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Posts Tagged ‘Environment’

Green Business Exhibition

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Would you like to green up your supply chain? Get to know who in Essex is greener, who is sustainable and who you would like to do business with at this great event.

  • Would you like to meet environmental service companies that operate in the Basildon District?
  • Would you like to shop around for recycling or waste carrier companies?
  • Need help with green transport or reducing your energy costs?
  • Need help with promoting your green credentials?
  • Like to do business with other environmentally aware companies?

You can do all of the above by attending the Environmental Service
Providers Market Place event on July 13 at 1400h at the Basildon Holiday
Inn hotel, SS14 3DG.

It is free to attend. The event will start at 1400h with a short presentation from the Environment Agency about their support for businesses followed by a talk from Envirowise about the importance of green procurement.

Attendees will then be able to visit the stands of the 30 exhibiting green companies.

Refreshments will be provided.

This event is organised by the Basildon Green Business Forum in
conjunction with the Federation of Small Businesses, the Environment
Agency and Envirowise.

To register to attend please go to website
http://www.fsb.org.uk/default.aspx?id=180&loc=101 and fill in your details
or contact Keith Brown at keith.brown@fsb.org.uk

All enquiries regarding exhibiting to Keith Smith or Colin Stroud at
green.business@basildon.gov.uk Tel: 01268 294294.

Here is a list of the 30 exhibiting companies as of April 22, 2009:-
Abby Couriers (use of electric vehicles)
Ahern waste management
Arrow Light Haulage (yes, thats us :) )
Asbestos Central
Basildon Green Business Forum
Basildon ITEC
BioTekNiks 100% IT recycling services
E&B Waste
Eastex, waste exchange
Enigin, energy saving solutions
EnviroComms, marketing communication agency working exclusively in the
environmental sector
Environment Agency
Envirowise
Essex & East London Van Services Ltd
Events Matter
FAT Management Ltd, waste solutions
Federation of Small Businesses
Hailstone Travel
LowC Energy Services Ltd
Morgan Cass
Organisation for Responsible Businesses
RAMAR
RDC, IT Equipment Disposal, Remarketing and Redeployment
Rentokil/Initial
Scott Wilson
Severnside Recycling (Basildon)
Simons Bus
TBU Solutions, Commercial Utility Advisors
The Eco Patch
Viridor (Thames Waste)

Contact Colin Stroud and Keith Smith from the Basildon Green Business Forum 01268 294294 / 07703 582368

The Basildon Green Business Forum can help you with any environmental
issues. Help is entirely free. Please contact  Colin or Keith for more
information.

Sarah

Greener transport and deliveries in Essex

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Silent Deliveries – Shhh!

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I have just read an article in the Telegraph about Sainsbury’s issuing guidance to it’s delivery drivers in the Cambridge area.

Drivers have been told to “keep conversation to a minimum” and “speak softly” while unloading cages and other goods.

Slamming truck doors has also been banned, while vehicle gear changes must be carried out as quietly as possible.

Engine revs must be kept to a minimum and drivers have been asked to accelerate gently until they are out of earshot.

The measures were introduced at a store in March, Cambridgeshire, in a bid to extend its weekday delivery times from 6pm to 10pm.

Sainsbury’s bosses hope the tactic will convince Fenland District Council to give the application the green light.

But local residents claim the instructions are a “cynical ploy” which will end if the firm’s proposal is passed.

source;  The Telegraph

This isnt the actual drivers that carry out the home deliveries but the drivers that deliver the goods into Sainsbury’s itself.

The residents have a right to be concerned, engine noise does carry and good planting around the delivery bays can do a lot to absorb the noise. Better still would be to tranship the goods into the stores in smaller less noisy vans, but that will cost more.

Buffers on the doors so they can be shut without slamming is a step in the right direction, it would be good to have the loading areas in a different direction from the residential area, but it’s too late for that now.  Reducing noise emissions by modifying or filtering the source of that noise is a good way of dealing with noise pollution. Exhausts, gear changes and engine noise can all be reduced this way.

What about measures to obstruct the path of noise  such as screens and enclosures?  What are the measures to protect the public from noise?  Double or triple glazing can make a big difference when it comes to music and radio.

Sainsbury’s and the residents can work together and make this so that planning permission can go ahead. Planting isnt the only  able to absorb noise It absorbs air pollutants too. If the radios’s / music in the warehouse are carrying then it’s double glazing or don’t turn it on; I know it’s not exciting to work in  a warehouse and the radio is a welcome background noise. There has to be solutions and compromises that don’t result in drivers having to whisper! If done correctly no one will have to ‘go back on their word’. It will also help Sainsbury’s with their carbon footprint, to be greener isn’t just about air pollution and how many miles an item travels from store to door.

Sarah

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