Act: Inspiration

Avoiding Excess this Festive Season

December 14, 2018

This article focuses on Christmas but of course many people don’t celebrate this festival. You can apply the same thinking to your big annual festival, be it New Year, Diwali, Eid, Solstice, Vaisakhi, Hannukah, Thanksgiving or another festival.

A ‘traditional’ Christmas is a perfect storm of carbon consumption: excessive shopping, long distance travel, lots of meat eating, buckets of food waste, mountains of packaging waste, unwanted gifts that go straight to landfill, and energy-hungry fairy lights. All of this can add up to between 3% and 10% of your annual carbon emissions in a single day.

But if we unpick that word ‘traditional’ we find that Christmas was originally about family and friends getting together, a day out of the business of normal life, time to play games and make music, gifts that would be treasured all year, communities coming together in shared celebration, care and thought for those less fortunate than ourselves. And aren’t those the things what we all want at Christmas?

Christmas puts a big strain on our carbon budgets, our wallets and our stress levels. So why not try a low-carbon, low-budget, low-stress Christmas? It might actually be more fun.

1 Million Women have calculated what would happen if we reduced our Christmas waste by just 1 kilogram per person. “If a million people did that, we could save approximately 10 billion litres of water waste (that’s 4000 Olympic swimming pools), prevent 8 million kgs of carbon dioxide pollution (growing a forest of approx. 45,000 trees) … and we would collectively save millions of dollars!”

Ideas for a low-carbon, low budget, low waste, low-stress Christmas

Don’t agonise about trying to get every gram of carbon out of Christmas. Instead, think about the things that make a big impact. Maybe start with one of these suggestions and then add one more each year. Or do them all at once; friends and family may be delighted to do it differently this year.

Travel

Stay close to home. Instead of crossing the country, think about who you know locally that you could share Christmas Day with. If you really want to get a far flung family together, choose a host location that reduces total travelling distances. If you’re travelling between big cities, ride share. Avoid flying (Santa is an exception: he’s carbon free).

Food

Plan carefully and avoid excess shopping, especially foods with a short shelf life. Swap some of your meat dishes for a plant-based option. Freeze leftover meat for use later. Learn a few simple leftover recipes, like turkey curry or sprout hash.

Presents

Make DIY gifts like home-baked cakes or homemade toys. Buy second hand gifts like books or vintage fashion. Set a maximum present budget. We all like surprises, but as 30% of presents are unwanted, maybe check first. Ask for the present you really want. Give money or vouchers so people can choose their own gifts. Give tickets to a musical/ theater/ cinema/ concert/ stand-up show. Buy high quality, ethically-sourced stuff that will last. If buying gadgets, choose energy efficient. Give to charity instead.

Read this article, Help! I Don’t Want More Stuff for Christmas, to learn about how to say “no”.

Decorations

Choose LED fairy lights (they use 15% of the energy of traditional lights), and switch them off when you’re out or asleep. Make your own decorations out of scrap paper. Avoid fan-powered yard inflatables. Instead of filling your house with battery-operated lights or animated gadgets, consider simple wreaths, ribbons and bells. Buy a living Christmas tree, plant it afterwards, and reuse it next year; or, decorate some driftwood or a fallen branch.

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This #seasonsgreentings guide has many more suggestions.

Some suggestions for a really different Christmas

  • Invite isolated neighbours to Christmas lunch
  • Make all your presents
  • Do the whole thing on 20% of last year’s budget
  • Volunteer at a homeless shelter or food bank

  • Go out all day for a walk/bike ride/surf
  • Give gifts like tree planting, charity membership, an acre of rainforest or a goat for the Global South
  • Arrange with all your guests to give second-hand gifts only.

Whatever you decide to do, we wish you a Happy Low Carbon Celebration!

 

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Chris Warburton Brown

Chris Warburton Brown is the Research Director of the Permaculture Association.

My job involves responding to general research enquiries, supporting researchers and students who contact the PA, leading the Information for Action on Climate Change project, project managing the PA’s contribtion to the GROW Observatory project, coordinating the Permaculture International Research Network, up-dating and maintaining the Permaculture Research Digest, developing the Association’s on-line Knowledge Base, supporting volunteer interns, fund-raising for my post and for projects and developing and delivering specific research projects for the Association.


Tags: anti-consumerism, powering down