| How sustainable is your suburb? |
| Friday, 23 May 2008 | |
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Ever wondered how green your suburb is? Now you can find out at the click of a mouse whether you and your neighbours are an environmentally friendly bunch or whether you need to make a bigger effort to reduce your impact on the environment. The online interactive Australian Consumption Atlas has data on the average impact the residents of every postcode area in Australia are having on the environment, in terms of greenhouse emissions, water usage and eco footprint — the amount of land required to supply all the resources a person’s lifestyle demands. While West Australians use less water than their fellow countrymen (the WA average is 720,000 litres per person per year, while the national average is 722,000 litres) and average less greenhouse emissions (the WA average is 18 tonnes per person per year, while nationally it is 18.9 tonnes) they do have the biggest average eco-footprint of all Australians (7.32ha, compared to the national average of 6.4ha). To find out how green your suburb is, go to the Australian Consumption Atlas. A story provided by ScienceNetwork WA - Activate your connections to science. This article is under copyright; permission must be sought from ScienceNetwork WA to reproduce it. To comment on this article go to the original story here. |



