Home Zero Home

  • Home Zero Home

    Home Zero Home
  • Watch videos at Vodpod and other videos from this collection.

Archive for the ‘Travel and Transport’ Category

‘McBiodiesel’ fuel is good food for thought

Posted by ericww on January 10, 2011

Thank You

Image by elycefeliz via Flickr

IT’S easy when you think you know lots of stuff to sometimes look at things but not really see them, missing out on some useful and important details in the process.  And there’s a potentially good epitaph in that sentence for me, I reckon.

So, yesterday afternoon, I happened to be sitting in McDonald’s at Leicester Square with my other half, both of us munching on a quick pre-cinema snack of chicken McNuggets and fries, washed down with an orange juice (smooth, no juicy bits).

There I was looking around at the decor at various items on display – specifically some large floor to ceiling glass cabinets, filled with neatly stacked apples, oranges, sheafs of wheat in glass jars and boxes of eggs (the speckled ones that are clearly meant to look organic/free range).  Printed on the glass cabinets were a collection of words: “variety,” “quality” and “farm”.

Now, I admit to being a bit of a cynic and – for whatever reason – a bit anti-big brands sometimes, so my first position is to view this kind of stuff with some kind of disbelieving contempt.

But, I confess, Hilary (my wife) made me realise during conversation that this skewed view isn’t always right (perhaps rarely in fact).  I always broadly blame this viewpoint on having been a journalist in the early part of my career – but, actually, nobody ever taught me to think that way when I was learning the ropes as a cub reporter. And so, McDonald’s, I would like to apologise.

While looking around, I had looked at but not really seen a giant wall-mounted horizontal text display, that was continuously scrolling through a number of positive McDonald’s messages.  One in particular, Hilary suggested, would make a good article for this blog – following a conversation where I had said that I maybe might shut up shop with Home Zero Home (on reflection that was rash and definitely not an option).

The vital detail was McDonald’s fuel choice in its delivery vehicles.  Says McDonald’s:

“McDonald’s now converts its used cooking oil into biodiesel to power most of its fleet of delivery trucks. In order to do this we use a national waste oil collector throughout the country to collect and consolidate the used cooking oil from our restaurants. The oil is filtered and pre-processed prior to delivery to the biodiesel manufacturer. The manufacturer then converts the used cooking oil into biodiesel which fuels the McDonald’s delivery fleet.”

That’s to be applauded.  As is a further observation from the Mrs.  To get real change in areas such as environmental behaviours and practices, you need big brands to be involved otherwise it’s just not going to happen, or if it does it will take ages.  That’s a really good point which I think I may have looked at but perhaps not really seen.

Happy New Year everyone!

Posted in Eco business, Environment, Travel and Transport | Tagged: , , , , , , , | 2 Comments »

Gaviotas: Colombia’s eco-village is a lesson for the world

Posted by ericww on October 1, 2010

A FEW weeks ago, HRH Prince Charles conducted a one-week tour of Britain’s finest examples of sustainable living and sustainability in action.  The tour was the focal point activity of the Prince’s START initiative, which aims to help people across the country lead more sustainable lives and to show what a more energy efficient, cleaner and healthier future could look like.

One of the stops on the tour was the former mill town of Todmorden in the Pennines.  Over the past few years, Todmorden has been hailed as Britain’s greenest town.  It’s a great example of how the community has come together and transformed local food production and translated wider global environmental issues into a meaningful agenda that is relevant to the community.

It’s great to shine a big spotlight on this kind of ground-up, community-based activity and there are definitely good green lessons for us all in the story of Todmorden.  And, thankfully, it’s not an isolated example of sustainable living.  There is now a growing movement gathering real traction that is inspiring more and more people and communities in Britain to do their own green thing.

But, while we celebrate positive action on our doorstep, it’s vital we look further afield to see what can be learnt from other countries.  Whereas Todmorden can justifiably lay claim to being Britain’s Greenest Town, the Colombian village of Gaviotas is a very worthy candidate for Green Capital of the World.  It’s a big shout if you’ve never heard of the place. And I only ‘discovered’ it myself recently thanks to a great Colombian friend of mine, Sebastian Franco.

In a nutshell, Gaviotas was founded in 1971 by a visionary eco-pioneer Paolo Lugari who assembled a group of engineers and scientists in an attempt to create a mode of sustainable living in one of the least hospitable political and geographical climates in South America.

Sustainable living is in the DNA of Gaviotas, which generates its own energy from a variety of renewable sources, has tackled local food production and distribution at prices the local community can afford, and has also successfully identified and tapped natural water resources.  Everything is part of, and contributing to, a big ecological plan; even the children’s roundabouts in playgrounds are used to generate power that in turn helps pump the town’s water supplies.

Fortunately, thanks to Google and Google Earth, Gaviotas is accessible to anyone interested in finding out more, and I hope this post prompts you to take a look!  It’s a fascinating story that has captured the attention of many, including the American author, professor and journalist Alan H. Weisman, who wrote about it first in 1995 and than again in 1999 in his book “Gaviotas: A Village to Reinvent the World” (still in print and available on Amazon, published by Chelsea Green Publishing).

Gaviotas and Todmorden are of course not isolated examples of communities working together to tackle big global environmental challenges.  There are scores if not hundreds.  The common thread running through all the best examples, however, is the power of the  community itself.  To achieve real lasting impact, it is at a community level where the good work is achieved.  What a shame then that all these ‘dots’ of great action can’t be somehow joined up on a big, green global map, so that ideas can be shared and inspiration found?  Maybe we should encourage communities to identify and build links with their Eco-Twin Town?…

A long time ago in a previous job I was lucky enough to be involved in something called the Twin Town Awards, run by a now defunct Government quango called the Local Government Information Bureau (LGIB).  I was working for the Royal Mail at the time and my employer was the main sponsor of the annual event.  The Twin Town Awards celebrated the best examples of  communities in Britain that ‘twinned’ with their counterparts in other countries, built good links and had jointly done something worthy of recognition.  It gave a context to the road signs outside most towns and and cities in Britain such as: “Welcome to Northampton… Twinned with…Poitiers, France and Marberg Germany” etc.

It was a good scheme, designed in the post-war era, to foster good relations between nations and encourage education and community interaction.  Perhaps we could blow off the dust from something like this and encourage towns, villages and cities all over the world to identify and build links with their ecological ‘twin’ and in so doing spread and share the best practice that was happening in Gaviotas 40 year ago much more quickly.  Todmorden and Gaviotas would be an ideal first match.

Posted in Environment, Travel and Transport | Tagged: , , , , , , , | Leave a Comment »

Recycling on a grand scale as magical theatre arrives at Waterloo International

Posted by ericww on September 28, 2010

IT TAKES a real vision for recycling to turn a mothballed £135 million international railway terminal into something that can bring enchantment and joy to thousands of people.  But that’s exactly what the people behind a wonderful and intriguing new production of The Railway Children have done.

Remember Waterloo International?…  Gateway to the continent via Eurostar services to Brussels and Paris, and another milestone of “entente cordiale” post the completion of the Channel Tunnel…

Waterloo International closed its barriers for the last time in November 2007, with St Pancras International taking over as London’s gleaming new terminal for international passenger rail services.

For anyone that’s passed through Waterloo in the intervening three years, as the cobwebs and dust have gathered and the rails have begun to rust, it is an obvious symbol of wasted investment, neglect and decay of a construction that once won the highest possible British architectural award for elegance.

Fortunately, the elegance still exists from a construction perspective and in a theatrical context now too.  E.Nesbitt’s classic story of The Railway Children has been brought to life within an amazing ‘black box’ theatre construction over two of the disused platforms, surrounded on either side by a 1,000-seat auditorium.

It’s a triumph of practical and creative utlilisation of redundant space, but it also creates a unique atmosphere that makes you feel that you really are observing a busy Yorshire railway station at the high point of Britain’s age of steam.

I defy anyone to sit in the audience, close their eyes for a moment and not feel like an actual steam locomotive has just roared past at top speed – thanks to the amazing trickery and effects within this production.  With your eyes open, you will also see a touching collective performance from start to finish, and scenery changes and movements that are as slick as anything the operator of the Clapham Junction signal box could pull off!

I’ve never posted a review for any kind of production on this blog before, but I would highly recommend The Railway Children live at Waterloo Station – with a real steam train – for all the family.  The production runs until January 2011 and you can buy tickets [here]. Enjoy!

Posted in Media, Travel and Transport | Leave a Comment »

Prince of solar power is simply delighted about sustainability

Posted by ericww on September 4, 2010

Charles, Prince of Wales outside the White Hou...

Image via Wikipedia

HRH The Prince of Wales, who recently came out of the solar power closet in favour of installing renewable energy sources at his London Clarence House residence, is scheduled to go on a five-day tour of Britain next week to highlight examples of communities and individuals starting to live more sustainably.

Part of the START initiative, the Royal Tour will include visits to a community-run city farm in Newcastle, a town-wide ‘grow your own’ project in Yorkshire, and an energy savings company in Nottingham as well as three national START festivals, two START Living Shops and a civic dinner in Manchester. The tour will begin in Glasgow on 6 September, before heading to Edinburgh, Carmarthen, Bristol, Newcastle, Todmorden, Manchester, Nottingham, and Birmingham, finishing in London on 10 September.

The Prince will be travelling on the Royal Train, which runs on bio-fuel, and he will host a series of meetings and receptions between station stops. The Duchess of Cornwall will join the tour for the Bristol and London visits.

Posted in Environment, Solar power, Travel and Transport | Tagged: , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a Comment »

Toyota iQ tops 2010 Green Car Buyers’ guide

Posted by ericww on June 16, 2010

THE Toyota iQ has been named Green Car of the Year, according to the Environmental Transport Association‘s 2010 Car Buyers’ Guide, which highlights which cars are best and worst in terms of their impact on the environment.

The Lamborghini Murcielago, a vehicle that over the course of a year emits an amount of CO2 equivalent to felling a football pitch-sized forest of trees, has been named the Least Green Car of the Year 2010.

It emits exactly five times more CO2 per kilometre than Toyota iQ. Over a year of driving, the Toyota emits CO2 equivalent to that absorbed by three tennis courts of forest.

The ETA examined over 5,000 models of car and compared their power, emissions, fuel efficiency and the amount of noise they produce to create a definitive guide to buying the greenest vehicle.

This year the Car Buyer’s Guide has ranked the following cars as the top 10 overall:

  1. Toyota iQ
  2. Honda Insight
  3. Volkswagen New Polo
  4. Toyota Yaris
  5. Toyota Prius
  6. Nissan Pixo
  7. Suzuki Alto
  8. Honda Civic Hybrid
  9. Ford Fiesta
  10. Mazda 2

  11. Bookmark and Share

Posted in Travel and Transport | Tagged: , , , , , | Leave a Comment »

‘Back to the Future’ for this zero-emission way to GO!

Posted by ericww on May 19, 2010

IF YOU’RE a fan of  the 1980′s smash hit movie franchise ‘Back to the Future,’ and you remember Michael J Fox as Marty McFly with his “hoverboard”, then you might just like this neat, zero-emission way to get around: the Swissbikeboard

It combines two popular “toys” in one unit – a skateboard and a bicycle – and is powered by two rechargeable, lithium-polymer batteries, which will last for about 30 miles on one charge.  The style is similar to Sharper Image’s Razor scooter, but looks a bit more like an old fashioned toy scooter circa. 1950.

The Swissbikeboard is not your average scooter, however. It has suspension for some radical on-street use, a powerful braking system, and it is so super quiet that it can be used indoors, according to its makers.  A variety of different models means it can also be used for serious downhill adventure, snowboarding, and wakeboard-style water fun.

All of this comes at a price, however, and $2,495 (about £1,720) for the street model seems a bit steep, we think.  You can see it in action on the manufacturer’s website where they have a short video.

Posted in Travel and Transport | Tagged: , , , , , , , , , | Leave a Comment »

 
Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.