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50 Ways to Use Less Oil

50 Ways to Use Less Oil


Curated by Stillmind


Oil? Who said something about oil? Not the oil industry.
Feature Photo: Seattle Municipal Archives.
This article started as a project for myself. Depressed and aggravated about BP’s oil spill and mismanaged clean-up, I started researching ways to cut back on my own oil consumption.
It was a two-level action plan; I could atone for my Petroleum indiscretions and Norman Bates some oil industry profits.
Although the negatives of the oil industry are outstanding–degredation of the ecosystem, global warming, oil spills and oil wars–there’s not a good guy, bad guy battle going on here.
Or is there?
There’s serious money grab happening in the oil industry. Sector profits continually increase and cyclical earning keeps oil companies and their lobbyists engaged in maintaining petroleum as a big part of everyone’s lives.
Consider this:
According to the U.S. Energy Information Administration, “the petroleum refining industry is the largest industrial consumer of energy”. Basically, we need more oil so we can refine more oil.
Basically, we need more oil so we can refine more oil.
Oil companies, and the politicians that are supported by them, aren’t necessarily looking to promote green energy with such interest in keeping oil lubricating the return of the other “green”.
Petroleum products don’t just include gasoline and crude oil. When petroleum is refined and its various chemical parts separated, petrochemicals make plastic, rubber, and a whole slew of materials that we ingest, wear, and use throughout the day.
Below, I’ve included obvious and not-so-obvious ways to cut back on oil and give less money to the oil industry.
(Statistics provided by the EIA.)
1.) Cut back on/regulate air conditioning and heat.
41% of Household Energy is consumed by space heating. 8% is from air conditioning use. Programmable thermostats are a great tool for regulating energy use.
2.) Weatherize your home.
Do a home energy audit to see where you’re losing energy. Insulation and natural shade will be key factors.
3.) Eat and buy local.
Support local farmers markets, restaurants that use local produce, and shops that sell locally made items.
4.) Calculate your carbon footprint.
5.) Try going vegetarian. Even for just Meatless Mondays.
In 2006, the United Nations summarized the meat industry as “one of the top two or three most significant contributors to the most serious environmental problems, at every scale from local to global.” Loads of sites offer vegetarian/vegan recipes and communities. My favorite, a print magazine and website, is Veg News.
6.) Don’t buy bottled water.
Try a Brita filter. Campaign like Jean Hill for no bottled water in your town.
7.) Cut back on plastic products.
Plastic bags and bottles obviously included. Plastic is made from petrochemicals, the main ingredient of which is oil.
Photo by: woodleywonderworks
8.) Recycle.
If you don’t have a recycling box, call your city’s public works department and they’ll bring you one.
9.) Buy mp3s and used CDs and LPs.
10.) Carpool.
11.) Roll down the car windows.
Turn off the a/c in your car and you’ll save on gas.
12.) Save your car radio and CD player for songs you really want to listen to.
Pull the plug on mediocre songs and unnecessary electronics.
13.) Keep your car in good condition and repair.
Get tire pressure checked, maintain regular oil changes, and replace parts as necessary.
14.) Take yourself off junk mail lists.
15.) Buy clothes at consignment shops instead of purchasing new clothes.
16.) Eat seasonally.
Food will travel less.
17.) Eat less package-heavy food.
18.) Combine trips in town.
Hit up the grocery store, bank, and gym all in one trip.
19.) Eat organic if you can’t eat local.
Pesticides are petrochemical poison.
20.) Avoid synthetic fibers like polyester, nylon, and acrylic in clothes, curtains, carpets.
They’re full of petrochemicals and feel like crap anyways.
21.) Do soap research.
There are two types of detergents: soapy and soapless. Soapless detergents are made from oil products.
Photo by: iLoveButter
22.) Cut back on processed and canned food.
Food additives are another petrochemical.
23.) Avoid standard candles.
Wax is a raw petroleum product that also makes milk cartons and polishes. Buy natural soy or beeswax candles.
24.) If you have a garden, watch out that your fertilizer doesn’t contain petroleum chemicals.
25.) Switch to non-ethylene garbage bags.
26.) Research non-synthetic (i.e. non-petroleum product) natural rubber or natural fiber shoes.
27.) Consider adopting a non-refrigerator lifestyle.
5% of household energy is used by the refrigerator.
28.) Cut off lights.
29.) Put all appliances on a power strip.
Flip the switch when you leave the room. Plugged in appliances are a major energy drain. Lighting and other appliances account for 26% of household energy use.
30.) Limit hot water use.
Take fast showers and wash clothes and dishes in cold water. Water heating accounts for 20% of household energy use.
31.) Make sure your water heater is in good repair.
32.) Switch to compact florescent lightbulbs from incandescent bulbs.
33.) Take the bus.
34.) Take the train.
On my recent trip to NYC for TBEX, I took the train from Virginia instead of flying. It was cheaper and less stressful than dealing with long security lines.
Photo by: jurvetson
35.) Make sure your house in well-ventilated.
36.) Switch to nonpetroleum cosmetics.
37.) Consider holistic medicine.
For yet another reason to switch to holistic medicine: most modern drugs contain petroleum based products.
38.) Avoid ammonia based products.
39.) Don’t chew gum.
Most bubble gum contains petroleum. I tell my voice students not to chew gum anyways since it causes jaw tension.
40.) Watch what you put on your body.
Read the ingredient lists in perfumes and lotions. Many contain petrochemicals.


This post first appeared on Stories, please read the originial post: here

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