Savannah Seydel, vp of sustainability and influence at Better Earth, a maker of compostable tableware and food service packaging, is on a mission to take
Tag: Home & Garden
Sustainable Holidays: Gifts for Cooks & Foodies
The vacation season is a time of pleasure, celebration, and giving. Foodies and cooking fanatics can get pleasure from eating with items that reduce their
How to Entertain Sustainably During The Holiday Season
As the times get shorter and the nights longer, it’s a pleasure to ask family and friends into our houses to share meals, items, and
Recycling Mystery: Bulging Lithium-Ion Batteries
Lithium-ion batteries are the driving drive behind merchandise which have redefined life over the previous 20 years, from smartphones to laptops. However, once they fail,
Protecting Your Garden In Winter
It’s been a record-breaking year for weather-related disasters, with excessive warmth waves threatening human health, wildlife, and our gardens. But even when your backyard survived
Extreme Weather Summer Scorecard – How Did You Fare?
Remember when summertime meant residing was simple? Summer was the season of backyard barbecues, journeys to the beach, and vegetable gardens filled with contemporary produce.
Earth911 Podcast: Irrigreen’s Shane Dyer on Water-Saving Precision Irrigation
Water is getting dearer as drought spreads resulting from local weather change, and within the Western U.S., shortage continues to drive water costs increased. Meet
Earth911 Podcast: ePlant CEO Graham Hine Listens to the Trees
Smart houses are commonplace right this moment. Now, the clever yard is poised to affix the combo. Meet Graham Hine, CEO of ePlant, which just
Best of: Earth911 Podcast: SuperCircle Breaks the Textiles Logjam
SuperCircle, a textiles recycling startup, has cracked the round economic system code for trend manufacturers. Meet Chloe Songer and Stuart Ahlum, co-founders of SuperCircle, which
Best of Earth911 Podcast: Putting Solar Generation Everywhere With Ubiquitous Energy’s Veeral Hardev
How can we sustainably harvest extra power and transfer it to the place it’s wanted? The United States’ annual power consumption requires about one-quarter of