Category Archives: electronics

Rechargeable Batteries: Use, add more juice, use again, and again, and again

Enviro Girl has long recycled her family’s worn-out batteries.  She keeps an empty yogurt container in the cupboard next to screwdrivers and packages of AA and 9 volt and AAA batteries.  When her children were younger, it seemed she was always prying open the back of a toy and replacing spent batteries.  The hardware store in town collects used batteries for recycling, so Enviro Girl didn’t feel too terrible about the amount of batteries her family used and she felt virtuous keeping the heavy metals and chemicals out of the local landfill.

Until she realized she was buying AA batteries almost every month and recycling a tub full of batteries four times a year.  Her digital camera was a particular battery pig.  Something had to change.

Enviro Girl had seen rechargeable batteries—initially they were expensive and hard to find, but now even Energizer makes their own brand of rechargeable batteries and sells chargers that plug into regular wall outlets.  Enviro Girl asked around, read some consumer reviews, and when she did the math it made sense to invest in her own.

She bought an Energizer recharge battery charger that works for AA and AAA batteries.  When the batteries die, the charger plugs into a wall outlet and brings the batteries back to life again and again.  Instead of installing 2 new AA batteries every 4 weeks (costing $26.00 a year), Enviro Girl purchased 2 new AA rechargeable batteries, 2 AAA batteries and a charger for  $42.00.  As she adds to her household’s inventory of rechargeable batteries, the savings will continue to add up.  She figures if she gets even half of the “hundreds of uses” out of these new batteries, she’ll come out way ahead financially.  She chose the Energizer brand because it’s sold at most retailers, including her favorite local hardware store, so it’ll be easy to buy more AA and AAA batteries as they’re needed.

When the rechargeable batteries die, she can still recycle them, but by buying fewer batteries, Enviro Girl uses less packaging waste and spends less money.

Solar or crank-powered flashlights, phones and cameras are still the ideal, and Enviro Girl always buys the renewable option when she can.  She owns hand-powered flashlights and a solar-powered radio and calculator.  But for battery-operated toys and appliances, Enviro Girl looks forward to a smaller ecological footprint through using her Energizer recharge batteries.

For more information on rechargeable batteries, head over to Green Batteries, a web site that gives price and product information on a range of rechargeable batteries and accessories for all kinds of uses–including laptops, solar ovens and converters.

Tell the Eco Women:  are you using rechargeable batteries?  What type?  Are you satisfied with them?

5 Cheap & Easy Ways Make Your Summer Greener

Make this summer the most environmentally responsible yet–and save money in the bargain!

1.  Buy a water bottle and fill it from your tap.  A stainless steel Kleen Kanteen water bottle starts at $15.00–the same price as 15 units of bottled water you might buy at the ball diamond or gas station, golf course or county fair.  We have the right and the obligation to drink tap water because it’s healthier and less expensive than water for sale in petroleum-based packaging.  Bring Your Own Bottle of water and do right by the planet!

2.  Install a clothesline.  For less than $10 you can buy a clothesline and pins and hang your laundry for free every load.  Clothes dryers are among the least energy-efficient appliances and line drying is a great way to go green.  Learn more here.   Bonus:  you’ll save on your electric bill and on fabric softeners and dryer sheets!

3.  Invest in a solar battery charger.  In the summer whether you’re camping or listening to your radio, you can power up your flashlights or ballgame without feeling guilty about using batteries.  Solar powered electronics have really come down in price and a 4-battery charger for D/C/AA/AAA batteries costs as little as $30.

4.  Skip the lawn chemicals.  Use full-strength white vinegar to kill weeds (.70 a liter vs. $10.00 a liter of Round-Up) and let your lawn grow a little higher to keep the weeds at bay.  Enrich your soil with worm castings or compost instead of poisonous blue granules.  Your pets, soil’s helpful microorganisms, water quality and wallet will all thank you.

5.  Leave your car parked and walk or bike your way around.  Enviro Girl lives in the country, but even she can adhere to this rule.  When she drives to town, she parks in a central location and walks from place to place instead of driving between errands.  It’s good exercise and better on the environment.

Fast Fact: Turn it down

Turn down your water heater thermostat — 120 degrees Fahrenheit is usually sufficient and will use much less energy than hotter temperatures.

Fast Fact: Switch over

RecyclaSwitch to compact fluorescent from regular incandescent bulbs and use 60%  less energy per bulb and save 300 pounds of C02 a year.

Fast Fact courtesy of the Global Footprint Network.

Fast Fact: Go online

RecyclaPay your bills online! For every 38,000 bills paid online 5,058 pounds of greenhouse gasses are avoided and two tons of trees are preserved!

Fast Fact courtesy of the Global Footprint Network.

Fast Fact: The most eco computer

RecyclaIf you’re on the market for new computer, get a laptop because they use less energy than desktops.  For more information, click here.

Quick link: Eco computer use

RecyclaOne way you can save both money and energy is to shut your computer off when not in use.  At a minimum, turn it off at night before you go to bed.  For more information, click the link above.,

You Don’t Have to Be Sick Or Crazy to Go Green

GQ
Mom raised nine kids when her budget could only afford two.

How’d she do it?

She was an original super-sustainer.

I just wish back then I would have seen
she wasn’t cheap or even mean –
she was progressive and being GREEN.

green queen sickToday, we don’t have to be sick or Crazy to Go Green.

All it takes is a little thought to save money and we can help protect the planet at the same time.

Here are a few tips to help you go green:

1) Buy green furniture – and if it’s too expensive in your area – look on Craigslist.com

2) According to the EPA, nearly 2 million tons of used electronics end up in our landfills every year. Here’s one idea that shows a fun way to recycle computer componentsKeyboard Bag. Take a minute to think of other uses.

3) When towels start to fray, trim off the threads, and either sew the edges or buy a little iron-on (underwonder or double-sided adhesive) material to attach new ribbon or ric-rac on the edges. This will extend the life of worn out linens.

4) When sheets wear out, cut them down and sew the edges to use them as out-door tablecloths for summer and fall dinners.

5) When you’re scrambling eggs, add a little water and use a wire to whisk them up (it doesn’t have to be milk – trust me). It will fluff up your eggs, stretch the meal to feed many more mouths and save you a little green in your wallet.

If you can think of a few money-saving tips, add them to the “comments” section to help your cyber buddies live green.

Batteries not included

batteriesBy Recycla

Whether we like it or not, we all use technology in some form, which means that we have to deal with batteries on occasion.  No one can escape this — whether it’s batteries in your smoke detector, in your son’s remote control car, or your TV remote — virtually everyone has at least one or two battery-operated devices in their lives.

In fact, Americans buy 3 billion batteries every year.

The best batteries to use are rechargeable ones.  You use them until they’re drained and then recharge them to full power.  There’s no waste!

However, rechargeable batteries don’t work with everything.  For example, Recycla’s daughters use battery-powered toothbrushes and rechargeables simply don’t work at all.

So, if you do use regular batteries, that means that at some point you’re going to have to dispose of them when the juice is gone.  DON’T THROW THEM AWAY!  Batteries leach toxins into the soil, waterways, and the air.  Keep the nasty stuff away from Planet Earth; we’ll all benefit.

Luckily, batteries can be recycled and it’s getting easier all the time.  From lithium to lead, battery producers can recover the chemicals and reuse  them  — 60% of the world’s lead supply comes from recycled car batteries alone.

So where can you recycle your old batteries?  It depends on where you live.   Recycla’s community recycling center has a bin just for batteries!  Some Walgreens and Radio Shack stores accept them too.

To find out where you can recycle batteries in your community, go to Earth911 and type in your location.

Photo from JohnSeb‘s Flicker photostream.

Get Green by Going Green

If Recycla doesn’t get some money back after reading this post and clicking on these links, I’m going to sponsor her next shopping expedition to IKEA.  Seriously.

You can get money back by being green.  A laundry list of state and federal programs have money to give you for using renewable energy and for using less energy.  Actual cash or tax incentives to make our citizens buy Energy Star rated appliances, install wind turbines, or perform energy audits on their homes and businesses.  Check them out:

DSIRE–Database of State Incentives for Renewables & Efficiency.  This site breaks down your incentives by state, then by a myriad of other categories–including homeowner incentives for renewables and efficiency.

Energy Star includes tax credits for home improvements like new windows, doors and roofs AND it includes inofrmation about how to purchase efficient appliances.  Years ago when Enviro-Girl moved into her new house, she mailed in a cash rebate for buying Energy Star rated appliances.   Check out the cool KIDS page–it’s one of the best child resources I’ve ever seen.

The US Department of Energy offers tax breaks for buying hybrid vehicles and installing renewable energy.  Caution: t’s not the most user-friendly site.

Energy Tax incentives for cars, homes and businesses can be found at the Tax Incentives Assistance Project.

Cash-back and other financial incentives for renewable energy in homes or businesses can be found at Focus On Energy.

Now go!  Click!  Get green!