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carbon foot print

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Jack Sparrow View Drop Down
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    Posted: 14 Nov 07 at 12:24pm
Originally posted by turnturtle

surely a thermo plastic-fantastic dinghy is the best... at least it can be recycled into something more useful. 

Although I still think wooden boats are the most eco-friendly; afterall what else would make such a lovely ornamental flower pot on a roundabout in Staines?



Yes you are probable right on both counts!
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getafix View Drop Down
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Post Options Post Options   Quote getafix Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 14 Nov 07 at 12:20pm
if you're worried about the trees, pull your boat to the next open event by hand,,,, or perhaps bicycle...
Feeling sorry for vegans since it became the latest fad to claim you are one
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Jack Sparrow View Drop Down
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Post Options Post Options   Quote Jack Sparrow Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 14 Nov 07 at 9:45am
Creating Carbon Cloth requires extreme amounts of energy.
Glass slightly less.
Wood absorbs Co2 whilst it is growing. And this is locked into the wood but the same amount it took in is released when, say you burn it. So it is Carbon Neutral. But there are plenty of processes that it goes through before boat builders use it, like Lamination, and a lot of it is from unsustainable forestry, esp if it's hardwood.

So when you then put all the other energy uses of transport, chemical production, negative habitat effects etc I can't see that there would be much of a difference between any of them. But this is just a guess.

Frankly sailing isn't a very eco, all be it more eco than say power boat racing.

To answer the question though. I would of thought after you do a very long calculation a smaller boat ie. Cherub or Int Moth that used less materials in the first place, that was light so it took less energy to transport and lasted longer would end up being fairly competitive in the who's got the lowest carbon foot print.

Having said that you are still probable better of in a wooded Mirror.


Edited by Jack Sparrow
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Post Options Post Options   Quote Guests Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 13 Nov 07 at 8:05pm

Depends, do you wear Odour eaters??

 

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mike ellis View Drop Down
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Post Options Post Options   Quote mike ellis Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 13 Nov 07 at 7:44pm

all the eco freindly tree huggers out there seem to be going on about reducing your carbon foot print. now im not entirely sure what this means but what i want to know is how much does sailing a cherub or international moth (or any other lightweight carbon class that breaks a lot) effect your carbon foot print compared to say sailing and maintaining a non carbon boat e.g laser or GP 14 say?

as an afterthought, do wooden boats have more of an effect than carbon boats on your carbon foot print?

600 732, will call it Sticks and Stones when i get round to it.
Also International 14, 1318
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