Friday, January 18, 2013

Stop Waste and Improve Your Life: 10 Actions You Can Take Today

Garbage can with dollar bills going in
Stop Wasting Money!
Image courtesy of scottchan
at FreeDigitalPhotos.net



Waste is bad.  It costs money, consumes resources, and results in pollution- yet does not improve your life,  Eliminating waste is a painless way to save money.  By definition, you do not need what you are wasting.  Following is a list of 10 forms of waste and action you can take today to reduce waste, save money, and improve your life.


1. Wasting Gas
Unnecessary driving wastes gas.  This costs you money, consumes natural resources, and generates pollution.  Idling the engine to run the heater or air conditioner while parked not only wastes gas, but puts excessive wear and tear on your engine.
Action: Plan your trips to reduce driving, for example one trip to the grocery store per week instead of 5 or 6 to pick up items you forgot.  Walk when possible, most people can walk 4 miles per hour or 6 blocks in 10 minutes.   Get out of your car and go inside rather than idling your engine.

2. Eating More Than You Need
The average American is 23 pounds overweight!  Most people consume far more calories than they need each day.  This not only wastes money, but consumes resources required to produce unnecessary food.

Action:  Eat the right amount to get the calories you need

3. Plastic Bottles
Sure it's convenient to get a new plastic bottle every time you get a drink.  Americans consume millions of plastic beverage bottles every year.  Recycling of these bottles is increasing.  But it still takes a lot of energy and resources to produce and recycle the bottles.  Eliminate waste from plastic bottles with a reusable bottle.  Better yet, get a BPHA free reusable bottle or aluminum


Action: Switch to reusable containers instead of one-time-use bottles.  Get a BPA-free plastic or aluminum refillable drinking bottle.  Filling it at home instead of buying bottles at convenience stores will cost less as well as waste less.


4. Wasting Electricity

How often do you find lights on with no one in the room?  Lighting consumes a lot of electricity and is an easy way to cut wasted electricity.  Even if you have switched to compact fluorescent, a fixture with multiple bulbs can consume more than 60 Watts.   Other examples of preventable electricity waste are fans or TVs left on when no one is using them.  One of the most egregious examples is when people leave outdoor lights on during the day.  You can SEE the money being wasted...

Action:  Turn off lights when not in use.  Encourage others to do the same.  Establish a habit of turning off unused items.  I even unplug my electric water heater is I am away from home longer than a couple days.

5. Disposable Products
Disposable products are literally made to be thrown away after one use.  Examples include garbage bags, paper towels and plastic utensils.


Action:  Find non-disposable alternatives to disposable products.  You'll save money and help the environment.  For example, re-use plastic shopping bags in small trash cans rather than purchasing small trash bags and use a cloth instead of a paper towel.

6. Oversized houses
Building large houses consumes extra resources.  Owners then feel the need to fill the extra space with furnishings, consuming even more resources.  Heating and cooling the unneeded space wastes money and fuel as well.

Action: Resist filling every available square foot with stuff- empty space is better than buying stuff you don't need.  On your next move, choose the smallest home that meets your needs.  It will cost less and requires less resources to heat, cool, and maintain.

7. Excessive Clothing
Most people have clothing in their closet they rarely (or never) wear.  Yet they continue to buy more clothes at every opportunity.  A common reason for buying more clothes... THEY WERE ON SALE!

Action: Stop buying new clothes until you really need more.  Sort and organize your existing clothes so you are more likely to use your entire wardrobe instead of buying unneeded clothes.  When you need to buy clothes, take a shopping list of items that you need to reduce impulse buys at the store.

8. Unnecessary Shoes
How many colors and styles of shoes do you need?  Here are the basics: brown dress shoes, black dress shoes, and tennis shoes. If you live in a cold climate, add boots.  If you do dirty work (gardening, etc.), add a pair of utility shoes.  If you have more than 5 pairs of shoes, you may have enough!

Action: Stop buying shoes until you actually need more.  When you do buy shoes, select strategically so you can survive with fewer shoes in your closet.

9. Unappreciated Gifts
They say it's the thought that counts, but custom dictates the giving of unwanted gifts.  This is wasteful not just in terms of the gift, but also the packaging, mailing, and wrapping of the unwanted gift.  What about the wasted time driving to the store to get the gift, not to mention the wasted gas.

Action: Send a note or email instead of buying "throw away" gifts.  Note: this strategy doesn't work well for small children.  Save some throw-away gifts your kids receive for re gifting at parties for other kids.

10. Leaving Food on the Table
It amazes me how much people pay to eat in restaurants.  What's more amazing is how much food people leave on the table when they leave.  Why?  This is perfectly good- and expensive- food.  Why waste it?  It just gets thrown away when you leave.

Action:  Take extra restaurant food home with you.  What looks like a small amount on the scale of a restaurant meal is probably enough for an entire meal or at least half a meal later. Take food home rather than throwing it away to save money and reduce the amount of waste going to the landfill.


Recommended reading:
7 Foods: Which foods would you choose if you could eat only seven foods?

Feel Young for Under 10 Dollars
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