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The BITS sustainability model, defined.
 Image Credits: Windmills within BITS corporate sustainability montage "Sustain-Ability" within BITS sustainable business montage (light bulb plant growers) "Amazing Earth" within BITS sustainable business montage Art Credit: Don Forrester
Core tasks:
- Constant re-evaluation of our business methods.
- Reducing first-use materials.
- Researching source materials.
- Controlling our waste output.
- Reusing resources whenever possible
- Taking advantage of our municipal recycling facilities.
What this means in real-world terms:
- We recycle. ALL office trash, with minimal exception, is separated by paper/glass/metal/plastic and we make sure it goes to a service that recycles properly.
- We reuse. Office scraps become packing material. Boxes are saved and used for various projects. Most important of all -- pay attention if you're a Smart Strip owner -- we have a takeback program for our products, offering free shipping; repairing the products if possible and reselling at cost or at a slight loss.
- We never just throw away Smart Strip parts, or any of our product parts. We reuse them, store them or destroy them in an environmentally responsible manner.
- All office lights are CFLs or LEDs. Even our shop torches. We have a few incandescents for product development testing purposes only.
- Overall paper usage is at least 70% post-consumer waste.
- All ink is soy-based. Both in-office and in the printers we hire.
- Our energy use is, of course, heavily managed. Computers and lights turned off, central air is on a timer and there are Smart Strips everywhere. Yes, we definitely use our own products.
- We vet our material sources. If they're from another country such as China, we go there firsthand and make certain the workers are treated fairly. While it's not necessarily sustainable, it matters to us.
What we've got planned for the future:
- Geothermal energy - simply running water through an underground pipe can conserve up to 40% of our warehouse energy usage in our estimates. Bruce Barton has already done studies on his home (digging some DEEP holes to do it) and is prepared to build the system for our warehouse.
- Solar panels - we don't have those yet. We plan to eventually; Bruce is looking into it.
- We're open to suggestions. Have one?
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88 percent of the total mercury and half of the total cadmium in the municipal solid waste stream comes from discarded batteries.
621.2 tons of household batteries were disposed of (not recycled) in 1989. That’s twice the amount thrown out in 1970, and was nearly doubled again in 1995.
Why is this important?
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Are you getting ready to throw out your cellphone? Stop. That cellphone is worth its weight (almost) in precious metals. As of this writing, gold is at $838/oz. And your phone has gold inside it. For every ton of cellphones, recyclers can extract 150 grams of gold (or more), 100kg of copper, 3 kg of silver, and all of it with 99% purity... compare that to 3 less pure grams for a ton of earth at a normal gold mine.
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If you want to know how BITS feels about 'Going Green', read this. We explain what we think green technology is, and we talk about the ways people approach the issue.
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