Sunday, July 13, 2008

What is my footprint?

Before I started talking about living a sustainable life style, I thought it prudent to find out what is my family's ecological footprint.   The task can be relative easy, or a bit hard, depending on what metrics you choose to use.  Here is a summary of my research starting from the two main sources I used, and including a few more that might be of interest:

www.ecofoot.org - This site offers a simple way to calculate your carbon footprint.   If everyone lived like me, we would need 3.6 Planet Earths to provide enough resources.  Yikes!  It is not going to be easy to reduce that to 1 - yet I feel I must.  How else can I call myself a sustainability advocate?  I have started to take steps, very small steps, so keep tuned and I will try to post on what these are.

www.MIPandL.org - The Massachusetts Interfaith Power and Light offers a personal carbon calculator in the form of an Excel Spreadsheet.   It is focused on homeowners and households, requiring input on actual utility usage as a basis for calculating a typical household's carbon footprint.  In our case, it is 53,393 CO2 lbs/year (54,600 is  typical for US household).  Obviously we have a long way to go. 

www.empowermentinstitute.net - This is a terrific organization which I believe provided the basis for the MIPandL calculator.  Its Low Carbon Diet program is based on sound social marketing principles and I believe Amherst and Northampton will make steps this fall to organize home owners in a community effort to support each other in reducing emissions.

Here are some more links that you might find useful.  I particularly enjoyed following the Slate and Treehugger challenge:

The EPA Personal emissions calculator:  www.epa.gov/climatechange/emissions/ind_calculator.html

Conservation International: ecofootprint  (my last score was 76) www.conservation.org/act/live_green/Pages/ecofootprint.aspx

Slate Green Challenge:  www.slate.com/id/216414/

Be Green: www.begreennow.com/calculator (gives the option to save your calculations)

Why calculate your footprint?  Because you cannot understand what you cannot measure on your own terms.   Because learning is the basis for effectiveness and we all need to continuously learn in order to become better connected to our planet as well as to ourselves.  We need to apply our will and the precious moments of consciousness we have each day to the task of understanding our own role in Earth's ecological cycle.

2 comments:

Cat C-B (and/or Peter B) said...

Very nice roundup of resources! I've gone ahead and posted this article to Metapagan, so hopefully, others will take a look, too.

Melusina said...

Thank you, Cat! I am still trying to learn the technology - I hope this materializes as a response to your comment. And thanks for being such a patient teacher.