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Environmentally friendly

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The phrase environmentally friendly is used to refer to goods, services and/or practices considered to inflict little harm on the environment. The phrase has been in common usage for at least 20 years and is often added to product advertising or packaging to promote a sale.

It also means "being friendly to the environment". For example, you can be environmentally friendly by recycling, or by being "green", as people call it. There are also many organisations that associate themselves with the term, such as Greenpeace.

In pest control, integrated pest management is regarded as more environmentally friendly than traditional pesticide use, as its goal is to reduce pesticide use to a minimum by using a variety of less impactive means, with pesticides only as the last resort. More recently, the development of biological pest control methods are an effort to go a further step to being environmentally friendly.

In waste management, recycling and composting are viewed as more environmentally friendly than traditional bury or burn practices. Some cities are at the forefront of such environmentally friendly practices. For example, Edmonton, Alberta, Canada has adopted large-scale composting to deal with its urban waste. Its composting facility is the largest of its type in the world, representing 35 per cent of Canada's centralized composting capacity. The $100-million co-composter allows Edmonton to recycle 65 per cent of its residential waste. The co-composter itself is 38,690 square metres in size, equivalent to 8 football fields. It's designed to process 200,000 tonnes of residential solid waste per year and 22,500 dry tonnes of biosolids, turning them into 80,000 tonnes of compost annually.

In North America over 300 million mattresses are used that are not Eco-friendly, filling the landfills and back lanes by dumping. There are now eco-friendly bedding materials being used in many countries. Many are hand-made by artisians and are Eco-earth friendly, reducing your 'carbon foot print", especially since they do not contain the chemicals and metals with which some conventional bedding is manufactured. Asian futons:

They are sold in Japan at specialty stores called futon-ya as well as at department stores... and now via the internet buckwheat futons are being sold.

Asian futons are flat, about 5 cm 2 inches thick with a fabric exterior stuffed with buckwheat or natural cotton for batting. They are often sold in sets which include the futon mattress shikibuton, a comforter kakebutonor blanket , a summer blanket resembling a large towel towelket, and buckwheat pillow, filled with buckwheat. Futons are designed to be placed on tatami flooring, and are traditionally folded away and stored in a closet during the day to allow the tatami to breathe and to allow for flexibility in the use of the room. Futons must be aired in sunlight regularly, especially if not put away during the day.

Western futons: are usually filled with foam as well as cotton batting, often in several layers, and are almost always much thicker and larger than Asian futons, resembling a traditional mattress in size. Western-style futons are a cheap alternative to a bed or other furniture, and are often sold in sets that include the mattress and frame; in fact, in the United States, "futon" often refers to the frame, not the mattress. Most Asian people would not recognize a Western-style "futon" as a futon.

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