Trade Four Wheels for Two

On the fence about biking to work this Bike to Work Week? Here are 5 tips to make biking to work successful.

  1. Route planning: Check for bike paths and residential streets that have less traffic. In larger cities, combining a bike ride and a public transit commute is also effective.
  2. Morning preparation: Biking to work is exercise. Make sure to eat a good breakfast and drink plenty of water before starting to bike. The Wisconsin morning sun can be hot, bring an extra shirt so you can confidently tackle your day when you get to work.

    This could be you on your way to work this week!

    This could be you on your way to work this week!

  3. Extra storage: Planning on doing errands before or after work? Attach a rack to the back of your bike or a basket to the front. You can carry anything you need to pick up or drop off right there on your bike.
  4. Maintenance: The miles will start to add up quickly, so check your tires and brakes often. Keeping your bike in top shape will keep you in better shape and keep you safe.
  5. Dress Up: Wearing a helmet can protect you from anything you hit while biking. Wearing reflective bands and attaching a blinking light to your bike will prevent anything from hitting you. While on your mission to saving the environment, remember safety.

Want some extra riding time? Join us every Thursday starting May 16 for the Clean Wisconsin & Friends Bike Club. We leave at 5:30 from the Clean Wisconsin office. Each week we’ll offer two different routes, and everyone is invited to join us afterward at our neighborhood bar, Echo Tap, for Happy Hour pricing (bring your own wallet)!

Let’s All Breathe a Little Easier

It’s Air Quality Awareness Week!

Now that spring is here, it’s time to head outdoors. Unfortunately for some, it might get a little harder to breathe.  This Air Quality Awareness Week, here are five easy ways to improve your air quality.

  1. Huge turn off: It seems simple, but remember to turn off lights when leaving the room and power down unneeded appliances and electronics. Using less energy means power plants create less particle pollution, while reducing your electric bill.

    This week we can all work together to help each other breathe a little easier.

    This week we can all work together to help each other breathe a little easier.

  2. Firewood etiquette: Last winter was harsh, but now is the time to start preparing for next winter. By chopping wood in the spring, it will be dried out by the winter, reducing the amount of smoke and particles created when burned.
  3. Ride with company: Catch a ride to work with coworkers. Carpooling reduces pollution from traffic and you’ll save gas money by rotating who drives each morning.
  4. Freshen up: During spring cleaning and touch-up, opt for the environmentally friendly cleaners and paints to keep from breathing in chemicals.
  5. Collect, combine, compost: Instead of burning yard wastes, which is banned in some cities and causes high particle pollution, start your own compost or contribute to your city’s composting site.

Enjoy this great spring weather we are finally having, but remember to check for air quality alerts to keep you and your family safe. 

Raise a Glass for Clean, Abundant Water

MADISON — This Friday, let’s make a toast to our most precious natural resource: Water!

March 22 is World Water Day, a day dedicated to sustainably managing the world’s drinking water. A vital natural resource, it’s critically important that even in a water-rich state like Wisconsin, residents do all they can to protect their waterways and drinking water.

“While our families have clean drinking water, it’s not something we should take for granted,” said Ezra Meyer, water resources specialist at Clean Wisconsin. “World Water Day is a great time to take a few easy actions that help ensure our water remains clean and healthy for generations to come.”

Rain barrels are an easy way to collect rain water for later use.

Rain barrels are an easy way to collect rain water for later use.

Here are 5 tips to make that happen:

  1. Pet Patrol: Cleaning up after your pet won’t just keep the bottoms of your shoes clean, it helps keep our waterways clean too. Pet waste contains phosphorus and when excess phosphorus gets into our lakes, rivers, and streams it can cause stinky, dangerous algae blooms.
  1. Green Rule of Thumb: Don’t run off to the garden store just yet. Lawn and garden fertilizers can be harmful to our waters, so be sure your garden needs it before applying fertilizer this spring. If your lawn or garden does need a pick-me-up, use fertilizer sparingly and as recommended.
  1. Free Water: April showers bring May flowers, but that rain water can work overtime so you don’t have to. Direct your downspout toward your garden for effortless watering or collect rainwater in a rain barrel for later use.
  1. Four-Wheel Inspection: Most vehicles can’t tell you when they have sprung a leak, so do a spring car check-up and look for leaking fluids, such as oil and antifreeze. These fluids get washed off of driveways, streets, and parking lots and straight into our rivers and lakes.
  1. Less is More: Every drop of water we don’t waste is one we’ll have on hand to meet our needs in the future. Install water-saving appliances such as toilets, dishwasher, washing machine, shower heads, and faucets in your home.

When we all do our part, our rivers, lakes, and drinking water can stay clean and healthy for everyone to enjoy!

Happy America (and Wisconsin) Recycles Day!

Everyone knows to recycle cans, bottles and paper, but what do you do with old cell phones, motor oil and light bulbs?

Today is America Recycles Day, a day to promote recycling and inform Americans about local recycling regulations. Since 1990, Wisconsin has been a leader in recycling and the program has since grown to include more than the basics of paper, plastic and glass.
Wisconsin has been a leader in recycling for over 20 years, with the average person recycling over 250 pounds of materials a year, materials that would otherwise be taking up space in landfills.
The most recent addition to Wisconsin’s recycling repertoire is e-waste, or electronic waste, recycling. In 2010, Clean Wisconsin helped pass legislation to establish a program to recycle electronic waste such as computers, VCRs, TVs and major appliances like air conditioners. Since then, 35.1 million pounds of electronics from Wisconsin homes and schools has been recycled. (Find collection sites here.)
While there are numerous ways Wisconsinites can recycle other everyday materials, here are a few:
  • Used motor oil and filters are banned from landfills in Wisconsin. For do-it-yourselfers, check with a local mechanic or your municipality for recycling options.
  • Cell phones are banned from landfills, but are not part of the e-waste program; luckily, many recycling options are available. For starters, check with your nearest electronics or cell phone store. In addition, some organizations collect old phones for redistribution or recycling.
  • While compact fluorescent light bulbs (CFLs) are a smart investment for the environment and your wallet, they do contain small amounts of mercury and must be properly recycled; if your local municipality doesn’t recycle CFLs, most hardware and lighting stores accept spent bulbs for recycling.
  • Old thermostats also contain mercury and should be recycled. Find a location here: www.thermostat-recycle.org.
  • While slow, Styrofoam packaging recycling is gaining ground around the country; some Wisconsin communities now offer block Styrofoam recycling. For packing peanuts, mailing and moving stores often accept them for recycling and reuse.
 Our robust recycling ethic in Wisconsin saves over $70 million per year worth of material and helps protect our air and water. America Recycles Day is a day to celebrate the progress we’ve made and to double down on Wisconsin’s commitment to reducing, reusing and recycling.
Want some fun recycling activities for kids? Visit this America Recycles Day webpage; toward the bottom right of this page are some coloring pages and activities!

Waste-B-Gon: Smart lawncare practices for your home

Written by Sarah Witman, Communications Intern

Lawn watering is draining your pocketbook. Each year, 50 to 80 percent of what people spend on water during the summer goes toward lawn care, and all we have to show for it at the end of the day is an abundance of grass stains that need to be laundered out.

Let’s look at a few ways to do the earth, and ourselves, a big favor.

1. Water only when your lawn needs it. You’re off the hook from this chore if it has rained in the last week or if it is likely to rain in the coming days. At most, lawns need a deep watering (an inch) once a week, no more. They can actually survive on much less (a quarter of an inch per month). Lawn grasses need very little supplemental water to survive, and they turn brown naturally when they’re low on water. Brown grass is not dead grass, but brown grass does save water, energy, and the environment. Brown is green.

2. When you do water grass and plants, do it in the early morning instead of the middle of the day. The best time to water your lawn is before 8 a.m. During the day, you lose precious water to evaporation. And watering at night can lead to disease in your grass, because the water will sit stagnant on top of the grass for hours without drying. The added benefit of early morning watering is that demand on your community’s water supply is lower in the morning that in the evening. By the way, it’s best to mow in the evening, not the heat of the day.

3. Consider replacing some or all of your lawn with beautiful, natural landscaping. Xeriscaping refers to landscaping with drought-tolerant plants, mulch, landscaping rock, or other alternatives to the typical, all-grass lawn. Plants that are native to your area are typically suited to the natural rainfall — they shouldn’t require watering at all.  Xeriscaping is relatively simple to do, it’s low maintenance, and is a great way to (cost-effectively) add variety, color and depth to your yard. Plus, it reduces the amount of lawn you need to water and fertilize (and mow!). Protecting our water resources is a huge added bonus.

Photo from USA Today

4. Use lake-safe fertilizers. There are plenty of things that go into a lawn that we don’t even think about: aeration, porosity, water retention, and even stress tolerance! Fertilizers that are healthful for the grass in your lawn are usually also the ones that are better for our lakes and our health.

Fertilizers made from compost or other organic wastes are a good option, but make sure you are not buying a supposed “organic” product that contains something called synthetic urea, which inhibits plant growth. No matter what you decide to use, make sure to follow the proper handling instructions.

5. Prepare for battle! Having a squirt gun or water balloon fight might be more fun than the first four tips, but it’s by no means a lesser method of water conservation. If you have kids (or a group of energetic friends), opt out of the sprinkler for a week and let one of these fun activities provide lasting hydration for your lawn.

As a nation, we use about 346,000 million gallons of fresh water each day. Following these tips is just one way Wisconsinites can help our rivers, lakes, and wetlands and all of the fish and wildlife that call them home.  We can all do our part to reduce that number while dialing down the chore factor and dialing up the fun factor … and if you buy biodegradable water balloons (latex, not mylar) no cleanup is required!

This month: Think H20

Hey there, Clean Wisconsinites. I’m Sarah, Clean Wisconsin’s very own communications intern. As a journalism student and former newspaper editor, I’m used to writing about the actions and talents of other people — not being in the spotlight.

I have been with Clean Wisconsin for almost a year now, and this month I am focusing on water. That means I’ll be sharing my experiences with you all, as I go in-depth into one of our state’s most important treasures. Together, we will learn about all things water and more importantly, how to protect the clean water resources that we all enjoy in Wisconsin. This means identifying threats to clean water, and understanding that the water systems in our environment are fully connected to what comes out of the tap.

I invite you to take this journey with me; I’ll be learning too. If you notice an influx of water-related content on Twitter, Facebook, our Clean Wisconsin blog, and even in local news, it doesn’t mean we’ve forgotten about everything else that matters to Clean Wisconsin (breathable air, renewable energy and much more).  It’s just that water tends to work its way into all aspects of how we enjoy summer—from boating and swimming to the ice in your lemonade. Here are just a few plans I have to explore Wisconsin water this month:

  • Efforts in other states to find usable, drinkable water
  • A Q&A with a water expert
  • Busting myths about water resources
  • Smart, lake-safe lawncare for summer
  • How mining affects the water we drink
  • Quotes about clean water and water conservation from legendary public figures

The goal of all this is to encourage Wisconsinites to incorporate simple and effective steps into their daily routines that can have big impacts on our lakes and streams. Even better, the knowledge we gain can only benefit our wieldy arsenals of brainpower (or so I would like to think). My hope is, when August rolls around, we will look back and realize that it feels just as natural and painless to take action for Wisconsin’s waters as it is to log onto Facebook or read a blog post.

Contributed by Sarah Witman, Communications Intern

Dane County Launches Innovative Pilot Project to “Clean the Green”

Lake Waubesa

Today, Dane County launched a pilot project designed to help reduce phosphorus pollution entering the county’s Yahara chain of lakes. This project uses the innovative phosphorus rules that Clean Wisconsin helped pass in 2010 and upon successful completion, will serve as a model for cleaning waters across the state.

Following is a video explaining phosphorus pollution and the pilot project, as well as our press release on today’s announcement.

Dane County Announces Project to Clean Up Lakes     

Pilot project is first to use innovative phosphorus rules, could become model for nation

 

MADISON – Dane County leaders announced the creation of a pilot project today that will use tools provided in Wisconsin’s recently passed phosphorus rules to clean up the county’s lakes.

“By allowing farmers and municipalities to work together to clean up phosphorus pollution, Wisconsin’s phosphorus rules offer an entirely new approach that holds great promise to fix Dane County’s decades-old water quality problems,” said Melissa Malott, water program director at Clean Wisconsin and chair of the Dane County Lakes and Watershed Commission.

The smelly and unsightly algae blooms that plague many Wisconsin waters every summer are primarily the result of phosphorus pollution. Phosphorus pollution comes from two main sources: farm fields and point sources such as municipal sewerage districts and food processing factories. Previous laws have treated these sources as separate entities, requiring point sources to install expensive technologies. The adaptive management program of the phosphorus rules allows point sources to instead work with farmers to achieve even larger pollution reductions at a lower cost.

“Everyone wins under Wisconsin’s adaptive management program,” said Malott. “Point sources avoid installing expensive technologies, farmers receive financial assistance to make improvements that reduce pollution running off their farm fields, and residents get to look forward to a future of cleaner lakes.”

Wisconsin’s adaptive management program is a first-of-its-kind in the nation. Dane County leaders are optimistic that this pilot project will become a model for cleaning up waters throughout the state and across the nation.

“Through this project, we hope to clean up Dane County’s lakes, and show other communities across the state that the phosphorus rules provide a cost-effective way to clean up our lakes, rivers and streams,” said Malott. “If successful, Wisconsin’s innovative phosphorus rules could become a model for states struggling with water quality issues across the nation.”

A Pre-Season Grand Slam

By Katy Walter, Clean Energy Specialist

Here’s one more reason to be excited about the Brew Crew’s opener at Miller Park tomorrow: The stadium is now LEED certified by the U.S. Green Building Council.

And much like winning the World Series, it was no easy feat. How do you make a giant structure with a retractable roof more sustainable? The answer is “very carefully.” According to The Brewer Nation blog:

Miller Park is one of the most complicated buildings ever certified in the LEED Existing Building rating system, due to the nature of the facility, the sheer volume of people, materials, vendors, the operable roof, and overall complexity of the building operations. Only two other Major League Baseball stadiums have achieved LEED for Existing Buildings (AT&T Park in San Francisco and Target Field in Minneapolis), and both of them are open-air facilities. The retractable roof makes meeting energy and ventilation thresholds more challenging.

Milwaukee’s own Johnson Controls masterminded the project, which includes a scoreboard that uses 50% less energy and retrofitted water faucets that will save 3 million gallons of water each year. Overall, the project will save 1,153 metric tons of CO2 emissions each year, which is the same as taking 220 cars off the road annually. In addition to the energy savings, a retrofit of water fixtures will save 3 million gallons of water annually and a more robust recycling program will up the amount of stadium waste diverted from landfills. Since the 2010, 35% of all waste has been recycled, and additional recycling containers have been added to both parking lots and inside the park for this season.

No doubt, this project is a grand slam for the environment, for the fans and for the Brewers.

It’s World Water Day: Are you doing your part?

By Elizabeth Wheeler, Staff Attorney

World Water Day is an observance held annually on March 22 to raise awareness around sustainability of our world’s freshwater supply. Freshwater supply is a global issue. Wisconsin is lucky enough to have significant freshwater resources, but those resources are constantly threatened by a dearth of water supply in other parts of the United States and even the world. This is the reason for the touted Great Lakes Compact, which was passed in 2008, and continues to protect our Great Lakes. However, even in Wisconsin, it is important to ensure that we are using our water smartly and efficiently.

You may be familiar with the term “energy efficiency,” but are you familiar with “water efficiency”? Water efficiency and water conservation are important components of smart water use. Water efficiency refers to using less water to achieve the same result; take low-flow toilets or shower heads for example. Water conservation means actually reducing your water-consuming activities, or changing your water consumption patterns, like turning off the water when you brush your teeth, only watering your garden in the evening, or only running your dishwasher when it’s full.

Clean Wisconsin promotes water efficiency and water conservation at the utility level by encouraging utilities to adopt rates that reward smart water use, provide incentives or rebates for technology designed to lower water use, and increase awareness for water efficiency in Wisconsin. What can you do to reduce your water use at home? If you think that you might benefit from installing a more water-efficient toilet, check with your water utility to see if they offer rebates. For tips, ideas and estimated savings around your home, check out this calculator.

In the meantime, here are just a few of the many ways you can save water around your home.

  • If your shower fills a one-gallon bucket in less than 20 seconds, replace the shower head with a water-efficient model.
  • Collect the water you use for rinsing fruits and vegetables, then reuse it to water houseplants.
  • Put food coloring in your toilet tank. If it seeps into the toilet bowl without flushing, you have a leak. Fixing it can save up to 1,000 gallons a month.
  • If your dishwasher is new, cut back on rinsing. Newer models clean more thoroughly than older ones.
  • Use sprinklers that deliver big drops of water close to the ground. Smaller water drops and mist often evaporate before they hit the ground.
  • Listen for dripping faucets and running toilets. Fixing a leak can save 300 gallons a month or more.

These ideas, and many more, can be found at Water-Use It Wisely.

 

When a $50 light bulb is a smart idea

By Tyson Cook, Staff Scientist

The Washington Post recently published an article, Government-subsidized green light bulb carries costly price tag, which is a thinly veiled attack piece on clean energy technologies and policies. It provided incomplete and misleading information on numerous fronts, with the main argument succinctly wrapped up here:

“How the expensive bulb won a $10 million government prize meant to foster energy-efficient affordability is one of the curiosities that arise as the country undergoes a massive, mandated turnover from traditional incandescent lamps to more energy-efficient ones.”

As someone who consulted on emerging energy efficiency technologies for a number of years, and LED lighting in particular, I’d like to chime in.

First, consider the “L Prize” award. The government awarded $10 million to Philips for being the first company to meet their criteria for developing a commercially available, high-quality, long-lived, highly-efficient (and, as it turns out, Wisconsin-made!) light bulb. What the article doesn’t mention is that the $10 million prize leveraged many times that amount in private research from multiple companies throughout the country. The article also doesn’t mention that the prize helped accelerate the development of a technology that has the potential to save Americans billions – with a ‘B’ – of dollars in the future.

The “massive, mandated turnover” that the article talks about is simply an echo of recent attacks on a piece of energy legislation passed by George W. Bush in 2007, which The Washington Post labels a “ban on inefficient incandescent light bulbs.” By claiming that the legislation essentially forces consumers to go out and buy only certain types of lights, the article attempts to play into big-government fears. In reality, that legislation is a performance standard that requires manufacturers to make their lights work better – including new, improved incandescent bulbs. The article doesn’t mention the facts that the “ban” doesn’t actually reduce consumer choice, or that all of the major bulb manufacturers have come out in support of the new requirements.

And that new L-Prize light bulb? Is the cost as absurd as the article makes it out to be? In a word: no.

As stated numerous times, the light will initially cost $50. Yes, it seems like a lot when compared to an old-fashioned 60-watt bulb that costs $1. On that note, it’s certainly worth considering that the bulbs have only been on shelves for a matter of weeks and are the most cutting-edge lights available. Like the latest smartphone, the prices will come down as the technology progresses and more challengers come along.

Putting that aside and using the higher prices that you’ll pay for being the first on the block to own the newest lights, they’re not as expensive as they seem. First, consider the fact that an L Prize bulb will last over 10 years. Since you’d need to buy thirty 60-watt bulbs in that time, that’s $30 in saved replacement costs alone. But the real savings are in energy use: The L Prize bulb cuts energy costs by over 80%. If you use your lights 8 hours a day, that’s annual savings of around $15 per light.

The only mention of this in the article is buried in a graphic that has to be clicked on to be read, in which the Post calculates that over 10 years, using traditional bulbs will cost a total $228, and the L Prize bulb will cost $83 – that’s savings of $145.

(Side note: In case you were someone who gets a hard copy of the Washington Post, the article is even more misleading. In tiny print at the bottom of the graphic is noted “This is a corrected version of a graphic that appeared in the paper on March 9.” As pointed out on the blog ThinkProgress, the original article listed the L Prize bulb as more expensive over time than incandescent lights, because they calculated costs with electricity at one cent per kWh instead of the national average of over ten times that. If anyone knows how to get that deal, let me know!)

We shouldn’t disregard LEDs as too expensive. They can be good, affordable replacements if you can get over the initial investment cost. We need to figure out ways to cut down that up-front expense, which will help people to get over the cost hurdle and start saving money. Incentive programs like those from Focus on Energy could help, as could innovative financial programs that help people spread out the initial cost.

The other take away from this article, at least for me, is that there’s a continuing need to fight to keep cynical politics from getting in the way of technologies, like LEDs, that simultaneously represent environmental and economic progress for our state and our nation.