Monday, March 17, 2014

Trillium

I love to eat.  I especially love to eat grilled cheese, and I get them pretty regularly from Trillium, my favorite eatery on campus.


In fact, I have been getting them so often for the last two years that the chef recognizes me and makes my grilled cheese before I even ask ;)

But besides its delicious grilled cheeses, Trillium offers a wide arrange of recycling and composting options that make it a very green place on campus.  Additionally, most of the products it sells are packaged in recyclable containers rather than plastic, and all of the silverware and plates are algae-based and thus compostable.  



When a customer is finished eating, they bring their trash to a line of bins that say either "Landfill Waste," "Recycling," or "Composting" above them.  Each of these signs has pictures of items that can be purchased at Trillium above the appropriate disposal bin.

The concessions choice to use language like "landfill" instead of "trash" was a great decision on the part of the people who installed this disposal sorting arrangement.  Knowing that one's trash goes to a landfill helps instill a sense of responsibility on the part of the consumer.

"Materials trucked forty miles to a waste facility where they could remain for thousands of years."

So Trillium, along with being my favorite spot for lunch, is also great in that it supports local efforts to compost and recycle all that we can!



Tuesday, March 11, 2014

Plastic Water Bottles at Cornell

Plastic water bottles have been something I've hated for a loooong time, for a variety of reasons.


Plastic water bottles, for one, are senseless in the United States.  In the US, we have clean, highly monitored, and very safe drinking water throughout our country.  In fact, the EPA requires that tap water is tested multiple times a day, whereas bottled water, which is regulated by the FDA, only needs to be tested weekly.  And often times, the PET plastic bottles that water is packaged in, leech chemicals into the water, making it even less safe.

Furthermore, after packaging, plastic water bottles are distributed throughout the country, which requires the use of fossil fuels, thus adding to our issues with greenhouse emissions.  And then the majority of the time, they are purchased, consumed, and thrown away rather than recycled.  This cycle is an issue in and of itself for several reasons.

Cornell's annual consumption of bottled water causes nearly 150,000 kg of CO2 emissions.
From Cornell's Take Back The Tap club website

Plastic water bottles cost a lot of money. According to Ban The Bottle, "the recommended eight glasses of water a day, at U.S. tap rates, equals about $0.49 per year.  That same amount of bottled water is about $1,400."  So this means that people are paying literally thousands of dollars more for water that is less-regulated and contains more chemicals.

Then, after paying all that money for a little plastic bottle, people throw the bottles in the trash, rather than in the recycling.  And as Nature put it in an article about plastic debris, "As the plastic does not break down, the pollution will be with us for centuries to come."  Instead, these plastic bottles erode into tiny little particles that infiltrate the oceans and natural ecological systems.  Even when they are recycled, a lot of fossil fuels are used again in transportation and the actual process.  It is truly a lose-lose situation.

So what are we doing about this on our campus?

Ads like these by Take Back the Tap are all over campus to promote sustainability

Well, the club Take Back the Tap has pushed sustainable efforts over the past several years, and has made it so that each freshman student gets a sturdy, reusable, red stainless steel water bottle.  And, there are water-bottle refill stations throughout campus to encourage their use.  Additionally, Cornell offers access to safe tap water in all dining halls and in all buildings.

However, it's not all taken care of.  According to Take Back the Tap, "Cornell's annual consumption of bottled water causes nearly 150,000 kg of CO2 emissions - that's the equivalent of 355 barrels of oil!"  Slope Day is one of the big culprits, but it's not uncommon for me to see students walking around with plastic water bottles.  And hopefully soon students will realize why this is so bad.

If the University of Vermont, in my home states and one of my favorite places, can get rid of plastic bottles, then surely Cornell University, my current home and another one of my favorite places, can follow their lead. 



Saturday, March 8, 2014

Nature on the Slope

Ah, Libe Slope.  The bane of the existence of everyone who lives on or below West Campus.




Walking up this slope every day (sometimes twice) is pretty awful.  No matter how cold it is, you still sweat, and no matter what shape you're in, you still huff and puff by the time you get to the top.  

Yet, the slope is one of the places Cornell students brag about when talking about our campus.  Sure, it sucks to walk up, but have you ever sled down it (without getting caught)?  Have you ever sat at the top and watched the sun setting over Ithaca?  Have you seen all of the squirrels that frequent the Shagbark Hickory trees?


I followed this little guy last semester :)

Whether people are conscious of it or not, the slope is a place where we have nature in our own backyards.  Sledding, watching sunsets, and chasing squirrels, all get us involved with the outdoors.  By recognizing the slope as the natural area that it is, rather than just an obstacle to get to class, students can connect with nature every day on their commutes.  The slope shows that "nature" isn't something we have to travel off-campus to see--it is all around us!  William Cronon would have to agree.

It is my opinion that people at Cornell, as much as they hate walking up it, love the slope very much.  We even dedicate an entire day--appropriately named "Slope Day"--to skipping class and running around on it, we love it so much!  

It's a pretty wild sight, actually

Although it sucks a lot of the time, the slope is definitely a very special place to me, and to most people at Cornell.  I start each day with the slope at the crack of 8:45, and my daily descent usually signals the end of a long day.  The slope is a great way for all of us to spend some time outside, enjoying the beauty that is Ithaca, and nature in general.  Nature is all around us, and the slope definitely demonstrates that!



Also: I once posted a picture of the slope on the internet, and one of my friends who is going to school in D.C. said, "What's all of that grass doing on your campus?"  Point and case. :)

Monday, March 3, 2014

Keystone XL Dissent

This last Sunday, 398 people were arrested in front of the White House for a sit-in protesting the Keystone XL Pipeline.

Image: A protest against the proposed Keystone XL oil pipeline

Several of the people who protested and were arrested were from Cornell.  I could not attend the rally because of school obligations, but supported the protesters wholeheartedly.

The Keystone XL Pipeline is a potential way to extend the current pipeline so that Canada is able to transport almost a million barrels of oil a day from Alberta to the Gulf Coast.  But its implementation would require the destruction of vital ecosystems, would dirty local water sources, and would promote the use of, as the Sierra Club puts it, "the most toxic fossil fuel on the planet."



The oil which the pipeline would be transporting would come from tar sands in Canada, which are harder to extract than conventional oil and require even more fossil fuels to get.  Moreover, the tar sands are under the Boreal Forest, which would mean a lot of deforestation due to the extraction process.  And then the actual use of this oil would even further contribute to the burning of fossil fuels and increased carbon emissions, thus intensifying climate change.

Although this pipeline isn't being proposed for Ithaca, NY, that does not make it any less of a local problem.  The pipeline would affect people everywhere, not just in the communities it would be infiltrating directly.  Thus, I find it appropriate to talk about in my journal post focused on local issues.  Climate change isn't an issue that affects only one community--it is a world-wide problem, that the pipeline would exacerbate.  And obviously, people at Cornell and in the Ithaca Community would agree. 

Students protest pipeline in D.C.
K.C. Alvey, a Cornell student who helped lead the organizing effort to bring students to the action, is led away from the scene by a police officer after being arrested.