With the Jewish New Year (Rosh Hashanah) coming up this week, many of us are reflecting on the past year and making resolutions for the next. These resolutions may include ways to treat ourselves better, ways to be better to those around us, and ways to make a more positive impact on our surroundings.
Making a green resolution is a way to do all of those things at once. Need help thinking of one? Here are just a few ideas to get you started:
Make your own… fill in the blank. Make your own tomato sauce, grow your own vegetables, craft your own gifts, sew your own clothes and for those adventurous ones out there – make your own energy by building a solar oven. Making your own saves precious fossil fuels and reduces waste, but you can also look at it as an opportunity to fuel your creativity.
Buy local, handmade and recycled. If you must buy, buy something that is local, handmade, and that has been given a second (or third, or fourth, or fifth) life. Local food is a given, and if it can be as local as your window sill or backyard then all the better. But what about everything else? Need some notebooks from school? A new sweater? A gift for someone? Be conscious of your choices and of the impact that your consumerism makes. If you need help finding things that fit these categories, try looking locally on Etsy or shopping Etsy’s ecoetsy category. (The above pomegranates, handmade out of upcycled plastic yarn, were created by Israeli Etsy seller LIMITZ – stay tuned next week for a feature on her upcycled designs.)
Israel was the only Middle East representation to make the new Global Cleantech 100 list, and according to the survey 5 companies made the cut.


