Wednesday, December 22, 2010

Create a policy purchase environmentally


These days, buying green products does not mean sacrificing the quality of your life or needing to become hippies. There are many high quality environmental products that are better for the environment and human health.

Today you have a lot more options when it comes to buying products that do not harm the environment. Products that once were found in health food store now appears on the shelves of supermarkets.However, more companies are jumping on the Green bandwagon is getting harder to find truly eco-friendly and what not. This article is staring point for you to put together a shopping policy that works for you, your family, your budget and the environment.

To be totally green procurement policies need to look at the cradle of serious analysis of each product, this means looking at:

-where he comes from,

-What kind of contamination occurred in production

-any possible toxic by-products

-inheritance from non-renewable resources

-energy may be delivered to your home

-was it locally or across the world

-What happens when you no longer use it

-possibility of reuse or recycled

-creates the final disposal

This is a huge challenge, not one that can be easily implemented by individuals but make some noise, some pressure on your local political representatives and let them know that you want a new way to let them know that you want to know the direct and indirect effects of products you buy.

Every time you make a purchase that you purchase and the message that it sends to the producers. buy products that are good for you and the environment to develop procurement policies that makes waste minimization of priority.

Before buying anything considered

-This product may be made from recycled materials?

-It can be reused or recycled after use?

-Do you really need to buy it at all?

-Could you reuse something else?

-Could you find a second hand product?

Is a product from a relatively natural source or chemically manufactured with possible toxic by-products?

-What kind of processing involved in their products?

To make shopping more environmentally when given the choice of:

-avoid disposable products

-buy organic and natural products,

-buy in bulk to reduce packaging

-buy products that are recycled and/or recyclable

-do not buy products that have been tested on animals

-buy quality products that will last

-do not buy products that adversely affect or made of disappearing species.

-do not buy products that affect your health

-do not buy products which cause significant harm to the environment during manufacture or disposal

-do not buy over packaged products

-buy goods with packaging that can be reused, recycled or which is biodegradable.

-buy organic fruits, vegetables and meat, whenever possible, common agricultural practices can be very polluting. Run off and leaching of pesticides, fertilizers, fungicides pollutes our groundwater and rivers, killing off aquatic wildlife and to make it unfit for human consumption.

-hold cleaners as naturally as possible. detergents, shampoos, liquid for washing, oven cleaners, etc. containing chemicals are very difficult to treat our sewers result is many heavy metals and toxic chemicals in our streams and oceans because treatment cannot delete them all. soil and rocks are fine filters to natural biological materials but cannot cope with chemical cocktails, they are today.

-When buying new appliances, buy the most energy efficient, you can it may cost a little more initially, but it will pay off yourself by lowering your energy bills.

-do not buy instruments that are more powerful than necessary or more

-What are the requirements for the product








Kerry-Ann Cox is an author and environmental scientists find out where to shop online for organic and natural products with free manual shops to get your copy at [http://www.wildlife-wilderness.com]


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