http://cotap.org/reduce-carbon-footprint/
25 việc bạn nên làm để giảm lượng carbon phát thải.
Hầu hết tip về di chuyển: ô tô, máy bay ... Ở VN có lẽ nên thay = ko nên mua ô tô ?
VN nghèo, di chuyển toàn xe gắn máy nên phát thải ít hơn. Tuy nhiên mn vấn cần làm tốt hơn.
Eat locally-produced and organic food. It has been estimated that 13% of U.S. greenhouse gas emissions result from the production and transport of food.
Cái này ở quê thì tươi. Với thực phẩm từ xa như hải sản, lâm thổ sản thì sao ?
Ở TP lớn thực phẩm như shit. Chuyên chở cũng = xe máy nhiều.
Cut the beef and dairy. It takes a lot of resources to raise cows, and it’s especially bad if you buy beef from somewhere like Brazil, where it was grazed on land that used to be tropical forest but was cleared for agricultural use. Deforestation is a top contributor to carbon emissions and thus climate change.
Avoid Robert Mugabe’s Birthday Party. This year attendees will be feasting on two elephants, two buffalo, two sables, five impalas and a lion. What a sad day in Zimbabwe for both food sustainability and economic inequality.
M ngại đi nhậu vì đồ ăn thường dở và đắt. Ở quê thì tươi hơn. Nhậu xong thường đi hát. Mình cũng ít khi đi hát vì ngại và ít hát tiếng Việt.
Water usage. Lower the amount of energy used to pump, treat, and heat water by washing your car less often, using climate-appropriate plants in your garden, installing drip irrigation so that plants receive only what they need, and making water-efficient choices when purchasing shower heads, faucet heads, toilets, dishwashers and washing machines.
Reuse and recycle. It has been estimated that 29% of U.S. greenhouse gas emissions result from the “provision of goods,” which means the extraction of resources, manufacturing, transport, and final disposal of “goods” which include consumer products and packaging, building components, and passenger vehicles, but excluding food. By buying used products and reselling or recyling items you no longer use, you dramatically reduce your carbon footprint from the “provision of goods.”
25 việc bạn nên làm để giảm lượng carbon phát thải.
Hầu hết tip về di chuyển: ô tô, máy bay ... Ở VN có lẽ nên thay = ko nên mua ô tô ?
VN nghèo, di chuyển toàn xe gắn máy nên phát thải ít hơn. Tuy nhiên mn vấn cần làm tốt hơn.
Eat locally-produced and organic food. It has been estimated that 13% of U.S. greenhouse gas emissions result from the production and transport of food.
Cái này ở quê thì tươi. Với thực phẩm từ xa như hải sản, lâm thổ sản thì sao ?
Ở TP lớn thực phẩm như shit. Chuyên chở cũng = xe máy nhiều.
Cut the beef and dairy. It takes a lot of resources to raise cows, and it’s especially bad if you buy beef from somewhere like Brazil, where it was grazed on land that used to be tropical forest but was cleared for agricultural use. Deforestation is a top contributor to carbon emissions and thus climate change.
Avoid Robert Mugabe’s Birthday Party. This year attendees will be feasting on two elephants, two buffalo, two sables, five impalas and a lion. What a sad day in Zimbabwe for both food sustainability and economic inequality.
M ngại đi nhậu vì đồ ăn thường dở và đắt. Ở quê thì tươi hơn. Nhậu xong thường đi hát. Mình cũng ít khi đi hát vì ngại và ít hát tiếng Việt.
Water usage. Lower the amount of energy used to pump, treat, and heat water by washing your car less often, using climate-appropriate plants in your garden, installing drip irrigation so that plants receive only what they need, and making water-efficient choices when purchasing shower heads, faucet heads, toilets, dishwashers and washing machines.
Reuse and recycle. It has been estimated that 29% of U.S. greenhouse gas emissions result from the “provision of goods,” which means the extraction of resources, manufacturing, transport, and final disposal of “goods” which include consumer products and packaging, building components, and passenger vehicles, but excluding food. By buying used products and reselling or recyling items you no longer use, you dramatically reduce your carbon footprint from the “provision of goods.”
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