Category Archives: Environmental politics

Environmental politics Miscellaneous

The changing price of skim milk

Having recently had a rare attack of earth-motherishness (not something that happens very often), I’ve started making my own yoghurt. It doesn’t really save very much money, but it does save lots of packaging, and is oddly satisfying. And the packaging saving has to outweigh the tiny bit of electricity used by the machine.

The recipe I’m using calls for the addition of skim milk, and I’ve been astonished to find that this is now – through rarity value it seems – almost a luxury item. A tiny 100g packet costs £1.29 in all of the local convenience stores.

This seems astonishing because when I was a kid skim milk was extremely cheap stuff. I remember it well, because when Mum was having a particular economising drive that’s what we’d have instead of real milk. And although they _claimed_ it dissolved like magic, it never seemed to in practice… a lump of milk-powder in the morning coffee really didn’t make it taste any better.

I’ve looked around and have now at least found a source of a larger packet (Planet Organic in Bloomsbury) – but it is organic, so cost about the same gram for gram – £3-ish for 300g. Still at least it is organic. (Although French – so you have to factor in transport costs…)

So now of course we’re all buying Tetra-packs with all of the water still in – and then discarding those same Tetra-packs into landfill. Progress?

Environmental politics

Seen in France … an “organic” builder …

abiobuilder

And I saw in the area around Plouharnel several under-construction houses probably related to this sign – being built not as in most cases concrete block, but similar looking red-blocks which according to one sign I was reading is designed for energy efficiency.

Environmental politics Science

The last Neanderthal

Of course we’ve known for a long while that there must have been, somewhere in Europe, a human who died out, the last of their species, but now suddenly, with the discovery of Neanderthal materials that may date as late as 24,000 years ago (and certainly 28,000) in Gibraltar, the image of that “last of their kind” gets a lot clearer.

The last Neanderthal quite possibly was not the victim of our own rampant human species, but of climate change …

Food for thought there.

Blogging/IT Environmental politics

From each according to their ability, to each according to their needs…

Always thought that was the magic bit of Marx, and I’m increasingly seeing bits of the Net working on that basis.

I’ve recently joined Camden Freecycle and seen exchanges of bicycles, sofas, computers, and rather less obvious objects between those who had them and no longer wanted them, and those who need them (quite often charities) but can’t afford to, or don’t want to, buy them new.

Such a brilliant, simple idea – sure a lot of this stuff could be sold on eBay, but a lot of people can’t be bothered with the hassle of that – dealing with couriers, post offices etc – and here if you’ve got something you want to get rid of, someone who needs it will come and get it from you.

I’m hoping to give my old computer to an environmental charity, if it meets their needs.

And environmentally, perfection…

There’s also apparently a London-wide list, but given the thousands of emails I get in a week, I can’t quite face that one.

Environmental politics Media

Definitely unsustainable (on several counts)

The weekend’s Guardian reports that “English newspapers gave away 54m DVDs in the first quarter of this year, roughly as many as were bought in the shops”. The best estimate I’ve seen is that each new reader so attracted (often for that one week only) costs the papers several pounds. And of course most of those DVDs will sooner or later – and probably sooner, end up clogging the nation’s landfills. How long before a DVD rots back into the earth? I dread to think.

Cycling Environmental politics

Bicycle heaven

Thinking about a week in France – probably a week wandering around Brittany, centred on Carnac, so poking around the SCNF website. How refreshing it is that every train on which cycles can be taken has a little logo beside it. I haven’t explored further to see about bookings and things, but surely this is a sign of serious attempts to make combining train and cycle journeys possible and even pleasant – so unlike the attitude of British train companies.