Big Push for Energy Efficient IT
IKEA shine a light for the environment
"First" Zero Carbon Home Unveiled
London 2012 - The Greenest Games Ever?
Welcome to the Terra Infirma Blog!
Wednesday, 20 June 2007
Yesterday I was looking for the carbon footprint of shampoo for a client project and found that Boots were now using the Carbon Trust's new(ish) carbon label (right). One bottle of shampoo is apparently responsible for 148g of carbon dioxide. The other product that has been labelled in this way is Walkers Cheese & Onion Crisps - 75g a packet. While this is very useful for those of us who need this sort of information to calculate carbon footprints, it left me wondering what it will mean to the shopper in the aisle of their local hypermarket. Is 75g a packet high or low? Is 148g a bottle good or bad?
The EU Ecolabel (left) does show the average punter whether or not a particular product (ranging from mattresses to campsites) actually meets best environmental practice. But have you ever actually seen one on a product? And would you choose, say, your new shoes based on this label?Labels: carbon footprint, eco-label
# posted by Gareth Kane : 08:19
![]()
![]()