed.
Start by using the Watershed Information Network (WIN) to find your watershed address and learn about its environmental health. Other useful sites include Surf Your Watershed, Envirofacts and Enviromapper. Also be sure to check out EPA's Wetlands web page to learn about the importance of wetlands.


Oceans and Fisheries:

Each year, commercial fishing worldwide wastes more than 16 billion pounds of fish and kills hundreds of thousands of sea turtles, marine mammals and seabirds.

Each year commercial fishing operations catch and kill more than 300,000 marine mammals worldwide – more than 800 each day.

Cruise ships generate an astonishing amount of pollution, up to 25,000 gallons of sewage from toilets and 143,000 gallons of sewage from sinks, galleys and showers each day. Currently, lax state and federal laws allow cruise ships to dump untreated sewage from toilets once the ship is three miles from shore.

Sea turtles have been swimming the world's oceans since before the dinosaurs roamed the earth, more than 110 million years ago. However, these treasures of ancient times are now on the brink of extinction. All six sea turtles species found in U.S. waters are listed as threatened or endangered under the Endangered Species Act.

 

Running solely on solar power
BOULDER - Louis Palmer started his trip around the world 13 months ago, in his home country of Switzerland. So far he has been to Europe, the Middle East, Asia, New Zealand and now North America, all in a car that goes no more than 50 miles an hour and runs entirely on sunlight.

Insulate and Seal Rebates Now Available for 100 Denver Homeowners
Properly insulating and sealing a home can help reduce monthly energy bills, and make your home more comfortable.
Greenprint Denver has partnered with the
Colorado Energy Science Center (CESC) and the Governor's Energy Office
"2008 Insulate Colorado" program to offer cash-back rebates to qualifying homeowners in the City and County of Denver that make these energy-efficient improvements to their homes.  This is a limited time offer, with funding for approximately 100 rebates.  Rebates are not guaranteed.


Green Tips for Easy Summer Living

Try these easy tips for GREENING your Summer!

It's easier than you think to support your local businesses and the Earth this summer. Try composting and natural alternatives for pesticides and fertilizer. Stop junk mail and use a re-usable shopping bag. Click here for more tips from Greenprint Denver!


Mayor Hickenlooper Encourages You to "Take Five"


Some of the greatest threats to our natural resources come from things we do out of habit. By simply changing five of these habits, we can all contribute to sustaining the environment for generations to come. We're encouraging all Denver residents to Take Five.
In five simple steps  - you can save energy and water, clean the air, and reduce waste.

Please join us in making a pledge for the future! 


Green Grocery Shopping on a Budget
Want to green your grocery cart, but think organic foods are out of your price range? Think again. If you pick and choose your spots and know how to shop smart, you can make healthy purchases that are good for you and your wallet.

How to be Greener: Cleaning Your Clothes
We know how fast that laundry basket can fill up. Enormous amounts of water and power are used daily to clean our dirty clothes (not to mention bed linens and towels). And for the garments you drop off at the dry cleaner–do you know how harmful the chemicals are? Luckily, there are simple steps you can take to clean your clothes so that they're better for you and the environment.

Transportation By The Numbers
Transportation facts underscore the need for reform. Transportation is one of the biggest causes of global warming pollution in the U.S. Our inefficient use of roadways and public transportation are only part of the problem.Check out our list of startling facts and figures.

Making choices that are good for you and the oceans
We keep hearing about the health benefits of eating fish, but at the same time, we're warned that eating too much fish could expose us to unsafe levels of mercury and PCBs. There's also overfishing, pollution and habitat destruction to consider. So what's a responsible consumer to do?
 

5 Natural Products that Get the Job Done
Your intentions are good. But did you know that the very cleaning products you use to rid your home of germs and bacteria could actually be leaving behind harmful toxins with every swipe?

Energy Watch:

Using energy more efficiently and moving to renewable energy (wind, solar, geothermal, and bioenergy) would significantly reduce our emissions of heat-trapping gases.

The United States currently produces 70 percent of its electricity from fossil fuels such as coal, natural gas, and oil, but only two percent from renewable sources. Since the burning of fossil fuels releases large amounts of carbon dioxide—the leading cause of global warming—but renewable energy does not, increasing the share of our electricity generated from renewable resources is one of the most effective ways to reduce global warming emissions.

Cars and trucks are another significant source (25 percent) of U.S. carbon dioxide emissions. A serious effort to address global warming must therefore reduce emissions from cars and trucks. Many technologies already exist that can do this, while also creating new jobs in the U.S. automotive sector and other industries throughout the country. In addition, American consumers would save billions of dollars on gasoline, and we would reduce our dependence on foreign oil.

By putting energy efficiency, renewable energy, and vehicle technology solutions in place at the federal level, we can reduce our contribution to global warming while creating a stronger, healthier, and more secure nation.


Waste management

Outdoor-gear label Patagonia is collecting used clothing (regardless of brand) made from Polartec and Capilene to melt and make into new fabric and clothes. (Some of that fleece is especially virtuous, starting out as fabric made from recycled plastic.) The company estimates that making polyester fiber out of recycled garments, compared with using new polyester, will result in a 76% energy savings and reduce greenhouse gases 71%. To shear your own fleece, visit patagonia.com/recycle.

Buying a shirt the second time around means you avoid consuming all the energy used in producing and shipping a new one and, therefore, the carbon emissions associated with it. Every item of clothing you own has an impact on the environment. Some synthetic textiles are made with petroleum products. Cotton accounts for less than 3% of farmed land globally but consumes about a quarter of the pesticides.

If every U.S. home viewed and paid its bills online, the switch would cut solid waste by 1.6 billion tons a year and curb greenhouse-gas emissions by 2.1 million tons a year, according to Javelin Strategy & Research.

Every year, more than 500 billion plastic bags are distributed, and less than 3% of those bags are recycled. They are typically made of polyethylene and can take up to 1,000 years to biodegrade in landfills that emit harmful greenhouse gases. Reducing your contribution to plastic-bag pollution is as simple as using a cloth bag (or one made of biodegradable plant-based materials) instead of wasting plastic ones. For your next trip to the grocery store, BYOB.


Deforestation

An acre of forest is cut every second world wide.

Every continent is being deforested except for Antarctica.

In Europe the forest were cut back so long ago that scientists that look at paintings to see what kind of trees grew there. Only 1/5 of the world's frontier forests remain intact.

As a result of deforestation and poor forest management, about ten percent of the world's 80-100,000 tree species are in danger of extinction.

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Mayor John Hickenlooper's Message about
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Learn about your watershed. Start by using the Watershed Information Network (WIN) to find your watershed address and learn about its environmental health. Other useful sites include Surf Your Watershed, Envirofacts and Enviromapper. Also be sure to check out EPA's Wetlands web page to learn about the importance of wetlands.


Home Lighting
Compact Fluorescent Bulbs

Check out the benefits of switching to compact fluorescent bulbs:
- Save up to $50 or more in energy costs over the life of one bulb
- Last up to 10 times longer
- Use up to 75 percent less energy
- Offer the same warm, bright light as standard bulbs
- Help to preserve our natural resources

LEARN MORE


Find out about our precious coastal and marine resources by reading the Coastal Watershed Fact Sheets. Learn about our pressure on ocean resources and find out 25 things you can do to help save coral reefs.


How can you help make a difference by using clean energy supply?

The Power Profiler is a tool developed by EPA to help users determine the specific air emissions impacts associated with their home or business's electricity use.

Visit the Green Power Locator to find out how you can purchase green power for your home and business.

Use the Is My Facility a Good Candidate for CHP? tool to find out if your business may be a good candidate for combined heat and power.