Ten Ways to Save Water

The United Nations Environment Program predict that if present consumption patterns continue, two out of every three persons on Earth will live in water-stressed conditions by the year 2025. Here are a few ways to conserve water and help do your part:

1. Cut a minute off of your shower every day to save more than 900 gallon of water annually. And if you swap out a 2.5 gallon per minute showerhead for a 1.75 gpm showerhead you can save 7,500. Water-conserving showerheads range from $8-$50 depending on features. Hand-held models are more expensive than fixed models.

2. Use efficient faucets and install low-flow aerators on kitchen and bathroom faucets to save hundreds of gallons of water each month. Low-flow aerators cost about $5-$15 each.

3. Make sure dishwasher is fully loaded, and use the energy-saving dry option if available.

4. Use leftover drinking water for houseplants instead of pouring down the drain.

5. Replace pre-1992 toilets with High-Efficiency Toilets (HETs) to save up to 22,000 gallons of water annually. HETs use 1.3 gallons of water or less per flush.

6. Use the appropriate water level and load size when doing your laundry in your washing machine. If you are looking to replace consider a front-load washers which are usually the most efficient.

7. Use a broom rather than a hose to clean off driveways, steps and sidewalks. For hard to get off gum consider a bucket with a deck brush.

8. Water plants and gardens during the coolest part of the day and avoid watering on extremely windy days.

9. Turn off the water while brushing your teeth or shaving.

10. Landscape with native or low water plants to reduce outside watering usage.

Every little bit helps! Do your part.

Getting Started

Getting started is the hardest part of doing something. Where do I start? what if I am doing the wrong thing? The realization that it is much more complicated that anticipated, but by that point you have already started and are further ahead on your project than you were the week, day and hour before. That is how I approach the green movement.

I do not know when I first started thinking green, maybe my upbringing in Iowa where the land is your lively hood for many, so you were always hearing about soil erosion, damages from hog farms, what pesticides were being used and there effect. It could have been my restaurant career which kept me in touch with local producers and the organic-sustainable trend. Overall, it was probably a combination of many things that led me to thinking differently about my consumption and things that I could do to reduce my carbon footprint.

One of those thinking differently ideas and the reason for this website/blog the “Green Business Project” is to help others in business get started. It is a starting point for business of all sizes to become greener. It contains questions and answers for all aspects of business that can help make your office or restaurant greener and probably save you some $$ in the mean time. If you feel your energy bill is too high, changing your light bulbs can help that or cutting the thermostat by a degree but there are more in depth solutions as well.

So get started by answering a question or two.

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