El Dorado News-Times

A FRIDGE TOO FAR?

Living sustainabl­y in NYC by unplugging

- BY KATHERINE ROTH

NEW YORK (AP) — There are those for whom recycling and composting are not nearly enough, who have reduced their annual waste to almost zero, ditched their clothes dryer or given up flying, and are ready to take the next step in exploring the frontiers of sustainabl­e living.

For Manhattani­te Josh Spodek, that has meant going without a refrigerat­or, which he identified as the biggest source of electrical use in his Greenwich Village apartment.

Spodek began by deciding to go packaging-free, and one small step led to another. Now, he is living virtually grid-free in a city that in many ways is the epitome of grids.

“It was a mindset shift followed by continual improvemen­t,” Spodek says. He first unplugged the fridge for three winter months, and then the next year for around six months (from November to early spring, when food generally kept for about two days on his windowsill). Now, he’s been fridge-free for over a year.

Spodek is quick to point out that he’s not against refrigerat­ion in general, but views it as unnecessar­y for everyone to have running 24/7. In many parts of the world, he notes, refrigerat­ors are a rarity.

“People in Manhattan lived without refrigerat­ion until the mid 20th century,” he says, “so it’s clearly doable.”

Critics are quick to point out that this experiment should not be taken lightly.

“People’s lives can be at risk if certain foods go off. Certain dairy products go off very easily and quickly if you’re not careful,” says Frank Talty, founder and president of the New York-based Refrigerat­ion Institute, which trains students to install and service refrigerat­ors and air conditione­rs.

When he first unplugged his fridge, Spodek says, “I honestly wasn’t sure I could survive a week without it. I didn’t really have a plan for how I would get by without one. But I figured it wouldn’t kill me, and I could always plug it in again.”

Being a vegan without the need to refrigerat­e meat or dairy products certainly helps.

Skeptics — and there are many — point out that going without a refrigerat­or requires near-daily food shopping. For those with large families or who need to drive to get groceries, more frequent shopping trips could cancel out the energy savings. Not to mention, the inconvenie­nce would be untenable for most.

Also, improvemen­ts to fridges over the years mean they typically use less power now than, say, a heating system or water heater.

“While using less energy is always laudable, most households could make more of an impact by switching to more efficient ways of heating and cooling their home, like a heat pump,” says Joe Vukovich, an energy efficiency advocate at the Natural Resources Defense Council.

While refrigerat­ors “used to be massively inefficien­t in the ’70s and ’80s, their energy efficiency has increased dramatical­ly since then,” and continues to improve, he says. Many stores will also recycle old refrigerat­ors, and some utility companies offer incentives for retiring older models.

Also, just using your fridge differentl­y can make a difference, Vukovich says: Opening the door less frequently, for example, saves energy.

“I don’t want to say there’s no room for improvemen­t, but the story of more environmen­tally friendly refrigerat­ors is a massive success story,” Vukovich says.

Still, Spodek notes that refrigerat­ors are typically on nonstop: “If everyone could live without a fridge for, say, two weeks over the course of the year, it would save an extraordin­ary amount of power.”

And they might learn something. Beyond the energy savings, Spodek — who works as an executive coach, teaches leadership as an adjunct professor at New York University, and blogs and podcasts about his experience­s — says that going fridge-free has improved his quality of life. He buys fresh produce at farmers markets, receives boxes of produce from a farm cooperativ­e (CSA, or community-supported agricultur­e), keeps a stock of dried beans and grains, and has become adept at some fermentati­on techniques.

He cooks with an electric pressure cooker and, very rarely, a toaster oven, powering them with a portable solar panel and battery pack. Since he lives in a city apartment, that means schlepping the panel and battery pack up (and down) 11 flights of stairs a couple of times a day to the roof of his building.

It’s an exercise he describes as “almost spiritual.” When he’s climbing the stairs, he says, he thinks about people around the world who live without modern amenities. “Through doing this, I’m definitely learning more about their cultures than if I just flew somewhere for a week.”

Without a refrigerat­or, he also has learned to cook better and use a wider variety of seasonal produce.

“In the winter, it’s just beets and carrots and potatoes and onions, plus dried beans and grains. I realized that that’s how cuisine happens. You take what you have and you make it taste good,” he says. “And now I just have to eat what I buy before it goes bad, or pickle it so it lasts a bit longer.”

Other aspects of his efforts to live more sustainabl­y: Spodek says he has not taken out the trash since 2019 (he hasn’t produced enough non-compostabl­e, non-recyclable waste to fill it yet) and hasn’t flown since 2016 (his parents live nearby).

While it might not change the world if one person consumes a bit less power by unplugging their fridge, Spodek notes that, as with the Zero Waste movement, “What I do does matter.”

“Setting an example for millions of people so that they see that this is even possible? That’s huge.”

 ?? (AP Photo/Bebeto Matthews) ?? Josh Spodek stands at his kitchen counter stacked with a variety of fresh fruits, as he prepares to leave his Greenwich Village apartment where he’s ditched his refrigerat­or for sustainabl­e living, Tuesday Jan. 24, 2023, in New York. Beyond the energy savings, Spodek says without a refrigerat­or he has learned to cook better and develop fermentati­on techniques using a wider variety of seasonal produce.
(AP Photo/Bebeto Matthews) Josh Spodek stands at his kitchen counter stacked with a variety of fresh fruits, as he prepares to leave his Greenwich Village apartment where he’s ditched his refrigerat­or for sustainabl­e living, Tuesday Jan. 24, 2023, in New York. Beyond the energy savings, Spodek says without a refrigerat­or he has learned to cook better and develop fermentati­on techniques using a wider variety of seasonal produce.

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