When Going Green, Every Action Counts!
18 November 2009Today I picked a favourite out of my RSS feed of various blogs that I have started to follow. The title ‘How Green is your Office? Eco-Friendly Hosting’ by Family Friendly Working / Antonia Chitty (which I really recommend
to all you Mumpreneurs out there to check out, lots of good posts and useful advice) caught my eye. Antonia gives some good tips on how she has built up a good ‘green policy’ : using fair trade tea and coffee, not print if it can be avoided it, get the kids to draw on the back of paper that is only printed on one side, re-use packaging and and use eco-friendly office supplies (which apparently are promoted in the UK — well done! Are they planning to open a Dutch branch as well??).
A new idea that she promotes via her blog is eco-friendly hosting for your website — now, that seems to be an easy way to save energy without compromising quality or even feeling any ‘sacrifice’.
The post inspired me to add a few tips myself:
Check out a a Dutch invention called Ecofont. It’s a clever, ‘hollow’ font, where the letters are perforated by lots of small, almost invisible, empty circles. This means less ink, about 20%, is used when printing! It’s free, just download, install and start saving. Smart thinking, don’t you agree! The font is very clean and neat, so should not bother anyone. Because let’s be honest: the entirely paperless office is still a bit of an utopia, in any case to me. Especially since my email (private) host crashed about a year ago, deleting all email correspondence from the about 18 months of my startup time for my business in the process. Now… I use Gmail.… and.… I am glad I have stuck to the habit of printing out the most important emails for possible future reference. You never know when you will need them, because you never know in business when someone you think you could perfectly trust shows another face.
My second tip is to check out a cool new Swedish company called Creatables. They develop smart products from industrial surplus materials and waste — and make great toys from it; not to mention magazine holders and noteboards from used tennis courts (!) and they have won a prize for a clever clotes-pin. And watch out, these guys are going global!
Finding Antonia’s blogpost also inspired me to think about the green policy of MummyMug as such. Of MummyMug as a company, as a product. After all, we are going to sell a plastic product, albeit one made out of an advanced material that more feels like ceramics than plastic. But I can understand if it might not appear as the biggest contribution to humanity to put one more plastic thingamy in the market.
Well — we do care! And we do have a plan. Let me explain:
* We will make the best possible, conscious choice of materials that are as climate-friendly as possible. The material we plan to use for manufacturing of the MummyMug has been chosen for its sturdiness, so the mug does not shatter if it falls. That is of course essential for safety. It has also been chosen for its ceramic look-and-feel: it is about as heavy as ceramics and feels ceramic to the touch, as I really believe that you as a user would prefer something that is as close as one can get to your regular, hug-me ceramic mug. Of course we had to reckon with the resistance to high temperatures (at least 100 degrees) and of course the user has to be able to clean it with regular detergents — noone wants a teamug with brown permanent stains, right? Last but not least, we obviously had to work within the short-list of food approved materials, by all applicable standards. Thus we ended up with something quite sturdy. It made it impossible to go for a bamboo-plastic or something similar. Nevertheless, the material is still recyclable, that I do want to point out. And the real good news are: the manufacturer of that material is in the process of making what they call an IQ-version, which has only a 25% carbon footprint compared to the current version! As soon as this material is ready for commercial release, we will switch to it to make sure the MummyMug is as little of a strain as possible on our planet.
* We will consider selling ‘spare parts’. The lid of the MummyMug contains a kind of vent. After prolonged and intensive use, the performance of this vent will eventually diminish, and should at some point be replaced to make sure safety is not compromised. That is after all what the MummyMug is there for. But to buy a whole new cup and a lid would of course be a waste — as the cup will still be in perfect order. Instead, we are considering selling replacement lids, so that the life-time of the mug becomes… basically endless. And hey, then you can even pimp your mug in the future, by choosing a lid with a different colour ;-)
* We will consider a programme for returning used mugs for re-use in production. Now, imagine the situation that your kids have gotten older, and you feel you can safely start using open cups again. We’re still working on the logistics, but the aim is to provide ou could then choose to recycle the MummyMug in the regular recycling for plastics — or send it back to us, so we can grind it and simply.… make new MummyMugs to make other mothers happy. Trust me, this will not save us that much money, I realise that, but I feel would be a great way to feed back into the loop what belongs in the loop.
* The MummyMug will lower the need for expensive health care. You hopefully know by now that the MummyMug is about safety: it is about preventing that yet another kid ends up spending two weeks in hospital and gets enormously expensive, not to mention painful, treatment and skin grafts there, because of a scald from hot beverages. I believe that keeping that kid, happy, safe and at home instead of locked up in a process of enormously expensive, whater-it-takes kind of treatment and validation, is surely going to make a contribution to a more sustainable society. And — a happier one! ;-)
* Last but not least: we will certainly make every ‘green’ choice we can in the office. Inspired by Antonia, I here and now vow to hunt down green office supplies in the Netherlands, to choose a hybrid car whenever there would be enough revenue to get a lease car for this business, to keep on biking as often as that is feasible, to keep on printing with Ecofont and use double-sided printing. We already have a very flexible organisation, which means we do not keep an expensive large, energy consuming office, nor do we engage in extensive travelling, but for example arrange a lot of the work via Skype. And I do believe one of the the green contributions we can achieve by building a networked society.
In other words, we will do all these little things, and strive for achieving the big things and contributions,
to make our contribution to our joint effort to create a better climate. I think being very conscious is the best start, and that I believe I am
- hey, who arent’ these days?!?! Which leads me to the last, logical question: what are your best tips? Looking forward to listen and learn!
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