| Travel
Light: 5 Tips on Planning an Eco-Friendlier Trip
Five
easy tips to help you reduce the impact you make and stay guilt-free
when you take your next vacation. By Wendy Worral Redal
Anxious to make summer travel
plans without turning your back on the Earth? Travel-related activities
contribute an estimated third of worldwide greenhouse gas emissions
— so we asked travel experts at eco-tour outfitter Natural
Habitat Adventures in Boulder, Colo., for their advice on how to
help fight global warming and be a cool traveler. They offered five
easy ways to avoid making your next vacation a guilt trip:
1) Stay neutral: Going the group
tour route? Check for green credentials. Increasingly, travel outfitters
like Natural Habitat Adventures are bolstering an ongoing commitment
to sustainable travel by going carbon neutral. Natural Habitat Adventures
reduces its carbon emissions with programs that include recycling
and renewable energy use, then buys offsets to make up the difference
– guaranteeing carbon neutral trips for its guests. Other
carbon-neutral outfitters include O.A.R.S., REI Adventure and Escape
Adventure. Traveling on your own? Organizations like Sustainable
Travel International will help you calculate and offset trip emissions;
major online travel companies Travelocity and Expedia also offer
travelers offsetting options when they make reservations.
2) Chart a green course: New eco-maps
chart the natural and cultural environment to suggest low-impact
activities and resources wherever you travel. Green Map System provides
“green” maps of some 302 spots around the globe, with
most recent offerings ranging from Missoula, Montana, to 17 new
Taiwanese maps.
3) Train yourself: Europe isn’t
the only place worth traveling by train. Check into train or bus
options wherever you travel; railroad shuttles up and down the U.S.
Eastern Seaboard are particularly quick and convenient. And if you
do end up driving, keep your car well-tuned and tires properly inflated
to pollute less – and cut gas costs up to 15 percent.
4) Fuel for thought: Committed to
a road trip? Try to buy gas from a more environmentally responsible
oil company: The Sierra Club recently updated its "Pick Your
Poison" guide to gasoline; two companies, BP and Sunoco, continue
to receive its "top of the barrel" rating. Better yet,
buy or rent a hybrid or bio-fuel car. While mainstream rental companies
continue to increase eco-friendly offerings — Hertz recently
began offering its "Green Collection" — the few
truly green rental companies are prospering and expanding. EV Rental
Cars and Fox Rent A Car regularly offer hybrid rentals, and Bio-Beetle
Eco Rental Cars offers bio-fueled vehicles. Or consider hybrid car-sharing
through a service like Flexcar. Whatever your vehicle choice, consider
joining eco-friendly auto club Better World Club, which offers discounts
on hybrid cars and eco-travel — and even roadside assistance
for bicycles.
5) In transit: If you do fly, eschew
individual cabs in favor of public transit or a hotel shuttle to
and from the airport. Or try hailing a hybrid cab: San Francisco,
New York and Chicago all have added hybrid taxis to their fleets,
mainly Ford Escape Hybrids, while the Brits recently introduced
the new lower-emission diesel TX4 taxi in London. And the first
hybrid taxi service, PlanetTran, continues to serve airports in
greater Boston and the Bay area by prior reservation. While you’re
visiting another city, remember to plan your day around walking
destinations or the city’s public transit options. |