How Ethical

How Ethical! Blog


31
Aug
2007

The internet is the home of some great ideas (and admittedly, some rubbish ones, but we’ll not go there), but few come close to the total and utter brilliance of Freecycle, a network of users with one sole aim - to stop stuff going to landfill by passing it on to others who might need it.

The Freecycle mission statement is simple - “To build a worldwide gifting movement that reduces waste, saves precious resources & eases the burden on our landfills while enabling our members to benefit from the strength of a larger community.” Here at HowEthical! this is something we feel very strongly about. So strongly, in fact, that I decided to give Freecycle a try, and trust me, it is fantastic.

Over the course of the past six weeks, I have become a regular participant in the Newcastle group, both as a giver and a receiver, and the system works in ways I could never have imagined. Gone from my garage to good homes is a flatbed scanner, a cd burner, some board games, a load of old cuddly toys and a number of rolls of wallpaper, whilst heading in my direction has been a brand new glass television stand, a futon and a 20″ computer monitor and some wood for a highly geeky DIY project I am undertaking. The system really works.

The whole system is based around email lists. Users receive emails from other members, either individually or as a daily digest, which detail offers or requests. If you see something you want, or something you want rid of, you reply directly to the sender, and do the deal. With the groups being organised geographically, you are never too far away from the person you are dealing with, and the number of trades being done each day can be huge.

To check it out for yourself, and join your local group, head on over to www.freecycle.org. I’ll warn you though, it’s can get just a little bit addictive.

29
Aug
2007

Link to a video that helps you visualise CO2:

http://www.climateprotect.org/ah12

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10
Aug
2007

mmm chocolate

Mmmmmm chocolate. New arrival at Ethical Superstore this week is Green & Black’s organic cherry chocolate.

Did you know? Chocolate was created by the Mesoamerican civilization, and cultivated by Mayans and Aztecs. The word ‘chocolate’ originates from a Nahuatl word meaning “bitter water”.

If you’re not a fan of cherries, check out the rest of the chocolate on the site. Our best sellers are Green & Black’s and Divine. Green & Black’s is organic and is suitable for Vegetarians and Vegans. Green & Black’s Maya Gold is both Fairtrade, and organic.

Divine chocolate is made with Fairtrade cocoa beans from Kuapa Kokoo - a cooperative of smallholder farmers in Ghana. Buying fair trade chocolate supports farming co-operatives in countries like Ghana, Nepal and Bolivia.

Oh, and I can vouch for Green & Blacks Cherry being one of the most mouth wateringly delicious chocolates I’ve had all week.

In our house we mainly eat Green & Black’s 70%, but this week we have mostly been eating Green & Black’s 85%, which must rank as the most hardcore dark chocolate there is. Last week, I also got myself some of the white chocolate (very nice - like a very posh Milky Bar), and the fruit and nut raisin and hazelnut, which I’ll try and report back on next week.

All of this in the name of research…

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3
Aug
2007

I’ve been aware of this blog for a while now, and I’m surprised it’s not really been picked up by the regular media yet. Anyway, without further ado, introducing Mr. William Kamkwamba:

http://williamkamkwamba.typepad.com/williamkamkwamba/

He’s a student in Malawi. He’s also a bit of an engineer, and he’s built himself an enormous windmill to provide power for his family.

It’s a great blog about wind power in the developing world. It is also a fantastic example of sustainable technology and it’s a great story too.

I’ve already bought the film rights, and I’ll be releasing my movie, “William and the Windmill” in Summer 2008. So back off, Mr Peter Jackson.

2
Aug
2007

Photographer Jeff Barbee is used to getting himself into precarious situations.

Prompted by a desire to document the effects of climate change for himself, Barbee set out to sail half way across the Atlantic.

Despite having barely sailed before, Jeff Barbee got himself a berth on a yacht from Cape Town to St Helena, a 35 square mile island in the middle of the South Atlantic Ocean.

On his website you’ll find blogs, pictures and video as Jeff chronicles the environmental destruction and the slow death of species on this, one of the most remote islands on Earth.

www.jeffbarbee.com

via

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