02 Nov

In his new book, Greening Your Business: The Hands-on Guide to Creating a Successful and Sustainable Business, author Daniel Sitarz outlines the ‘21 Best Green Business Tips’ every business should consider adopting.  The new book, a 2008 National Best Book Award recipient, has been met with rave reviews by industry professionals and Green businesses alike.

Of course, all of the recommendations listed below can be integrated into your business according to its own unique needs and culture. YGR recommends incorporating as many Green business practices possible, either on your own or with the assistance of a Green Business consultant.   The following is the list of 21 Best Green Tips excerpted from Sitarz’s acclaimed guide to Greening Your Business:

1. Set a company policy to shut off all lights, machinery, and equipment when not in use, particularly on nights and weekends. Much equipment is idle and unused for up to 90 percent of its life. Simple inexpensive timer devices can be used to accomplish this task easily.

2. Install low-cost energy monitors that can provide an accurate display of the cost and energy use of individual equipment. Research shows that this step alone can lead to energy savings of up to 40 percent. See, for example, www.powermeterstore.com.

3. Consider using energy-efficient power strips or surge protectors. The latest versions can be found with remote control shut-offs, main shut-offs that can power down peripheral equipment, and motion-detecting shut-offs.

4. Lighting can often account for up to 40 percent of energy costs for many businesses. Install motion-sensor and/or automatic dimming switches for all lighting to be certain that you are not inefficiently lighting areas when no one is present.

5. A very cost-effective upgrade is to replace all of your incandescent lighting with new compact fluorescent bulbs. Your older 1.5″ diameter fluorescent tube lighting should also be replaced with newer 1″ tubes and solid-state electronic ballasts.

6. Install programmable thermostats to automate your HVAC system and to significantly scale back your heating and cooling when your business is not in operation. About 6 months of energy savings generally pay the installation and cost of these units, an excellent return on your investment.

7. Use fans in your business. Comfort is a function of temperature, humidity, and air movement. Thermostat settings of 3 to 5 degrees higher can feel as comfortable with fans.

8. Upgrade the energy efficiency of your older equipment. Modern equipment is much more energy efficient, often with less than half the energy use of older equipment. High-efficiency upgrades for motors and drives for equipment, air compressors, lighting, and other energy-consuming equipment generally have rapid payback periods, often less than one year.

9. Always buy Energy Star qualified products for your business. The Energy Star label indicates the most efficient light bulbs, computers, printers, copiers, refrigerators, televisions, windows, thermostats, ceiling fans, and other appliances and equipment.

10. Travel and transportation costs have been rising rapidly as fuel costs increase. Efficiency in transportation is often an effective way to lower your energy costs. If your business has company-owned cars or a fleet of vehicles, consider purchasing vehicles that are hybrid whenever possible. Check www.hybridcenter.org for the latest information on hybrid vehicles.

11. If your company ships products or is a truck or rail company that delivers these products, look into the EPA SmartWay Transport Partnership. This is an innovative collaboration between EPA and the freight industry to increase energy efficiency while significantly reducing greenhouse gases and air pollution. Hundreds of businesses are benefitting from this partnership. See www.epa.gov/smartway.

12. Develop a company-wide policy to eliminate unnecessary idling of truck engines. One way is by installing auxiliary power units that will heat or cool the truck when stopped, allowing the main engine to be shut down. Wal-Mart installed auxiliary power units on its 6,845 semi tractors and saved $22 million in 16 months.

13. Many areas in the U.S. are facing rising water and sewer costs. Better water efficiency can be attained with relatively simple and low-cost steps. For example, check your facility carefully for any water leaks. If feasible, shut off all water-using outlets and monitor your water meter. If meter is showing water input, you have leaks in your system. Locate and repair any such leaks.

14. Eliminate unnecessary wash-downs or cleaning. Install pressure reducing valves if necessary to reduce high water pressure. This can reduce water use when high-pressure water is unnecessary for a particular use.

15. Install low-flow showers, faucets, toilets, urinals, hose valves, etc. (Zero-water urinals, 1 gpf toilets, and .5 gmp faucets are all readily available. See, for example: www.zeroflush.com). Use Energy Star certified equipment whenever possible to insure the highest efficiency.

16. Computers and their peripherals consume a surprising amount of power. Consider using laptops as desktop computers. Laptops are far more energy efficient and can consume up to 80 percent less energy than equivalent desktops. Inkjet printers use 75 percent to 90 percent less energy than laser printers.

17. Turn your computers off when they are not needed. It does not harm modern computers to be turned on and off repeatedly. Enable power management modes on your computer. These features allow computers to go into lower-energy modes after a certain amount of time. Sleep modes can save up to 90 percent of the energy consumed.

18. Any waste that your company generates is an unnecessary cost. Waste is simply inefficient. Examine all waste generated by your business and look for ways any current waste products can be reused on-site or by other businesses,eliminated or radically reduced. Brainstorm with the employees who are involved in the generation of the waste for fresh ideas. Look for ways to alter your waste generation so that the waste produced can be reused.

19. You can incorporate green business practices into your supply chain by incorporating green specifications into bid or quote requirements where appropriate. For example, you can specify that products contain no hazardous chemicals, that they do contain post-consumer recycled content, or that all plastic components are not painted or varnished, or that all electronics equipment be Energy Star certified.

20. Your business facility itself can be a source of excellent energy savings. Plug all leaks in your building’s outer shell with weather stripping or caulking. Use expandable foam to fill any gaps. If you will be remodeling or building a new facility, check the LEED standards for the latest efficiency techniques. See the U.S. Green Building Council website, www.usgbc.org, for more information.

21.) Consider developing a comprehensive Green business plan for your business that encompasses energy and water efficiency, waste reduction, transportation, computing and equipment efficiency, building design, and the design and actual operation of your business.  Energy savings of 30 percent are easy and cost-effective to achieve and can reach up to 75 percent with a dilgent effort.

Greening Your Business: The Hands-on Guide to Creating a Successful and Sustainable Business can be found and purchased here

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2 Responses to “21 Best Green Business Tips”

  1. 1
    Derek Says:

    Many of the tips evolve from things we can do in our personal lives. It’s painful to watch a business, which could be your employer, be so unfriendly to the earth. You take the steps at home and have to watch waste at work. Being green should become a way of life for all.

  2. 2
    GreenGrrl Says:

    EPEAT – Electronic Product Environmental Assessment Tool – EPEAT (www.epeat.net) – enables purchasers looking for greener IT products to address dozens of environmental performance attributes in a meaningful way.

    EPEAT (www.epeat.net) is a consensus-based environmental performance rating system that was developed in a stakeholder process supported by US EPA. The standard criteria and functioning are formalized in IEEE Standard 1680 for the Environmental Assessment of Personal Computer Products, and the system is managed by the nonprofit Green Electronics Council. EPEAT currently covers desktops, laptops and monitors and is expanding to address printers, TVs, servers and mobile devices (cell phones, PDAs) over the next year or two. The original IT standard will also ratchet upward on a regular basis to continue to push design in the direction of more sustainable materials, processes and devices.

    EPEAT currently addresses 23 mandatory and 28 optional environmental performance criteria covering energy efficiency (Energy Star compliance mandatory), toxics reduction (RoHS mandatory), provision of takeback and recycling service (mandatory), greener materials choices (recycled, biobased) , ease of disassembly and recycling, life cycle extension, packaging, and company performance. Products register at Bronze, Silver, and Gold levels in EPEAT, depending on how many of the optional criteria they meet. (Criteria overview at http://www.epeat.net/Criteria.aspx ) And an Environmental Benefits Calculator allows purchasers to estimate the benefits of their purchase of EPEAT-registered products by product type and ratings tier.

    Dozens of manufacturers participate in EPEAT, with 900+ base-model products registered (the equivalent of ~ 25,000 configured models). Nearly all global manufacturers and numerous local or regional manufacturing companies are registering products that conform with the EPEAT criteria (Participating manufacturers list at http://www.epeat.net/Companies.aspx ) Already nearly $60 billion in contracts – US and Canadian national government, state, local, enterprise, higher education – contain EPEAT requirements, creating a huge incentive for manufacturers to provide a steady stream of registered products.

    Choosing the highest EPEAT-rated product appropriate for their needs allows purchasers to immediately and significantly reduce the environmental impact of their computing. Search the product database, see participating manufacturers, examine product rating criteria, see environmental benefits estimates, review verification procedures, and read media coverage at http://www.epeat.net

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