Mon, Dec 01, 2008

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Jewcy Book Club

This week:
and My Jesus YearDumbfounded
Welcome Authors
Benyamin Cohen
&
Matthew Rothschild
who are posting all week.
Coming up:
  • 12/08:
    Seth Greenland

Last logged in: Apr 24, 2008
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Cornell University
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About Liore Milgrom-Elcott

Liore Milgrom-Elcott is the Project Manager for COEJL. Liore’s environmental passions took root and grew as she spent summers camping in the backcountry of America's National Parks. She received a Masters of Professional Studies from Cornell University College of Agriculture and Life Sciences in Environmental and Developmental Economics, focusing on how monetary factors will and do play a role in environmental decisions. Prior to that, she received a Bachelor of Sciences degree in Natural Resources from Cornell with a concentration in Environmental Science. There, she focused specifically on the scientific and social aspects of the environment and pollution. During her time as an undergraduate, she sat on the Hillel programming board and founded Teva, the campus Jewish environmental group. After graduating, she spent five months representing the American Jewish World Service in rural education and its tsunami relief work in Kanchipuram, India, a conglomerate of fifty-plus individual villages. She has also worked in the Dominican Republic and Mexico on environmental and social justice projects. Most recently she was a Community Liaison for Assemblywoman Amy Paulin (D-Scarsdale) in her campaign and Assembly offices with a specific focus on environmental issues and advocacy.

She also contributes to the COEJL blog To Till and To Tend: www.coejlblog.blog.com

Recent Blog Postings

10 Easy Things You Can Do to Help the Environment

Liore Milgrom-Elcott
 

How Many Jews: does it take to change a light bulb?How Many Jews: does it take to change a light bulb?During a time when global environmental catastrophes loom large, clear, and real, it's natural to question the impact of our individual actions. Considering that China is opening a new coal-based power plant every week, does my switching to an energy efficient compact fluorescent light (CFL) really matter?

The Coalition on the Environment and Jewish Life (COEJL) challenged the American Jewish community to start fighting climate change with that simple act. During our How Many Jews Does it Take to Change a Light Bulb? campaign, Jews across America heeded the call and switched out their energy inefficient incandescent bulbs for CFLs. Thanks to the response in homes, offices, schools, and synagogues, over 80,000 CFLs were purchased, keeping approximately 29,000 tons of CO2 out of our atmosphere.

Simply put: Yes, your independent acts of environmental conservation matter. Below is a list of 10 actions with a range of required effort that will help you and the Jewish community reduce our collective impact on global warming.

  1. Change 5 light bulbs to energy efficient and cost effective compact CFLs ( if all American Jews did this it would be the same as taking 1.76 million cars off the road for a year)
  2. Switch out a meat meal for a vegetarian one (global livestock is responsible for 18% of CO2 emissions and 37% of methane emissions - a greenhouse gas that is twenty times more potent than CO2)
  3. Eat local (in the US, conventional food travels an average of 1,500 miles to reach our markets)
  4. Find new meaning in old traditions: walk or bike to synagogue (only 6% of all trips made in the US are by bike or foot)
  5. Recycle ½ of your household waste (saves 2,400 pounds of CO2 a year)
  6. Install a programmable thermostat and drop it 2 degrees in the winter and raise it 2 degrees in the summer (saves 2,000 pounds of CO2 a year)
  7. Eliminate “phantom loads” by unplugging unused electronics, shutting off power strips, or buying smart ones that will shut it off for you (if all phantom loads in US homes were stopped, we could shut down 17 power plants)
  8. Fully inflate your tires and improve mpg efficiency (Saves 347 lbs of CO2 a year)
  9. Plant a tree – in your own backyard or Israel (if all Jews in America did this it, 6 million tons of CO2 absorbed over its life)
  10. Due to the fact that CO2 is a global gas, when you’ve taken all the actions you can, buy carbon credits to offset the rest.
To purchase appliances that enable tips 6, 7 and 8 click here.

Though it may be scary, it’s also empowering. We - in our houses with our family, offices with our colleagues, and community with our friends - can be part of the solution.