
Easy and Effortless Actions You Can Take To Make a Difference
The #1 thing that keeps people from being planet conscious is convenience, so here is a list of incredibly easy, convenient, and super effortless things you can do that can make a huge impact on the future of our planet if we all collectively care.
Recyle Anything
Find Out MoreRecyling Anything
How and where to recycle almost anything, even things you thought you couldn't recycle. Find out what can go in your curbside bin and where to take the items that can't.
Get Less Junk Mail
Find Out MoreGet Less Catalogs/Junk Mail
You get less catalogs and junk mail and the planet gets less paper processed, less trees cut down, less water wasted, less pollution created from the processing/delivery.
Eat Sustainably
Find Out MoreEat Sustainably
Find local farms, farmers markets, family farms, and other sources of sustainably grown food in your area.
Add Earth Mode
Find Out MoreAdd Earth Mode
Add the Earth Mode Google Chrome extension to your browser to monitor your online carbon footprint, which Johnnie Walker (yes that Johnnie Walker 🥃) will offset by planting trees - it's really that easy.

Reuse Shopping Bags
Find Out MoreReusable Shopping Bags
Start using reusable shopping bags instead of plastic bags (some cities, states, and countries are actually banning plastic bags now). Get the reusable bags for free and even get rewarded for using them.
Join Recyclebank
Find Out MoreStop Pollution
Join Recyclebank for free and earn rewards, points, and discounts at local and national businesses just by recycling, taking some green actions, and reading earth-friendly articles on the site. It's super easy and really works, no catch.
Affect Policy Change
Find Out MoreAffect Environmental Policies
Take action right from your computer to change the policies that threaten the environment and ecosystem.
Cut Single-Use Plastics
Find Out MoreLearn Why Single Use Plastics Are Bad
Take a minute to understand why plastic itself is great, but single-use plastic is terrible, and just as bad for humans as it is for marine animals.
even the smallest efforts help when everyone joins together
The current pandemic has shown more than anything that the world is very capable of taking strong collective action to combat a significant global threat. To illustrate how much it works, on the very first Earth Day in 1970, 10% of the US population (20 million people) came together to protest industrial pollution and demand a sustainable future. And it worked: the EPA was created later that year, and shortly after that the Clean Air Act, the Clean Water Act, and the Endangered Species Act were passed. Collective action works.