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The Green Home MOT: Would Your House Pass?

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  The Green Home MOT: Would Your House Pass? If your house went for an environmental MOT tomorrow, would it pass? We are used to having cars inspected. Brakes, tyres, lights, emissions and dozens of other components are checked to make sure the vehicle is safe and working efficiently. Yet our homes consume energy, use water, produce waste and affect the natural environment every day—often without receiving the same careful examination. A house may look attractive and feel comfortable while quietly wasting heat through the roof, drawing unnecessary electricity through outdated appliances, leaking treated drinking water or offering very little support to wildlife. That is why it can be helpful to carry out a Green Home MOT . This is not about judging people for living in an imperfect house. Very few homes would receive a completely clean environmental bill of health. It is about identifying: what is already working well; what needs attention; what could save money; what would reduce ...

Why Repair Skills Are Becoming Valuable Again

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  Why Repair Skills Are Becoming Valuable Again “Knowing how to repair something is becoming a superpower.” For many years, repairing everyday objects was simply part of normal life. A torn shirt was stitched, a loose chair was tightened, a punctured bicycle tyre was patched, and a blunt garden tool was sharpened. Today, we are more likely to replace an item than investigate why it has stopped working. Sometimes replacement is unavoidable. However, many objects are discarded because of faults that are surprisingly small: a loose wire, a damaged plug, a blocked filter, a missing screw, a worn seal or a split seam. Learning a few straightforward repair skills can save money, reduce waste and give us greater control over the things we own. More importantly, repairing something changes the way we think. Instead of seeing possessions as disposable products, we begin to see them as useful resources that can be maintained, improved and kept working. We Have Become Used to Throwing Things ...

How Much Land Does It Take to Feed One Person for a Year?

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  How Much Land Does It Take to Feed One Person for a Year? Every plate has a hidden acreage—and some diets require far more land than others We rarely think about land when we sit down for dinner. We see a plate containing potatoes, vegetables, bread, cheese or meat. We do not normally see the wheat field behind the bread, the pasture behind the beef, the field of animal feed behind the chicken, or the overseas farmland used to grow ingredients that eventually arrive in a British supermarket. Yet every meal represents a claim on land somewhere. That raises an important question: How much land does it take to feed one person for a year—and do we have enough suitable land to feed a growing population? At first, the answer can appear surprisingly simple. Divide the amount of farmland by the number of people and calculate the result. Unfortunately, food production is not quite that straightforward. First, We Need to Check the Figures Figures suggesting that a vegetarian req...

Recycling Is Important—but Buying Less Is Better

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  Recycling Is Important—but Buying Less Is Better The Greenest Bin Is Often the One You Never Fill Recycling has become one of the most visible signs of environmental responsibility. We separate glass, cardboard, tins and plastics. We wash containers, flatten boxes and wheel our recycling bins to the kerb. It feels like a positive action—and it is. But recycling can also give us a false sense that our responsibility begins and ends at the bin. A product does not become environmentally harmless simply because a recycling symbol appears on the packaging. Before it reaches our home, raw materials have been extracted, processed, manufactured, packaged and transported. Energy has been used at every stage. Water may have been consumed, habitats disturbed and emissions produced. Recycling may recover some of those materials, but it cannot undo everything that happened before the product entered our shopping basket. That is why the greenest bin is often the one we never fill. The real env...