Here is a list I have formed:
-Regulate Polluting Industries
-Switch to Esim
-Buy used
-Install geothermal heat pump systems
-Install smart thermostats
-Build more apartments
-Use shampoo/conditioner bars
-Put carbon labels on products
-Buy stuff at the local store
-Eat plant based
-Prioritize transit over cars
-Switch to Ecosia
-Recycle
-Give homemade gifts
-Compost
-Be organized
-Avoid synthetic cloths
-Switch to green burials
-Buy reputable carbon credits
-Mandate microfibre filters for washing machines
-Install Linux on new/old computers
-Switch to Electric car (second to public transit in funding)
-Shut down all oil operations
-Pickup litter
-Ride your bicycle instead of the car
-Adopt kids and companions instead
-Build more green spaces
-Convert animal agriculture land to wild lands
-Support repairability
-Ban private jets/yachts
-Start your own garden
-Use older cars for more than 12 years
-Keep phone for longer than 5.5 years (easy to do with fairphone,iphone, pixel, samsung or android phone with unlockable bootloader)
-Switch to renewable and nuclear techologies
-Halt all new road developments and just maintain them until transit is good enough
-Do everything to prevent and end wars
-Tax the rich and use the money for climate initiatives
-Ban all fossil fuel ads
-More widespread use of contactless payments
-Switch to bidets to save trees
-Switch to super slippery toilets to save water
-Mandate all stoves to be electric
-Build robust high sped rail network and ban flights under 4 hours.
-Require much longer warranties on consumer goods
-Require all software to become open source after the company stops developing the code
-Patents expire after 4 years
-Ban cryptominning
-Reduce concrete in constructions projects and opt for bamboo/wood construction
-Require all office work to be done from home for as much as possible
-Ban discrimination and promote affirmative action so that there isn’t lost potential or innovation from disadvantaged groups
-Improve insulation in older buildings
-Shop at refillable container stores
-Buy Fairphones as they’re the most repairable and have to 8-10 years of software support
-Buy Framework laptops as they’re user repairable upgrade-able
-Use reusable diapers for your infant/toddler
-Buy goods within your continent to avoid cargo ship bunker fuel
-Use refillable for everywhere you go
-Increase energy efficient standards with new houses with solar panels mandatory
-Increase grid interconnections
-Support political parties with green policies
-Boycott fossil fuel banks and switch to green credit unions
-Demand that your investment/retirement program switches to green projects
-Force companies to mine minerals from e-waste instead
-Give up half of the planet to nature
-Establish support networks for people who are using older gadgets/cars/clothing to encourage solutions to make goods last longer
-Create a program to recycle old clothing
-Switch to electronic documents
-Mandate higher build quality of manufactured goods
-Encourage the use of hatchbacks and sedans
-Ban oversized vehicles
-Require that water pipes have pressure management and active leak detection
-Implement waste-to-energy conversions for waste management systems (stopgap solution)
-Design cities as more walkable
-Track your government’s climate policy by visiting https://climateactiontracker.org/countries/
I will add more to list as more ideas are thought of.
It looked different from the formatting I did on my notes.
eSIM reduces plastic and shipping use.
Using older computers has to be weighed against the newly developed efficiencies in the latest cpus/gpus. Windows 11 is dropping computers that are like 4 years old. That is way too soon for perfectly good computers.
Synthetic cloths are used a lot currently so using microfibre filters is a stop gap measure until we have biodegradable cloths.
Any stats on the eSIM? Seems pretty irrelevant in the scheme of things, feels kinda close to greenwashing.
Here’s a source that provides numbers on that:
Since the commercial launch of SIM cards three decades ago, approximately 4.5 billion SIM cards are sold and shipped each year industry-wide, accounting for more than 560,000 tons of carbon dioxide and 18,000+ tons of plastic waste annually.
https://www.iot-now.com/2023/05/05/130286-kore-sim-card-initiative-cuts-plastic-use-and-carbon-emissions-in-shipments/
That’s a pretty stunning figure. Wonder how large a portion of that is private individuals vs. companies.
I changed my SIM for the first time in a decade earlier this year. Do people change SIMs more frequently than that?
18,000,000 kg / 7,000,000,000 = 0.0025 kg per person on earth. 2.5g per person. Its not a big number at all.
Granted, not everyone has a phone or sim, so the number may be 2-4x higher, but we are talking about such a tiny amount of waste that its a rounding error in the scheme of things.
See, to me, those numbers just dont seem that bad in the scheme of things, annual medical waste in Victoria, Australia, is 3x that (Vic is a state of 7-8M people, we are pretty small). I bet the single use plastic shopping bags tossed annually dwarfs this by many orders of magnitude.
https://www.health.vic.gov.au/planning-infrastructure/waste
Many phones dont support eSIM yet, so an individual switching means throwing away an otherwise fine phone, and that doesnt seem worth it to save on 1 credit card sized peice of plastic.
Using windows is also massively wasteful, it spends probably more than half of the processor usage on analytics and tracking stuff. Linux or other free kernels are much better in terms of power usage, on old and new hardware
I notice my resource usage dropped to half after switching.
The Linux kernel was supporting hardware that was 30 years old.