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Thank you

Wakefield, 22 April 2012 - Thank you Mother Earth for the beauty and peace you create.  We salute you today, as we do every day.

 
Read about our Airtight Sanctus Mundo Containers in the Toronto Star

Barbara Turnbull, Living Reporter for the Toronto Star, gives her take on our Sanctus Mundo stainless steel airtight containers after receiving a set as a gift.  She liked them so much she even ordered some more. You can read her article in the Living Section of the Toronto Star.

 
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U.S. EPA on BPA: Finally Taking a Closer Look

Washington, D.C., 15 April 2010 -- On March 29th, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) announced a bisphenol A (BPA) action plan to look deeper into the potential effects of BPA.  The plan focuses on the environmental effects of BPA and will consider adding the chemical to the EPA's 'chemicals of concern', a new list announced on December 30, 2009, and currently including phthalates and polybrominated diphenyl ethers (PBDEs). The BPA action plan is available on the EPA website.

BPA is used to make the hard, clear plastic polycarbonate (#7), which is used for water and baby bottles, the linings of metal food cans, and numerous other common products.  Billions of pounds of BPA are produced each year, and over one million pounds of BPA are released into the environment annually.  What effect is that having on living beings? Peer-reviewed scientific research is increasingly linking BPA, which is an endocrine disruptor, to numerous adverse health effects ranging from developmental problems to cancers. What we also know is that when people are tested, BPA inevitably shows up in their bodies, if not through exposure from the chemical leaching out of food containers into their food, then likely from environmental exposure. For a fascinating example of such test results, check out one of our favorite books: Slow Death by Rubber Duck by the good folks at Environmental Defence.


Image credit: Photo by Nigel Cox from the eye-opening 2009 Fast Company article 'The Real Story Behind Bisphenol A', which uncovers a long history of corporate-government collusion and conflicts of interest in refuting and covering up the growing body of solid, non-industry funded, scientific research pointing to the dangers of BPA. Definitely worth a read.

 
THE GREEN KEYS TOUR - Visionary Eco-Pianist FRANK HORVAT Live

Montreal, 23 March 2010 - Life Without Plastic is thrilled to be a sponsor for virtuoso eco-musician Frank Horvat's Green Keys Tour of solo piano performances across Canada. And what makes an 'eco-musician', you ask? According to Frank it means the musician is carrying on their professional activities in a sustainable way and minimizing their carbon footprint. Take a look at all the ways Frank is doing this on The Green(ing) Musician page of his website. The tour will raise funds for the Earth and promote Frank's latest CD - A Little Dark Music - of original piano compositions, which explore "real world themes like the environment, poverty and Sept 11. Despite the somewhat sombre and serious subject matter, A Little Dark Music attempts to bring peace, joy and contentment to its listeners." Here is a man with vision, making music with vision, and saving the Earth along the way. We hope you will get a chance to hear Frank play. We are sponsoring his Montreal concert on April 11, 2010, but tour dates are happening all across the country through 2010 and into 2011.

 
Sanctus Mundo airtight containers recommended by Whom You Know

New York City, 10 March 2010 - Manhattan's very own Peachy Deegan and the Whom You Know Earthy Peachy Panel have recommended the Sanctus Mundo airtight containers, which are available at Life Without Plastic. Whom You Know features "Manhattan's best in class & most interesting:Airtight container with fruit people, places, events, books, fashion, restaurants and a general guide to better living & pursuing excellence in life."  And through the Earthy Peachy Panel, Whom You Know is now putting more focus on some of the best green products out there. The Panel of seven experienced reviewers have tested out the Sanctus Mundo airtight containers, and here is what they have to say:  Sanctus Mundo & Life Without Plastic Airtight Containers Recommended by Whom You Know's Earthy Peachy Panel.

 
U.S. FDA changes position and warns about BPA

Wakefield, 15 January 2010 -- Despite growing evidence to the contrary, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has long held that bisphenol A (BPA) - used to make the hard, clear plastic polycarbonate - is safe even when indirectly ingested via plastic baby bottles or canned food linings. This has now changed as the government begins to raise flags about BPA. The FDA just released it's Update on Bisphenol for Use in Food Contact Applications: January 2010, Plastic baby bottle and bisphenol A molecule - RSCand states that it has "some concern about the potential effects of BPA on the brain, behavior, and prostate gland in fetuses, infants, and young children. In cooperation with the National Toxicology Program, FDA’s National Center for Toxicological Research is carrying out in-depth studies to answer key questions and clarify uncertainties about the risks of BPA." 

This moves the U.S. more in the direction of Canada, where the Canadian Government has designated BPA as toxic and banned its use in baby bottles.  The FDA will now carry out in-depth studies to answer key questions and clarify uncertainties about the risks of BPA. In the interim, the FDA has posted BPA information for parents, including recommendations on how to reduce exposure to BPA. 

Image credit:  Royal Society of Chemistry (RSC)

 
MOMS AGAINST CLIMATE CHANGE

Ottawa, 10 December 2009 -- As the first week of the United Nations Climate Change Summit in Copenhagen comes to a close, we wanted to highlight the important creative work of Moms Against Climate Change, a partnership between the NGO's Environmental Defence and ForestEthics to give Canadian parents a forum for joining together and demanding global warming action from Canada's political leaders. Moms Against Climate ChangeTake a look at the video that began the initiative and has since gone viral and been named YouTube's most watched activist video worldwide.

One of the goals of the campaign has been to compile a web wall of uploaded photos of children - a reminder to political leaders of who they really serve.  AND TODAY... thousands of photographs of children from every province and territory are being projected on high-visibility buildings around Ottawa and Vancouver, Canada as part of a 'global warming photo wall' to remind Prime Minister Stephen Harper who he is supposed to be representing in Copenhagen as the Canadian Parliament recesses for the year. This statement on the Mom's website sums it up: "NEVER UNDERESTIMATE WHAT A MOTHER CAN ACCOMPLISH."

 
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