Live Earth concert/carbon footprint calculator

calmloki

Give me a museum and I'll fill it. (Picasso) Give me a forum ...
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Live Earth on MSN: The Concerts For A Climate In Crisis?

Ahh rite all you treehuggers. What's your personal impact on Momma earth?
We're weighing in at 6.65 tons. We have planted a bunch of bamboo, so that's generating a bunch of extra oxygen, but we're way casual about gas and electricity use.

For some reason the concert just keeps reminding me of the end of the movie Rat Race...
 
DW and I were musing about this concert over breakfast today. We wondered if all of those folks (musicians, staff, big shot pols, regular folks, greenies) all walked to the venue or did some of them ride a bike?
 
We're at 7.4 tons. If we only drove 12,000 miles/year instead of 21,000 we'd be at 5 tons.
 
I saved on electricity by not watching the concert.

Calc said 6
 
calc shows me at 7.85 but it didn't ask if the mustang was a gt or how hard i drive it. thanx to an old florida house & lots of shade, my elec bill is low even though the a/c runs 24/7 and at night it is set on hibernation. my car travel will increase over the next few years of roadtripping, to be later replaced with increased air travel at which time car use will decrease. if i eventually go the liveaboard route, i'd imagine my carbon footprint will be reduced even while running a diesel.

my current in-city 1/4 acre sports 7 mature pine trees, about a dozen young pines, about 7 or 9 species of bamboo (including two bamboo hedges running length of property), huge sandbox tree and over 30 species of palms (uncounted individuals) & various shrubs. i produce enough oxygen for the entire block, at least.

my thinking over a decade ago when i started getting serious with the gardens here was to replace with nature the space i took up with the house & the car.
 
You guys must be living in tents and staying home a lot...I only put in one of our two vehicles ('98 Ford F-150 V-8 Automatic) and with our typical expenditures for electricity & natural gas, which are lower than lots of my friends, I got a 14.45. If I was to use both vehicles, it would probably be around a 20! Back when I was pulling a boat about 5000 miles a year, plus factoring in all the gas my boat drank at about 4 mpg, heck, I probably should just go ahead & turn myself in to Sheriff Al Gore right now so he can hang me high. Or maybe he'd let me come hang out at his mega-mansion over there in TN where he's certainly doing his part to save the environment. Peace to the tree huggers, I love you man!
 
Good grief! We're at 15.8 with only one of two cars factored in. And I thought we were doing a reasonably good job of cutting our impact on Mom Earth. Back to the drawing board.
 
8.35 ton/yr for our whole family (I think). We don't do anything to conserve besides try to be economical about things (fuel efficient cars, I don't drive much, CFL lightbulbs, etc). We keep the a/c in the very low 70's in the summer and the heat at 71 in the winter. We do have a "small" house (1800 sf). Electricity is from nuclear sources. When I just put in my info, my personal number is 2.4 tons/yr.

(I also don't recycle, but please nobody tell Al Gore!!!).
 
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Over 18 tons/yr for the three of us. BUT-a large portion of that is my frequent airplane trips for business. But, hey, the plane was going to make that flight anyway! I'm (rationalizing) that I should only be held accountable for the very small additional fuel burn that my weight contributed to each flight (every passenger could be treated this way. The "base footprint" of flying the empty plane on my route should rightly be the carbon f0otprint of the airline. Yeah--that's it!)

I'll bet the "embodied energy" of our vehicles wasn't cranked into the formula. Hybrids don't look so good if you calculate things that way.
 
Wonder when they are going to have the "Sun is heating up, causing solar system warming on all planets concert"?
 
You guys must be living in tents and staying home a lot...I only put in one of our two vehicles ('98 Ford F-150 V-8 Automatic) and with our typical expenditures for electricity & natural gas, which are lower than lots of my friends, I got a 14.45.

We own one car, an Accord with a 4 banger, and just carpool. The house is usually about 77 in the summer and we can pay a premium on our utilities to ensure an amount equal to our consumption is fed onto the grid from wind power.

I'm not doing it to combat global climate change, though.
 
8.35 ton/yr for our whole family (I think). We don't do anything to conserve besides try to be economical about things (fuel efficient cars, I don't drive much, CFL lightbulbs, etc). We keep the a/c in the very low 70's in the summer and the heat at 71 in the winter. We do have a "small" house (1800 sf). Electricity is from nuclear sources. When I just put in my info, my personal number is 2.4 tons/yr.

(I also don't recycle, but please nobody tell Al Gore!!!).

I like the nuclear source of electricity down here. You keep the house at 71 in winter? We stayed at 65 ! Summer we have the upstairs unit at 80 the downstairs unit at 77.
 
A/C is set at 85 and I don't use it at night.
Winter temp is 60, 50 at night.

I drive less than 5000 miles per year.

I'm trying to convince myself that laundry gets clean in cold water.
 
Wow, I plugged in my stats (I thought I was living a greener lifestyle) but I came out as 9.6 tons for just one person. It seems each long haul flight 5,000 miles = 1 ton!
 
Wow, I plugged in my stats (I thought I was living a greener lifestyle) but I came out as 9.6 tons for just one person. It seems each long haul flight 5,000 miles = 1 ton!

Mine was 5.5.
Higher because I am one person living in a house? But it's a small house.
 
I like the nuclear source of electricity down here. You keep the house at 71 in winter? We stayed at 65 ! Summer we have the upstairs unit at 80 the downstairs unit at 77.

Yep - we like it comfortable and don't mind paying a few hundred $$ per year to keep it like that! DW gets cold easily and I get hot easily. 71-74 is the "perfect" range apparently for us. Nat gas furnace in winter though. Still, total gas/elec utils are ~$1500/yr.
 
My footprint was 1.5...

I really didn't think I was doing anything that special.

Probably helps that I ride my bike everywhere (I have a car that I never drive), and that I never fly anywhere either.
 
3.25 for our household. All electric from a hydro power source.

Biking and walking keeps the mileage down.

Its the three airline trips that does it.
 
Wanna lower the entire earth's carbon footprint? Stop cows from farting! :eek:

Family fartprint is 8.25. I am working hard to get it much much higher- I wanna be like Al Gore and all the celebretards !!! :rolleyes:
.
 
Not that this means a whole lot to most of us, but these numbers appear to be per person when you look at the results -- I am single and come up with 7.7 but if I just change the number of people in my household to 2, the result is cut in half. So, to get the per household impact, you would need to multiply by the number of people in the household.
 
New Marketing angle? Note the third bullet point.
 

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Seems as if single people are using more than their fair share because the cost of electicity and oil only supports one person.

The most effective change I can make would be to get married.

At least my acura tsx is only a couple tons higher than the hybrids.
 
Not that this means a whole lot to most of us, but these numbers appear to be per person when you look at the results -- I am single and come up with 7.7 but if I just change the number of people in my household to 2, the result is cut in half. So, to get the per household impact, you would need to multiply by the number of people in the household.

That's because there's two of you consuming the same amount of resources then. Realistically, some of those numbers would go up if you had another person in the house.
 
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