We as a nation are ready to go green. We get it. The climate is changing and human activity is a major cause. If billions of people are going to live on the planet, natural resources need managing, and waste will be a major concern. And all around us are new technologies, products and practices that will soon replace the crude, energy-wasting, resource-depleting path we've been on. If only everyone knew what those were. That's what the Green Guide is forto find those new products and practices and share them with you. One of the most important ways to protect the planet is through consumer environmentalism: buying and using thingsfrom the food you eat to the clothing you wear to the cars you drivewith an eye on the resources required to make them and the waste they will become. As simple as (we hope) they sound, the tips and ideas you'll read about have a lot behind them. Each assertion we make about the potential hazards of products and practices has been documented in peer-reviewed scientific journals. Our writers and editors are painstaking in their research and are held to high standards by a separate team of fact-checkers. And we're working from a deep base of knowledge: The Green Guide has been writing about environmental consumer issues since it launched as a newsletter in 1994. Seth Bauer |
About The Green Guide
![]() Originated as a print newsletter in 1994, then expanded into a web site, thegreenguide.com, in 2002, Green Guide was acquired by National Geographic Society in March 2007, as part of NGS' global commitment to inform and inspire people to care about the planet. Dubbed the "green living source for today's conscious consumer", the GREEN GUIDE makes living in an environmentally-aware way easy, understandable, and practical. Intended for general consumers, GREEN GUIDE (in print and on the web) shows people how to make small changes that add up to big benefits for their wallets, for their health, and, of course, for the health of the planet. Not political or activist, the GREEN GUIDE is chock-full of simple, useful, ideas, broken down into achievable steps, that make going green a gradual and affordable process rather than an all-or-nothing plunge. User Feedback about The Green Guide
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