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One Million Trees

August 23rd, 2010 by Alison Wheatley in General

Earth Day Network recently announced it had found partners in 15 countries who together will plan one million trees in 2010 as part of the Avatar Home Tree Initiative.  The Initiative is a partnership program between Earth Day Network and Twentieth Century Fox Home Entertainment, with the purpose of reducing greenhouse gas emissions and supporting sustainable development and reforestation around our world.

tree in handEach of the one million trees to be planted will be added to Earth Day Network’s Billion Acts of Green program as well as pledged towards the UN Environmental Program Billion Tree Campaign, a worldwide tree planting initiative by the UN Environment Programme.  Twentieth Century Fox Home Entertainment will insert a unique code inside the Avatar Blu-ray/DVD which lets fans adopt one of the one million trees being planted.

Tree Canada will work to reforest almost 2,000 acres of pine forest in southeastern Manitoba that were destroyed by hurricane force winds in 2005.

tree planting 2In the UK, The Woodland Trust will provide free tree packs and online support to communities as part of their More Trees, More Good campaign.  The UK has only 4% native woodland cover, but the Woodland Trust suggests that at least twice as many native trees and woods are needed to maintain healthy populations of wildlife and people, and to combat climate change and improve the environment.  Clive Anderson, Sean Bean, and Barry Davison are among the British celebrities who are supporting this program.

tree plantingIn the United States, the tree planting will be sponsored by three organizations.  MillionTreesNYC in New York focuses on increasing green spaces and the urban health environment for low to middle income neighborhoods.  In San Franciso, Friends of the Urban Forest help citizens plant and care for street trees and sidewalk gardens, particularly in low income areas.  And in Los Angeles, TreePeople improves city life by planting trees, including fruit trees which will provide a free source of fruit to help low-income citizens eat healthier.

For information about the other 12 countries involved in the Avatar Home Tree Initiative, see Earth Day Network’s press release.


Our Days After Earth Day 2010

April 23rd, 2010 by Alison Wheatley in Climate Change

The 40th annual Earth Day was a success, with an estimated one billion people in 190 countries participating in some way, according to Earth Day’s website.  Many people are forming green teams, dedicated to finding cost-effective ways to promote sustainability. Doing simple things such as printing on two sides of paper, and using a reusable water bottle rather than buying a new container each time you drink coffee or water.  A stainless steel travel mug is the best option for this, so you can avoid the toxic effects that plastic water bottles have been found to give.

environmental conservationMeanwhile, the three day World People’s Conference on Climate Change and the Rights of the Mother Earth wrapped up in Cochabamba Bolivia.  This conference largely grew out of how so many NGO’s were barred from any official dialogue at Copenhagen.  Over 30,000 people participated in Bolivia and the conference resulted in a wide recognition that a world referendum is needed on climate change, a climate justice tribunal, and the protection of the rights of Mother Earth.  Several people blogged about the conference.   Hopefully they will accomplish an agreement at the summit planned to be held in Mexico later this year.  Their bottom line is that they want to establish a legal framework for protecting our increasingly threatened natural environment and raising the global consciousness about Mother Earth, on which we all depend for life.

Now that so many people are on board, what are some of the things we can do going forward?  This being the Friday File, what’s fun?

holding treeSustainability can be fun if we take the right attitude to it.  My current stainless steel travel mug is decorated with zebra stripes with a pink border, and I love using it.  Look at lists of things we can do, such as on Earth Day’s website, and make a fun version of it.

If you’d like some inspiration, check out National Geographic’s website that shows some fun ways that Earth Day has been celebrated over the years.

And sometimes activities can be fun just because we’re helping our home planet and making a difference.


Happy Earth Day

April 22nd, 2010 by Alison Wheatley in Greetings

Happy Earth Day, 2010, Everyone!

EarthLet’s celebrate our fabulous home planet today, as well as pledge that we will help make a positive difference in the next year.  Read the last paragraph in my blog entry below (”Earth Days”) if you want some inspiration!

If you’d like to send your friends an Earth Day e-card, check out World Wildlife Fund US which has a small but nice selection on their website

It is rather poignant to celebrate our planet on the same day as reading Newsweek’s 100 Places to Remember Before They Disappear.   It’s an inventory of some of our world’s most beautiful places and a reminder that if we let climate change continue we will lose these places.

As Stewart Brand says in Earth Days, we all have a unique opportunity to make a contribution that will last for eons after we’ve passed on.   And if we all do something, then we will be able to save the 5,966 endangered species, feed the one billion people who are hungry, and stop storms and weather problems from destroying lives and areas on our planet.

What are you going to do for the Earth this year?