View Full Version : What did you do for Earth Hour?
Lotz-A-Landies
31st March 2012, 09:10 PM
I'm really excited by this Earth Hour, just to show how enthusiastic we were at our house, we turned on all the lights in the house so that people on other planets could see how well were doing here on Earth!
Then we had a TV or computer on in every room so that we could monitor what the rest of Australia was doing.
What did you do?
tomalophicon
31st March 2012, 09:49 PM
WTF is earth hour?
Homestar
31st March 2012, 09:50 PM
When was Earth Hour? Didn't hear anything about it this year - thought it had fizzled out... If it was earlier tonight, I was sitting in my spa watching the telly, and drinking a cold beer from my beer fridge. My bad????
ramblingboy42
31st March 2012, 09:52 PM
its a bit like daylight saving.....no one has a bloody clue why they do it.....except us Queenslanders.....who dont. Make sense?
Homestar
31st March 2012, 09:57 PM
its a bit like daylight saving.....no one has a bloody clue why they do it.....except us Queenslanders.....who dont. Make sense?
Let's not turn this into a Daylight Savings thread - we understand it perfectly down here...:p:wasntme: and it does make sense...
tomalophicon
31st March 2012, 10:10 PM
And it's bloody ending tonight!
The ho har's
31st March 2012, 10:13 PM
again what is earth hour??
George130
31st March 2012, 10:16 PM
Earth hour - Save the earth by switching of all the leci gadgets in your house for 1 hour. Me I did nothing for earth hour.
The ho har's
31st March 2012, 10:20 PM
oh well my bad, it didn't happen here:)
Mrs hh:angel:
p38arover
31st March 2012, 10:23 PM
I'm really excited by this Earth Hour, just to show how enthusiastic we were at our house, we turned on all the lights in the house so that people on other planets could see how well were doing here on Earth!
Me, too!
Not only that, I turned on the lights in the garage and carport 'cos both have lots of skylights and the light could go upwards to all those out there looking down on Earth.
ramblingboy42
31st March 2012, 10:34 PM
its got something to do with a swarm of insects and a bloke breaks the light cord and burns his fingers trying to remove the globe.....I saw it on telly.....dont you guys take any notice?
isuzutoo-eh
31st March 2012, 10:37 PM
Left the lights and tv on, drove a stinky diesel (with headlights on) to a friend's house to have hot food, cold drinks and watch tv with sound through a stereo.
But i did sort my recyclables from the rubbish this arvo!
SMASH
31st March 2012, 10:41 PM
well i was in the shed polishin my car with all the lights in the shed on... woops :angel:
p38arover
31st March 2012, 10:47 PM
Bloody rednecks - all of you! :D
V8Ian
31st March 2012, 10:48 PM
Doing a bit of enthusiastic circle work down the back paddock in a V8 Maloo, but I didn't have the headlights on. :Rolling:
Tikirocker
31st March 2012, 10:49 PM
Honestly? Completely ignored it ... we don't buy into the concept in my house. ( Cleaned the bores of a few of my guns )
Tiki.
EDG60
31st March 2012, 11:04 PM
Think I may have had the welder running at the time ?? ... ;)
My contribution to reducing pollution is to buy bread at the local bakery. I figure it's better to transport a bag of flour than the equivalent three and a half pallets of bread from ... wherever :angel:
350RRC
31st March 2012, 11:05 PM
Does Bono from U2 have something to do with this................
spreading the message about 'saving the world' while management ferrys their stage gear around the world in 6 747's?
DL
ramblingboy42
31st March 2012, 11:06 PM
its cool....really.....its 10:05 and an ad just came telling you turn your lights off at 8:30
p38arover
31st March 2012, 11:10 PM
its cool....really.....its 10:05 and an ad just came telling you turn your lights off at 8:30
Ahh, you central Qlders, behind the times - as usual! :D
33chinacars
1st April 2012, 01:24 AM
Forgot all about it :angel::angel:
Radz
1st April 2012, 07:00 AM
Switched on a number of lights including the shed light so as to contribute to global warming.
bee utey
1st April 2012, 07:19 AM
I turned off all the eco-friendly, super bright, zero mercury, cree led downlights, and just sat there, looking at the pitch black out doors, while getting a warm inner glow from the 2400W electric heater behind us...
Earth Hour is greenwashing for dummies, a bit like the carbon tax really, but even less effective.:D
http://www.abc.net.au/news/2012-03-31/is-earth-hour-dead/3924806
Reads90
1st April 2012, 07:58 AM
I was driving at the time and thought it might not be a good idea to turn my lights off :-)
blackbuttdisco
1st April 2012, 08:15 AM
I turned the solar panels off in case the moon generated a bit:eek::eek:
460cixy
1st April 2012, 08:18 AM
I burnt a half tank of diesel shooting critters forgot all about it. It's a load of bs any how
Disco_owner
1st April 2012, 08:53 AM
2 x sparkies came up to our floor yesterday at work and told us to close off all the blinds before earth hour so noone can see inside the office from outside , we're a 24/7 operation and fluro lights on the entire floor are constantly on but there is only 3-4 staff in the office afterhours , then they left , said they can't do much for our floor during earth hour. :twisted:
Edit: Hey 460 oxy , Shooting critters , Earth our , makes perfect sense
richard4u2
1st April 2012, 10:21 AM
its when you switch off the safe elect globes and light up candles and risk burning down your house
ellard
1st April 2012, 04:49 PM
Hi there all
Now need to state I am definately not a green - as I work in the mining industry (copper, gold, silver................ & ............... Uranium).
But I did sit in the dark chatting to the family on the mobile phone........not that is will make alot of good but just reminds me of how we depend so highly on our creature comforts.
All the best
Wayne
Homestar
1st April 2012, 06:16 PM
.... and light up candles and risk burning down your house
Yeah, light up candles .... made from petrolium based products.... that'll really save our planet...
flagg
1st April 2012, 07:31 PM
This sums it up well :)
The history of Earth Hour, a Fairfax promotional campaign | Crikey (http://www.crikey.com.au/2012/03/29/history-of-earth-hour-at-fairax/)
An hour to ponder why Fairfax bothers turning off the lights
by David Salter, veteran journalist and former Media Watch EP
It surely can’t be long before Fairfax finally tiptoes away from their embarrassing Earth Hour commitment. Saturday night’s switch-off might be the last. Not even Bob Brown at his most fatuous would now claim the stunt has any significant environmental benefits.
The whole fandango, if accurately measured, most probably has a bigger carbon footprint than whatever small savings the 60 minutes of “lights out” might deliver. But it’s not the climate science that troubles us so much here as whether such important media outlets as The Age and The Sydney Morning Herald should be involved at all.
What tends to be forgotten — or deftly sidestepped — is that Earth Hour began in 2007 as a promotional campaign for Fairfax dreamed up by an advertising agency, Leo Burnett (the Earth Hour website now describes this genesis as a “partnership with brand co-owners, Fairfax Media”). The basic idea pitched by the advertising “creatives” five years ago was to cloak the Fairfax broadsheet mastheads with the feel-good moral superiority of joining the Good Fight against global warming while adding to paid sales and making an extra little pot of cash from spin-off custom display advertising. To clinch the warm-inner-glow value of their pitch, the World Wildlife Fund was enlisted as a partner, complete with their heart-tugging little Panda Bear logo.
This was the cynical commodification of concern — flattering readers with a false sense of empowerment while hoping to make a fast buck behind their backs. And it worked. Pledges to participate in the empty gesture of turning off the lights for one hour boomed and Fairfax pocketed a tidy profit from a 56-page colour liftout crammed with conscience advertising largely gouged from energy companies greenmailed into buying space. (There’s been no sign of a similar supplement this year, a measure of how much the corporate world has lost interest in buying environmental brownie points.)
Early claims for the effectiveness of the switch-off stunt were shameless. The Age and SMH told their readers Earth Hour would “make a difference” to global warming and might save the world 200 tonnes of carbon emissions. The Murdoch papers were quick to debunk those claims, pointing out the probable total carbon reductions achieved were equivalent to taking six standard-sized cars off the road for a year. Worse followed when Fairfax was forced to concede that the dramatic before-and-during switch off pictures they’d featured on their front pages the morning after Earth Hour had been manipulated.
The organisation itself responded to this bloody nose by abandoning its earlier rhetoric about making a difference. Now, the official line (buried among the FAQs on the website) is: “Earth Hour does not purport to be an energy/carbon reduction exercise, it is a symbolic action. Therefore, we do not engage in the measurement of energy/carbon reduction levels. The campaign has now gone beyond climate change to symbolise the growing global pursuit of a better, healthier world.”
Beyond climate change? Spare me.
Yet Fairfax keeps flogging its dying enviro horse, and the more you dig behind the Earth Hour shopfront the tackier it gets. The website oozes adspeak drivel such as “conserve some of Australia’s most precious threatened species and places” (quite how turning out the lights for an hour saves a “place” is unexplained). There’s even an “adopt an animal” click-through (complete with cute pic of baby tiger Kamrita), and boastful copy about WWF “High Impact Initiatives” including “Market Transformation” and “Climate Change”.
Lamely aping the more prominent charity-based campaigns, Earth Hour now has its own “People’s Award” and celebrity “Ambassadors” — devices clearly designed to attract impressionable youngsters who might believe that sitting around a sandalwood-scented candle for an hour is helping to save the planet. And of course you can’t avoid the key component of any do-gooder website: the “Make a Donation” box.
Then there’s the silliness. The website suggests you “bring your community together to host an acoustic concert or event”, presumably without using any electricity or fossil fuels. The elegant “60” graphical symbol for the campaign has become “60+”, another lame nod to advertising trickery (30+ sunscreen, Vitamins+, etc) but utterly meaningless.
For some strange reason the “hour” begins on the half hour, at 8.30pm. Originally it began an hour earlier. Maybe that’s daylight saving, or the change was made to sync with the common 8.30 programming junction on prime-time TV so that nobody has to miss Sex and The City re-runs on Foxtel. And among the proudly listed Earth Hour “participants” are the Crowne Plaza, Novotel, Mantra, Mercure and Holiday Inn hotel chains, not notably parsimonious when it comes to consuming electricity.
Even more distressing is the ethical issue: a purportedly independent media organisation adopting and endorsing a partisan, activist position. If The Age and SMH continue to devote so much unquestioning time, effort and newsprint to the nonsense of Earth Hour, can we assume their general reporting on climate change is impartial? Meanwhile, it’s a tad difficult to accept the carbon emission credentials of Fairfax while it keeps taking ads for fossil-fuel-swilling luxury cars and 4WDs.
In 1975 the advertising agency for the Malcolm Fraser-led Coalition dreamed up the slogan “Turn on the lights, Australia” for the federal election campaign that followed Whitlam’s dismissal. The unstated message was that Labor’s melodramatic three-year rule had been some sort of antipodean Dark Ages. Now, another ad agency wants us to turn those lights off again. But that’s advertising for you: emotive words, gestures, symbols and images — none of which make any logical sense.
That the best brains at Fairfax should persist with such feeble tosh is an indication of how far the company has strayed from the business of just giving us the news every morning.
Vern
1st April 2012, 07:31 PM
was drunk in the spa with the 6kw element heating it, was using my battery powered work stereo though:).
digger
1st April 2012, 09:52 PM
We had no lights, Tv or computers on at home for earth hour :)
because
we were at a cricket club wind down party...
under the flood lights lighting the cricket/hockey ground in town...
playing some cricket and having a shot at hockey and
with the lights on in all rooms of the club house.... :p
BUT we were drinking beer cooled through a "miracle box" cooler
(even though the other drinks were cooled in a glass fronted (uneconomic) fridge...)
But hey, my power usage at home was zero! :)
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