• Tule elk silhouetted against sunlight reflecting off of Drakes Bay.

    Point Reyes

    National Seashore California

  • 2012 Harbor Seal Pupping Season Closures

    From March 1 through June 30, an annual closure of Drakes Estero and certain beaches of Tomales Bay is implemented to protect harbor seals during the pupping season. Please avoid disturbing seals to ensure a successful pupping season. More »

How You Can Help Reduce Greenhouse Gas Emissions as a Citizen

Encourage Community Action
You can work within your community to promote energy efficiency and use of clean energy in a variety of different ways. Make sure that public buildings are models of energy efficiency and encourage the incorporation of passive-solar techniques in community construction or remodeling projects. Urge your local library, businesses, and church or synagogue to install bike racks. Promote community carpooling plans and the construction of bike lanes. Work to change local zoning ordinances and other regulations that involve energy use. Encourage your local electric utilities to promote energy efficiency and the use of clean, renewable energy sources.

Protecting and planting trees
Protecting forests and grasslands, and planting new trees contributes to the absorption of carbon dioxide from the air. You can make a difference in your own backyard and community. Get a group in your neighborhood together and contact your local arborist or urban forester about planting trees on private property and public land. In addition to storing carbon, trees planted in and around urban areas and residences can provide much-needed shade in the summer, reducing energy bills and fossil fuel use. There are many opportunities to plant trees in the yard, along roads, in parks, and in public gardens. In addition, some charities plant fast-growing trees -- for as little as $0.10 per tree -- to help citizens in tropical developing countries restore the productivity of their lands. Conversely, clearing old-growth forests adds to the carbon in the atmosphere, so buying non-old-growth paper and wood is good for the climate as well as the forest. When buying wood products, check for labels that indicate the source of the timber. Supporting forests that are managed in a sustainable fashion makes sense for biodiversity, and it may make sense for the climate too. Forests that are well managed are more likely to store carbon effectively because more trees are left standing and carbon-storing soils are less disturbed.

Letters to the editor
Write to your local newspaper about the significance of the global warming threat and the need for action. Monitor your newspaper's coverage of this issue and write in response to any stories or letters that portray global warming inaccurately.

Use Your Investor Power
If you invest in power companies that continue to rely on coal, voice your concerns with unsustainable technologies and ask them to disclose their role in creating climate risks, assert that you prefer to invest your money in cleaner technologies. If you invest in mutual funds, tell the company that you expect them to vote for sustainability on climate risk resolutions.

Top of Page

Did You Know?

The pernicious Cig Egret makes its nest in beaches, estuaries, and marshes. Physical removal is the only means of eradication.

40 percent of all debris items picked up during California Coastal Cleanup Days are cigarette butts. In 2008, volunteers picked up over 340,000 of them in only three hours. 2008 was the 24th straight year in which cigarette butts were the most numerous debris item picked up. More...