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Cruisin’ Green

by ecodebbieg on April 17, 2009

in Uncategorized




Cruisin’

Originally uploaded by M+M

Over the next few months I’ll be working with my daughter to plan her wedding. The grand plan includes a seven day cruise to the Eastern Caribbean. Surprisingly, but with gratitude, she has invited the entire family to join her on this amazing adventure. As a travel agent, I know the carbon footprint left by a cruise ship, but I also love to cruise. I began to wonder, is there a cruise line that would support my belief about reducing our negative impact on the earth?

I was delighted to discover Costa Cruises (which partners with Carnival Cruise Line) and their “Green Fleet”. Costa was the first cruise company to be awarded the voluntary “Green Star” notation for its entire fleet by RINA, an Italian shipping certification agency (Costa is an Italian based fleet). The rating was based on corporate compliance with the highest international standards for social accountability, environmental protection, workplace health, safety and quality. Since a cruise is, without question, in this wedding’s future, I decided this cruise line would allow us to honor my daughter’s plan while staying true to a desire to travel as responsibly as possible.

The “Green Star” designation certifies that Costa ships do not damage the environment and that they contribute to keeping the air and the sea clean. It also means that they comply with the highest standards in environmental protection for prevention against pollution of the air and the sea, going beyond regulations required by the international MARPOL standards in use. These standards assign ships a series of technical and managerial requisites that contribute to the safeguarding of the environment. The special “Green Star design” however, is only given to ships that, from the very first planning stage, are designed to guarantee maximum respect for the environment.

The “Green Star,” RINA also awarded the company “B.E.S.T. 4” status, a system of voluntary certification attesting to the best international standards in terms of social accountability . Furthermore, as a means to best manage various environmental issues, in 2002 Costa Cruises established the Environmental Compliance Division to oversee environmental protection and compliance with related international legislation, appointing an official on board each ship specifically to help in this task. Costa Cruises’ environmental protection program is outlined in its Environmental Compliance Plan (ECP), a manual that integrates perfectly with the safety management and pollution prevention system.

In addition, since July 2005, Costa has supported the World Wildlife Fund (WWF) for the protection of three of the most endangered marine Ecoregions in the world including areas of the Mediterranean Sea, the Greater Antilles and Northeastern Brazil. Targeted operations to assist these regions are carried out by WWF Italy via the generous donations of Costa guests and the company. Costa also provides its guests with informative and educational onboard material to highlight WWF’s efforts, including information for children who participate in Squok Club activities.

As an added bonus, we were able to book cabins at just $399 for the entire seven days!

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Summer

Originally uploaded by Katarina 2353

Being the anti-tourist this year could help you travel green.

By Elizabeth Seward
New York, NY, USA | Fri Apr 10 16:30:00 EDT 2009

As the warmer months are breaking on us, the road trip will surface, as it does every year, to monopolize sunny weekends. Of course I’d kindly suggest you bicycle, kayak, or walk your way around fun spots this spring and summer, but I’m no fool. I understand that no matter how green you are, you might still want to use your car for a road trip this year—regardless of whether or not your car is green. And that’s totally fine. Caring about the environment doesn’t put me in the business of never ever using cars and your green lifestyle doesn’t need to be so excruciatingly extreme, either. But here’s a green tip for this spring and summer which will, I’d wager a bet on it, yield more interesting and possibly more green experiences for you and your family and friends: try to avoid ultra touristy spots.

Sure, there’s a reason why places like the Grand Canyon and Niagara Falls are popular: they’re beautiful. And there’s a reason why places like Times Square and Disney World are popular: they’re fun. But you can find beautiful and fun places while exploring this year that aren’t tainted by anti-green mass-merchandising giants. Bringing your kids into a gift shop at one of these major tourist spots could easily doom you to a long wait at the cash register, waiting to buy something plastic (think: Mickey Mouse ears, puffy taxi cab toy, Grand Canyon snow globe…). Trekking off to somewhere touristy and congested can yield some other not-so-green circumstances: wasting gas in traffic, buying bottled water because all water fountains are conveniently extinct or hidden, disturbing wildlife (even if you don’t mean to)—you get the point.

Why not hunt down some anti-tourist spots this year if you’re going to road trip? Find a remote beach to clean up. Dine at a more-or-less unknown restaurant—the kind that uses fresh organic and local food. Grab some drinks at an under-the-radar brewery in order to avoid drinking transported beer for a night.

I’m not saying you can’t be green at a touristy spot—and by no means am I saying that all non-touristy spots are green. What I am saying is…consider your options. Thinking outside the regular tourist box may not only help you travel without so much anxiety, but it may also help you travel a bit more green if approached correctly. Want some ideas on not-so-touristy spots to visit? Check out my site, The Anti Tourist, http://www.theantitourist.com

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