Tuesday, February 23, 2016

Period 2 Blog #14


Your comment post should be at least 340 words this week due Thursday by 11:59 pm (worth 70 points) and you will be responsible for responding (respectfully) to one of your classmates in at least a one paragraph reply entries by Sunday at 11:59 pm (worth 30 points).


Student Question | Should We Think Twice Before Buying Online?

By MICHAEL GONCHAR  FEBRUARY 23, 2016 5:30 AM February 23, 2016 5:30 am Comment

With the click of a button, we can have almost anything delivered right to our front door — sneakers, toothpaste, even groceries. But what’s the environmental cost of all those home deliveries? The billions of discarded cardboard boxes and fleets of trucks zipping around neighborhoods?

Should we think twice before making online purchases?


In “E-Commerce: Convenience Built on a Mountain of Cardboard,” Matt Richtel writes:

Ruchit Garg, a Silicon Valley entrepreneur, says that he worries that something isn’t right with his Internet shopping habit. With each new delivery to his doorstep — sometimes several in a day — he faces the source of his guilt and frustration: another cardboard box.

Then, when he opens the shipment, he is often confronted with a Russian nesting doll’s worth of boxes inside boxes to protect his electronics, deodorant, clothing or groceries. Mr. Garg dutifully recycles, but he shared his concerns recently on Twitter.

A handful of scientists and policy makers are circling the same question, grappling with the long-term environmental effect of an economy that runs increasingly on gotta-have-it-now gratification. This cycle leads consumers to expect that even their modest wants can be satisfied like urgent needs, and not always feel so great about it.

The article continues:

The environmental cost can include the additional cardboard — 35.4 million tons of containerboard were produced in 2014 in the United States, with e-commerce companies among the fastest-growing users — and the emissions from increasingly personalized freight services.

“There’s a whole fleet of trucks circulating through neighborhoods nonstop,” said Dan Sperling, the founding director of the Institute of Transportation Studies at the University of California, Davis, and the transportation expert on the California Air Resources Board. He also is overseeing a new statewide task force of trucking companies and government officials trying to reduce overall emissions from freight deliveries, including for e-commerce.

Dr. Sperling said that consumers shared as much responsibility for the environmental cost of the deliveries as the companies that provided the speedy services.

“From a sustainability perspective, we’re heading in the wrong direction,” he said.

After reading the article, Jamie Gleklen and Robert Schwartz, two members of our new Student Council, wondered: In what ways does the Internet hurt and help the environment? How can we balance convenience with environmental consciousness? And do we have a duty to look after the environment if companies already say that they are working on it?

Students: Read the article, then tell us …

— How much do you shop online? How about your family?

— Have you ever thought about the environmental impact of buying things online? Is it something we should worry about? Should we think twice before making online purchases?

— Are there times when shopping in a brick-and-mortar store makes more sense than buying online, or vice versa? Why?

— Do you have any ideas about how the e-commerce industry and consumers can make online shopping a more sustainable practice? Explain.

1 comment:

  1. Almost all the people I know have shop online and it would be for shows, cloths, phone cases and other things. Have you ever wonder why they put so many paper or boxes inside boxes? Well Matt Richtel does well we know it helps protect what we buy but it's also not good because it affects the ecosystem. How many trees do you think they have cut down to protect what you buy, well maybe one but the one tree is one less tree for use to breath in. We can't live without no trees but if we stop or shop right we can save the trees and our ecosystem. I am now changing my style of shopping online if I shop 5 times a week now I only shop 1 times a months and only for somethings. Some people buy things they don't need and they just buy for no reason and it might hurt their piggy bank but it's also hurting the ecosystem without them knowing. For some people it's good to buy online because they can't fine whatever they're looking in a store and it's fine because first they try to find it them self on stores they went out to look for it before ordering online. It's better to look in stores first because they don't have to use too much things to protect your fragile things and even tho they give you something to protect it it's less paper then when you order. Me as a citizen I don't know that much on how the e-commerce industry works but what I do know it's that they're using a lot of paper to maintain things save when their ship which is good for the client but it's not good for our environment. The industry put our products save with something else besides paper and all them boxes.

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