Toronto Star

How to ease your vacation’s carbon footprint

Eco-experts offer advice to sunseekers about sustainabl­e measures

- CASSANDRA SZKLARSKI THE CANADIAN PRESS

TORONTO— It was a recent trip to Australia during the country’s devastatin­g wildfires that got Paul Winston thinking seriously about changing his globetrott­ing habits.

The Victoria doctor says he came back from this past Christmas holiday wondering about the impact his own travels have on the environmen­t, convinced that the terrifying bush fires are linked to the climate crisis.

Frequent travel is a profession­al necessity for Winston. It got him researchin­g whether to buy carbon offset credits to alleviate his carbon dioxide emissions.

“A few years ago I wouldn’t have even thought about it. And (now) you feel, ‘Gosh, what’s my role in this?’” Winston says.

Winston says it’s also hard to know whether specific offset credits align with his own ecogoals, and he’s worried about sharing personal details on online emissions calculator­s.

Eco-experts encourage travellers to consider less impactful modes and keep those trips closer to home.

Toronto eco-warrior Helen Melbourne advises sunseekers to think carefully about what sustainabl­e measures they’re willing to commit to.

“You tend to overdo it and then stop doing it because it’s too difficult,” says Melbourne, creative director of Creative Reuse Toronto. “I’d certainly rather see people accomplish a bit at a time and keep the pattern going and growing.”

Here’s a look at some tips to lighten your vacation footprint.

Enlist your flight (or train) attendant

So you’ve refrained from buying airport snacks by bringing your own and filled your reusable water bottle at the gate after passing security, but the onslaught of single-use plastics is far from over.

Emily Alfred, the waste campaigner for the Toronto Environmen­tal Alliance, says don’t be shy about handing your reusable bottle or Thermos to a flight attendant when they take drink orders, while Melbourne suggests bringing silicone straws, cloth napkins and a wet bag to store reusable items that will need to be washed later.

“There’s a lot of single-use waste that is just not necessary.

So if we can bring a few lightweigh­t reusables, that really helps,” Alfred says.

Those reusable supplies, along with reusable cutlery and food containers, will come in handy once you land and find yourself eating out more than usual, adds blogger Tara McKenna of TheZeroWas­teCollecti­ve.com.

She suggests making a “zerowaste kit” that includes everything you need in a grab-and-go pack — don’t forget dish soap.

Pack light Backpackin­g isn’t for everyone, but reducing your luggage even a little bit will reduce the load that trains, planes, and vehicles have to carry, and thereby the fuel they use, Melbourne says.

“The weight of the luggage is one of the biggest things that is adding to environmen­tal degradatio­n because of the need for extra fuel when you carry more,” she says. “This is one of the reasons that the airlines have started (making) it obvious what the charges are for carrying a lot of stuff.”

Still, Melbourne will bring her own soap, shampoo and other toiletries to avoid more plastic packaging ending up in the trash at hotels. Alfred suggests packing reusable bags in case you go grocery shopping, but if you forget, consider buying a reusable cloth bag from a local business or designer that doubles as a practical souvenir.

Photos are a great souvenir, she adds, but do not take rocks, or other natural keepsakes.

“That is actually environmen­tally really destructiv­e because of all the micro-organisms that depend on those shells to actually survive on a beach. And you may be picking up things where the shell itself might actually be an endangered species.”

The nuts and bolts on carbon credits Organizati­ons like Less make it easy to offset flight impacts by curating a list of domestic and foreign projects that meet either internatio­nal or Canadian certificat­ion standards. The company has partnered with Air Canada to allow travellers to calculate and buy offsets after they book their flight, and an annual external audit assures buyers that everything is on the up-and-up, says Christine Carter, regional sales director of parent company Bullfrog Power.

Carter says demand for offsets has risen dramatical­ly in the past year thanks to Swedish teen activist Greta Thunberg.

Carbon offsets work by supporting projects that reduce the same amount of emissions that would be caused by travel, essentiall­y neutralizi­ng the environmen­tal impact of that specific trip. That could include a wind or solar farm, or tree planting. But the David Suzuki Foundation says tree-planting is problemati­c because it doesn’t address fossil fuel dependence and other critics question the amount of carbon that even massive tree farms could absorb.

A paper by the David Suzuki Foundation and the Pembina

Institute recommends projects with gold standard certificat­ion, which are considered to be the highest standard in the world for carbon offsets. That’s not to say Canadian projects certified by the CSA group are not as good, adds Tom Green, a foundation policy analyst in Vancouver.

“They are subject to Canadian law and regulation­s,” Green says. “So if there was any attempt to sell offsets fraudulent­ly, or anything like that, you will be in a much better position for that to be detected and for measures to be taken.”

An alternativ­e way to offset The problem with offsets is that until the project gets off the ground, real harm is being done to the planet by the trip you just took, Green says.

“The project that you may invest in may take some time to sequester an equivalent amount of carbon,” he says.

“We know for sure that those emissions from your flight are going into the atmosphere. We don’t have 100 per cent confidence that the offsets are going to be durable. For instance, we could have a jurisdicti­on where there’s a change in government and you know, something happens or there’s major ... change in policy.”

It’s why he considers offsets the third-best response to dealing with flight emissions. The best tack is to reduce air travel by video-conferenci­ng, grouping trips together, or by taking fewer vacations and staying longer, he says.

His second-best strategy is to press business and government for better climate policies.

 ?? RICK RYCROFT THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Paul Winston, from Victoria, recently came back from Australia wondering about the effect his travels have on the environmen­t.
RICK RYCROFT THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO Paul Winston, from Victoria, recently came back from Australia wondering about the effect his travels have on the environmen­t.

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