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Anchorage Recycles
Stay current on what's happening in recycling around Anchorage. Several recycling organizations post regularly.
Plug at 20 Anchorage
Keep up with local events and cold-weather driving tips.
Bike to Work Anchorage
The bicycling community pedals into fall with events and trainings.
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| Thank You to our Sponsors | Thank you to all of our sponsors and donors for supporting Green Star.
Thanks ConocoPhillips for supporting Bike to Work Day!
Visit Our Sponsor List
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| Green Star Staff |
Kim Kovol Executive Director Josh Sherwood |
What's New
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Green Star's address is
333 W. 4th Avenue, Suite 310, Anchorage, AK 99501. PLEASE MAKE A NOTE! Several web listings that are beyond our control list out-of-date contact information for Green Star in Anchorage. |
Member Benefits
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Green Star offers benefits to its members beyond just energy savings and waste reduction. Many local businesses offer product and service discounts to Green Star members. Visit our Member Benefits page to learn more. |
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SHINING STARS
Happy New Year from everyone at Green Star!
Congratulations to the latest Green Star Award certified organization!Pearson's Pond's efforts were highlighted in an article "Pearson's Pond Inn Earns Green Star Certification" in the December 7, 2012, Juneau Empire Welcome to our most recent Green Star enrollees. We look forward to working with these organizations to help them achieve Green Star Award certification. - Cycle Alaska, Juneau
- Midnight Sun Environmental, LLC
- Northern Powerline Constructors, Inc.
Green Star has collected almost 3700 pounds of recyclables from downtown recycling bins since summer. Keep on recycling, Anchorage! This project is a collaboration with Green Star, Municipality of Anchorage Solid Waste Services, Anchorage Downtown Partnership, University of Alaska Anchorage student interns, Anchorage Recycling Center, and downtown businesses.
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EVENTS & REMINDERS
Find events on Green Star's web calendar.
Reminder to Green Star Members:
2013 membership/sponsorship notices have been sent. Look for your notice via email. Membership dues and sponsorship contributions allow us to continue to assist you and other local businesses in becoming more efficient and environmentally responsible workplaces.
REAP Clean Energy Lecture Series -- January 9

Renewable Energy Alaska Project (REAP) hosts FREE forums from 6 to 8pm on the 2nd Wednesday of every month from September to May at the Anchorage Museum auditorium, 625 C Street. Those who can't attend can listen via live podcast or download a podcast posted after the event.
Join REAP in January for "Alaska Energy Update." Chris Rose, Executive Director of Renewable Energy Alaska Project (REAP), will give an update on current energy projects, programs, and policy in Alaska. His presentation will include the outlook for future renewable energy and energy efficiency development in the state, and highlight REAP's education efforts for the 2013-2014 Legislative Session.
Visit http://alaskarenewableenergy.org/ for more information, to register for the lecture as a webinar, or to see a list of future lectures.
Biking Across America: a presentation by Steve Lindbeck -- January 10
Join Steve Lindbeck on Thursday, January 10, 7pm, at the Anchorage Museum Auditorium for a the story of his adventure. Have you ever wanted to do something kind of wild, like ride your bike across the country? Well, Steve Lindbeck did it. Come hear his story.
Alaska Beer Week -- January 11 - 20
Green Star will be participating in many of the beer week events and activities to make them Green Events! See the full article below for details.
Community Energy Lecture Series: "Which energy project is right for Fairbanks? An independent look at the numbers." -- January 15 Hosted by the Alaska Center for Energy and Power, this lecture series is held in the Fairbanks area but is web-streamed for anyone interested. See details below.
Several competing projects have been offered to provide energy cost relief to Fairbanks. Determining our community's best bet has been difficult as project projections are based on different assumptions made at different times. Join University of Alaska Fairbanks economist Antony Scott to see how these projects stack up on an "apples to apples" basis. Independent comparative analysis of a number of projects will be presented, including trucked natural gas; large, small and medium diameter natural gas pipelines from the North Slope to Fairbanks; coal to liquids technology; electricity from the Susitna dam; and North Slope generated electricity transmitted by High Voltage Direct Current. Where: The Blue Loon (2999 Parks Highway, Fairbanks)When: Tuesday, January 15, 2013, 6:00pm - 7:30pmPresenter: Antony Scott, Senior Economist and Policy Analyst, University of Alaska Fairbanks Out of town? This presentation will be web-streamed courtesy of UAF, Cooperative Extension Service. Find this and future lectures at this link: www.ustream.tv/user/ACEP_STREAM/shows ACEP is on Facebook: www.facebook.com/AlaskaCenterforEnergyandPower Annual Christmas Tree Recycling Drop-off -- December 28 - January 15  Drop off your tree at the clearly marked areas of Carrs parking lots in Anchorage, Eagle River, and Palmer between Friday, December 28, and Tuesday, January 15.
Be sure to remove all lights, ornaments, tree stands, tinsel, and plastic bags before leaving your tree. No wreathes are accepted because they have wires in them. The trees are processed into wood chips and used for trail cover, erosion control, and mulch by local nonprofits and government agencies. Boy Scout Troop 268 will pick up trees for a small donation. Call 868-8899. Sponsored by ALPAR (Alaskans for Litter Prevention and Recycling), with support from Carrs and the Municipality of Anchorage Solid Waste Services.
Alaska Forum on the Environment -- February 4-8 Save the dates for the 15th annual AFE at the Dena'ina Convention Center. Visit www.akforum.org for details on sessions, speakers, films, trainings, and other components of this annual event.
 Anchorage to Zero Waste Guide -- Download the guide. Produced twice a year by the Municipality of Anchorage's Solid Waste Services, the guide is your definitive source for recycling information in Anchorage. The fall/winter issue includes information about winter water quality, heating with wood cleanly, and updated recycling, energy efficiency, and waste prevention information.
Alaska Materials Exchange. Don't forget to list your used items on the exchange or look there for items before going shopping. At any given time, you can find office furniture and supplies, chemicals, pallets, constructions materials and more. Visit AME for more information. |
ALASKA BEER WEEK WILL BE GREEN
Alaska Beer Week is January 11 - 20 and it includes dozens of events to celebrate beer in Alaska. Visit www.akbeerweek.com to see a list of events. You'll find more than 65 different events going on during Beer Week!! Just click on EVENTS and keep clicking through "older posts" to find all the events.
Many Beer Week events will be Green Events, which means they will have recycling available. Here are just a few highlights for the week:
January 17 is Green Star Posole Day at Midnight Sun Brewing Co. All Posole (that warm and wonderful Mexican stew) sales will be donated to Green Star. Green Star staff and board members will be there for lunch! January 18 & 19 is the Great Alaska Beer & Barley Wine Festival at the Egan Center. Green Star staff will be there with recycling bins and lots of giveaways. Midnight Sun Brewing will have a drawing from names of folks signing up for Green Star's E-News. They'll be giving away cases of Midnight Sun beer!Don't forget that glass bottles are recyclable in Anchorage again so keep that in mind during Beer Week! Drop off glass bottles and jars 24/7 at the Anchorage Recycling Center on Rosewood Street. Note: Please do not place glass in curbside recycling carts.
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ALASKA ZOMBIES WERE A BIG HIT
The Zombie Apocalypse Winter Bike Ride, held on December 15, made a big impact, not only in Anchorage, but nationally and even internationally! The ride was recognized on several top national and international bicycling blogs and web sites.
This is exactly what Green Star hoped to accomplish with the race -- increase awareness of winter biking as a sport and an alternative method of commuting. It's not just for zombies -- anyone can do it!
Green Star wishes to thank everyone involved once again for all of your continued support. This was a group effort and we were wildly successful!! Can't wait to do it again soon! Visit the Green Star Facebook page for lots more gruesome photos.
People for Bikeshttp://www.peopleforbikes.org/blog/entry/cities_encourage_citizens_to_keep_riding_through_the_winter
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MEMBER MOMENT -- CONOCOPHILLIPS SAVES WITH NEW LIGHT BULBS
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A maintenance-free 28-watt LED fixture designed for walk-in coolers and freezers.
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According to ConocoPhillips Alaska's Alpine Environmental Coordinators, the company recently implemented one more small initiative to continue its steps toward becoming even more efficient.
At Alpine, staff changed out the light bulbs in two large walk-in freezers. The bulbs were switched from incandescent bulbs to Phillips A19 LED bulbs. These are the second generation LED bulbs. The bulbs were changed out six months ago and so far none have needed to be replaced. The average life span of these bulbs is 30,000 hours. Previously, staff was changing out two to three incandescent bulbs per month per freezer.
The switch has resulted in a savings of $1,800 per year in labor and $144 per year in bulbs, for a total savings of $1,944 per year. Since ConocoPhillips supplies its own electricity, it is not clear what the additional savings might have been if the cost of electricity were factored in. And staff likes the bright light the new LEDS provide!
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HOLIDAY RECYCLE PROGRAM RESULTS
 During the last three home games of 2012, the Alaska Aces, in conjunction with the Municipality of Anchorage Solid Waste Services (SWS), Green Star, Total Reclaim, ALPAR, Alaska Waste, and Rock Tenn Recycling, offered fans the opportunity to recycle both paper gift wrap and boxes and small electronics. Volunteers from SWS, ALPAR, Green Star, Total Reclaim, and the community helped collect about eight roll cars of wrapping paper during the event. Quantities of electronics collected for recycling have not been tallied yet. Besides collecting material for recycling, the event raised awareness about the various recycling opportunities available in the Anchorage area. After talking with the volunteers staffing the recycling information table, one youth at the game with his parents exclaimed, "This is great! I need to get my family to recycle."
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HOW MANY TIMES CAN YOU RECYCLE A PIECE OF PAPER?
excerpted from an article by Brian Palmer, posted December 27, 2012, www.slate.com
A piece of paper can be recycled about five or six times, on average. At a recycling plant, paper is heated and chopped into tiny bits to make a pulp. During that process, each of the long fibers that characterize virgin paper has an approximately 20 percent chance of being cut into a strand that's too small to be useful to paper makers. (Short strands of wood fiber make extremely weak paper, and are suitable for newsprint or other applications in which quality is less important.)
In theory, a strand could survive the pulping process unscathed for 20, 30, or 100 rounds of recycling, but the odds suggest that a paper fiber only has about five lives.
Even if a paper fiber were to maintain its shape after several instances of recycling, it would still lose some of its virgin qualities. Paper that has been dried and then resoaked in water undergoes a process known as "hornification." The internal structures contract, causing the fiber to collapse slightly and lose structural integrity. Recyclers usually add virgin paper to a batch of recycled pulp to combat hornification.
In addition, paper fibers are often lost in the washing process that separates ink from paper. The paper's brightness also fades each time it is recycled, which is why some batches of earth-friendly paper have a slightly grayish hue. (On a more positive note, recycled paper often has better opacity than the more porcelain virgin version.)
Since paper loses quality after each recycling, there is a hierarchy that paper descends on its way toward retirement. The fibers that make up a piece of writing paper, for example, may be returned to a notepad if they maintain most of their good qualities. As they age, however, they typically are recycled into something less distinguished, like facial tissues, milk cartons, or toilet paper. The corrugated boxes that carried to your home Christmas presents purchased online will eventually become shoe boxes or cereal boxes.
There's a good chance you won't get to see your cardboard box's next life, no matter what form it takes after rising from the dead. Approximately 40 percent of U.S. waste paper is shipped abroad, often to China, which doesn't have enough forestland to feed the country's demand for paper. Waste for recycling is, in fact, the largest U.S. export to China, according to some experts. China's hunger for used paper is a good thing for recyclers. At times, the price of a ton of recyclable paper has dropped below $5, making the business nearly impossible without foreign demand and government requirements that paper contain a certain percentage of recycled content.
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Access past issues of E-News, sorted by topic or date. Please send comments, questions, or suggestions for future E-News topics to us at jeanne@greenstarinc.org. Forward this newsletter freely. Send us any email addresses you wish us to add to our mailing list. Thank you!
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