Viewing 40 posts - 1 through 40 (of 61 total)
  • "Eco-Freindly"
  • BigEaredBiker
    Free Member

    Does this phrase annoy anyone else when it is used instead of “less environmentally harmful”. It really bugs me when adverts, manufactures, and people use it.

    If something was truly environmentally friendly there would have been no pollution incurred in the sourcing of it’s raw materials, it’s construction, or its daily use.

    This is clearly the work of evil marketing types and it spilling over into everyday use. Just on another thread reversing a car into a parking space is described as “Eco-Friendly”. Erm… if you want to be “eco-friendly” don’t drive a car, just doing something a particular way so it uses less fuel is just sensible.

    I feel the need to rant at the next person who tells me driving a diesel or even a Prius instead of a petrol car is Eco-Friendly!

    I’ve also been known to get annoyed when CO2 is described as toxic, but that deserves a thread of its own…

    PJM1974
    Free Member

    Dihydrogen Monoxide is a killer too…be careful out there.

    Here:

    nealglover
    Free Member

    I feel the need to rant at the next person who tells me driving a diesel or even a Prius instead of a petrol car is Eco-Friendly!

    Why ?

    If they said driving a Prius instead of walking was Eco Friendly, then they would be wrong.

    But when compared to a low MPG petrol car, a Prius is more Eco Friendly.

    Stoner
    Free Member

    they should be beaten up until they say that their car is “Eco-friendlier” then…

    Junkyard
    Free Member

    if you want to be “eco-friendly” don’t drive a car

    Well technically the most eco friendly thing you could do would be to die as you produce C02 by breathing

    I think most folk realise eco friendly means less damaging rather than helpful especially in relation to transport

    I’ve also been known to get annoyed when CO2 is described as toxic

    have you tried breathing it to test this ludicrous claim?
    It might turn out to be very eco friendly 😀

    BigEaredBiker
    Free Member

    But when compared to a low MPG petrol car, a Prius is more Eco Friendly.

    No, it isn’t environmentally friendly at all. You should only say it is less harmful to the environment. If it was environmentally friendly it would in the least leave less pollution behind it, it does not. It still creates pollution and the manufacture of the car probably created more than a small engined petrol car. This is the whole point of my pedantry – you have been brain washed.

    Stoner
    Free Member

    Well technically the most eco friendly thing you could do would be to die as you produce C02 by breathing

    You wait till you start rotting, methane breath!

    BigEaredBiker
    Free Member

    have you tried breathing it to test this ludicrous claim?
    It might turn out to be very eco friendly

    You will certainly suffocate if it is present in large enough quantities, but the amount needed to do that isn’t what would normally rate a substance or gas as toxic; it certainly isn’t poisonous or carcinogenic which is what one would usually associate toxic as being.

    alpin
    Free Member

    i like the “eco-friendly” plastic bags that biodegrade. swathes of Madagascar is planted with some cactus like plant, rather than its native dense forests, so that we in the west can have a clean conscience when we go to Tesco’s.

    or when the government want you to trade in your old car for a new, more eco-friendly model ignoring the fact that the most eco-friendly thing to do is keep old cars on the road for longer and produce fewer new cars.

    the Prius (and other e-cars) is also a joke as the batteries produce a lot of shitty pollution during their production.

    tomhoward
    Full Member

    😆 @PJM

    GaryLake
    Free Member

    My beef with these Eco variants is that they still essentially rely on driving efficiently, and the majority I see are being razzed around delivering equally shite mpg. Nearly all the benefits are aero so ranting them round town does nothing to help. I’m sure their owners think something magic is happening under the bonnet.

    MrSalmon
    Free Member

    No, it isn’t environmentally friendly at all. You should only say it is less harmful to the environment.

    That’s just splitting hairs I think. “Less environmentally unfriendly” = “More environmentally friendly” near as dammit in my book. Obviously the key word there is “more” though.

    I don’t think it’s necessarily as simple as saying people are brainwashed either, or that biodegradable bags are bad, or electric cars are a waste of time. Obviously what alpin’s talking about in Madagascar is bad, and so are the problems with making and disposing of batteries for Priuses(?), but the better alternatives have got to come from somewhere so it’s not as easy as saying we should all just run our clunkers into the ground, although obviously that’s the better individual choice than going out and buying a new Prius.

    zippykona
    Full Member

    Cutting down the amazon to plant bio fuels. Super eco.

    Sandwich
    Full Member

    You will certainly suffocate if it is present in large enough quantities, but the amount needed to do that isn’t what would normally rate a substance or gas as toxic; it certainly isn’t poisonous or carcinogenic which is what one would usually associate toxic as being.

    Apparently you don’t need a vast amount to be dangerous. Check out acidosis

    molgrips
    Free Member

    No, it isn’t environmentally friendly at all. You should only say it is less harmful to the environment.

    Correct. It’s a question of semantics, but most people are too thick to understand the consequences.

    the Prius (and other e-cars) is also a joke as the batteries produce a lot of shitty pollution during their production

    Not entirely convinced by that argument.

    Suggsey
    Free Member

    Wish I hadnt read this thread now. I too have got a big beef with anyone that owns or drives a Toyota Pious as I call them. winds me up when you see them thrashing the nuts out the shitty petrol engine that is dirtier than a lot of other modern engines so they can just pay zero/low road tax. I only ever seem to see them on the motorway at 90mph along with Smart cars and other ‘Eco’ badged variants with no spare tyres and a tin of sealant………..
    Up until the other day when I read in the paper that Vauxhall had mde some false claims on the range of the ‘batteries’ of their new car I was half set to consider going ‘eco’ on retirement but on the back of all the lies I am now thinking of doing less miles but in a nice V8, without a gas conversion and spend the difference on at least one new bike from each niche market 😆

    nealglover
    Free Member

    But when compared to a low MPG petrol car, a Prius is more Eco Friendly.

    No, it isn’t environmentally friendly at all. You should only say it is less harmful to the environment.

    I did.

    I said it was more[/B] Eco Friendly.

    I’ll say it’s less un-Eco friendly if it really makes you feel better.

    But it’s essentially the same thing.

    This is the whole point of my pedantry – you have been brain washed.

    Have I ?

    That’s very observant of you. Considering you know nothing about me.

    (I drive either a petrol 4.2 V8 oracid work, a 2.5 Diesel that’s been remapped and had the Catalytic Convertor removed, if that helps you jump to some other conclusions. ?)

    Peyote
    Free Member

    the Prius (and other e-cars) is also a joke as the batteries produce a lot of shitty pollution during their production

    Not entirely convinced by that argument. [/quote]

    Aye, me neither. As a ‘stepping stone’ technology it’s probably a useful direction to take transport in, at least in the short term.

    Can you imagine what horse riders/stage coach users etc… said when some chap came along with a new fangled vehicle without a horse that ran on a volatile solvent that had to be distilled out of black stuff that came out of the ground*?! He’d have to work really hard to flog that idea, especially when horses were easily available and could be fed on hay and grass!

    * I suppose they could’ve used alcohol distilled from normal fermentation.

    edited to add – How come in preview double quoting works fine, but in the real forum it doesn’t?!

    molgrips
    Free Member

    I too have got a big beef with anyone that owns or drives a Toyota Pious as I call them. winds me up when you see them thrashing the nuts out the shitty petrol engine that is dirtier than a lot of other modern engines so they can just pay zero/low road tax.

    What about me then on the speed limit getting 63mpg yesterday going to my folks and back? 🙂 In a car I’ve had for 5 years and will have for many more. Don’t blame the car for **** drivers.

    Did you know that most of the battery material is recycled btw? And that diesel is also harmful to manufacture and burn?

    Anyway, not fair to derail the thread, the OP is quite right. But then again, marketeers trying to bullshit people is hardly new is it?

    Peyote
    Free Member

    The official term I believe is “greenwash”. At least in the corporate environment (if you’ll excuse that pun!).

    On a personal level, the lingo is “dark green” and “light green”. Dark Green = The hardcore elite, those who make a significant effort to shun environmentally damaging products and behaviour. Light Green = those who reuse their carriers bags, and only drive when it’s raining, or they have to carry lots of stuff, or the kids need picking up, or they’ve got a bit of dodgy ankle from the last badminton session, or… …you get the picture I’m sure!

    tazzymtb
    Full Member

    until hybrids or electric cars are powered/re-charged by green or renewable energy it’s all a bunch of bollox as you are still burning dinosaurs in a cocking great big power station to generate the electricity.

    want to have a carbon neutral footprint on the planet? just die now…but don’t get cremated, or preserved with chemicals for standard burial….in fact just feed yourself to some hungry bears…it’s the only green way to go.

    molgrips
    Free Member

    I thought it was as follows:

    Light green = using eco washing powder, reusable nappies, driving a Prius etc etc

    Dark green = not owning a car, growing your own veg, being vegetarian, never flying etc.

    until hybrids or electric cars are powered/re-charged by green or renewable energy it’s all a bunch of bollox

    Not quite bollox – they are just a bit more efficient that’s all. It gets annoying when people assume you think you are saving the planet when you drive one though and hand out abuse accordingly.

    Peyote
    Free Member

    That’s a pretty simplistic way of looking at quite a complex issue Tazzymtb, but if you feel that way so be it!

    Peyote
    Free Member

    Yeah, you’re right molgrips, I was just being a bit more cynical!

    zokes
    Free Member

    just die now…but don’t get cremated

    Actually, the conversion of your body’s carbon to CO2 by cremation would have a much smaller global warming effect than the equivalent amount of methane as you slowly rot.

    matt_outandabout
    Full Member






    nickhart
    Free Member

    Sorry nealg but a new built Prius is NOT as Eco friendly as a well maintained second hand diesel or petrol car. The traditional fuel car has already been built and although the fuel is not as clean as the electricity for the Prius the materials and energy required to build a new car has already been done and is therefore history. Building a new Prius when there is a perfectly good secondhand traditional car is less Eco friendly. Plus how long do the battery packs last? Then what do you do with all that lovel chemical based stuff when they stop working? There aren’t many if any recycling options for acids.
    The 2000 grant thing the government did a couple of years ago should have been used to service and sort out older cars so that they run as efficiently as they could. That would have been better for the environment and the economy.
    Not that I’ve thought about this much.

    alpin
    Free Member

    nickhart +1

    juan
    Free Member

    Well you don’t really expect car owners to have some sense do you? I mean they must justify their laziness. I had this argument far too many times my my mum. She buy organic stuff and recycled loo paper etc etc, but she refuses to “be cold” during winter and she still drives to work every day.

    yunki
    Free Member

    Well you don’t really expect car owners to have some sense do you? I mean they must justify their laziness

    +1

    tazzymtb
    Full Member

    Actually, the conversion of your body’s carbon to CO2 by cremation would have a much smaller global warming effect than the equivalent amount of methane as you slowly rot.

    maybe, but the increase in particulate emission, aldehyde and VOCs within the incinerator plume will also have a significant impact on the environment, hence the reason why that crem stacks are subject to regular emissions monitoring under the PPC regulations. Plus the energy used to run the crematoria still has a increased environmental impact from the power stations needed to supply the electricity. There aren’t many crematorium or clinical waste incinerators out there that run a CHP plant off their own process to mitigate their energy needs.

    see greener to rot, or maybe end up in a MBT-AD plant where the methane liberated is used for power generation.

    molgrips
    Free Member

    Sorry nealg but a new built Prius is NOT as Eco friendly as a well maintained second hand diesel or petrol car

    What about a well maintained second hand Prius? All cars are new at some point, and someone has to buy them otherwise there won’t be any used ones.

    Plus how long do the battery packs last? Then what do you do with all that lovel chemical based stuff when they stop working? There aren’t many if any recycling options for acids.

    They are NiMH batteries, and I’ve read that most NiMH battery materials are recycled to begin with, and at the end of their lives. The Prius battery is carefully managed to last the lifetime of the car. They are even guaranteed for 10 years in the US (or maybe just California not sure). There are some failures of individual cells in the battery pack, which are similar in size to C cells.

    MrSalmon
    Free Member

    Sorry nealg but a new built Prius is NOT as Eco friendly as a well maintained second hand diesel or petrol car. The traditional fuel car has already been built and although the fuel is not as clean as the electricity for the Prius the materials and energy required to build a new car has already been done and is therefore history. Building a new Prius when there is a perfectly good secondhand traditional car is less Eco friendly. Plus how long do the battery packs last? Then what do you do with all that lovel chemical based stuff when they stop working? There aren’t many if any recycling options for acids.
    The 2000 grant thing the government did a couple of years ago should have been used to service and sort out older cars so that they run as efficiently as they could. That would have been better for the environment and the economy.
    Not that I’ve thought about this much.

    That’s fine. So we don’t need to look at what’s going to come next then, we’ll all drive used cars instead.

    I’ve never owned a car, and I’d sure like to see a lot less of them on the roads. But there needs to be some R&D on what’s going to come next, unless you believe everyone will stop using cars in the future. They won’t be perfect, and the first generations will probably be a long way from perfect, but I think it’s about the long game rather than saying “Yeah, but Priuses take loads of energy to make- suckers!”

    Obviously the scrappage scheme was nuts IF it was about being more eco-friendly though.

    molgrips
    Free Member

    “Yeah, but Priuses take loads of energy to make- suckers!”

    Which isn’t particularly true anyway. Most of the rumours come from a report that was published years ago that was almost complete nonsense.

    Obviously the scrappage scheme was nuts IF it was about being more eco-friendly though.

    It wasn’t of course, it was about helping the car industry. However, given that in normal economic conditions people would have been buying new cars at the usual rate, all it really did in terms of energy spent on new cars was reduce the DROP in emissions* that a recession would normally see. And given that the incentive was only on old cars, not 3 year old ones, it might actually have helped compared to normal conditions since fewer people would be replacing decent cars. Having said that, those 3 year old cars would have been sold on anyway. Complciated.

    * of course, when factories close down or shed staff in difficult conditions, those people often end up having to travel a long way to new jobs because they can’t afford to move or their partners don’t have the flexibility to move jobs due to the market. So having a factory close (and reduce the number of cars made) could have a negative impact on travel emissions. Just a thought, but my point really is that it’s almost impossible to predict the effect things have on emissions.

    nickhart
    Free Member

    Ah mr salmon I was answering or commenting on the original post. The transport industry need to start with a blank piece of paper and come up with something completely different to be truly successful. Either that or we should go back to living the lives we used to which meant we lived and worked within walking distance. As a teacher it pains me most days that I drive past several schools before getting to work, mind you I wouldn’t want to teach my own kids either.
    Our style of life which includes so much travel is, in my mind unsustainable, I will live it until I can’t anymore but I will teach kids to think about change so that when it’s needed they can.
    If this thread was a general Eco thread then I’d rant about the smart metre British gas installed. Great idea but then why do they expect us to have a electrically powered readout which was made outside of the uk and then shipped here running 24/7?

    Suggsey
    Free Member

    Moelgrips, I applaud your proper use of the right vehicle for the right job so as to speak and perhaps you are right, maybe the majority of the Prius owners I have ever seen are just ****’s 😆
    Still not that impressed with the real life mpg though, not when my 1998 VW tdi (well maintained and serviced)on a similar run averages near enough the same mpg.

    yunki
    Free Member

    FOR ONCE WHERE HERE WERE PLEASANT FIELDS,
    AND NO ONE IN A HURRY,
    BEHOLD THE HARVEST MAMMON YIELDS,
    OF SPEED AND GREED AND WORRY.

    John Betjeman

    tazzymtb
    Full Member

    FOR ONCE WHERE HERE WERE PLEASANT FIELDS,
    AND NO ONE IN A HURRY,

    except for those working the land trying to fend off starvation and disease.

    I’ve got the soul of poet 😀

    yunki
    Free Member

    well.. perhaps you stole the soul of a poet once and crushed it in your hammy fist, before sticking it in a jar of vinegar at the back of your collection of exotic condiments .. 😀

    GaryLake
    Free Member

    What about me then on the speed limit getting 63mpg yesterday going to my folks and back?

    Not a pop at you but is that considered good for a Prius then, I’d have hoped for more if I was going to make that kind of outlay? From a 55 plate 2.0TDCI C-Max I’ll get 60mpg on a pure motorway trip (low 60s even if the weather is really fine). Low 50s isn’t hard day to day (although my wife only seems to get high 30s from it in town even though I get close to 50 in town)

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