Shoppers will spend more in the post-Thanksgiving rush than any other time of the year.
By Sarah Gibbens, November 21, 2018
Late November is the season of stuffing: we stuff our turkeys with breading, our bellies with turkey, and our homes with holiday gifts. The U.S. Post Office estimates they’ll deliver 15 billion pieces of mail and 900 million packages between Thanksgiving and the New Year. Many of these items will be delivered thanks to a purchase made over the popular shopping weekend that follows Thanksgiving.
On the busiest shopping days of the year, here’s how your consumer habits could impact the environment:
How you’ll buy it
According to a consumer survey released by Deloitte, the average shopper plans to spend 20 percent more in 2018 than they did in 2017. Fifty-seven percent of that will be spent online instead of in brick-and-mortar stores, a shift from past years.
How consumers choose to ship their online purchases will impact how “green” they are.
An analysis done last year by Vox and the University of California’s Climate Lab found that two-day shipping, like that provided for free to Amazon Prime members, left a bigger carbon footprint than slower options that shipped over a week. That’s because shipping that gets items to your door faster requires more diesel-using trucks on the ground and less efficient shipping systems.
What you’ll buy
Once an item arrives on your doorstep, how it’s made and what happens to it once it’s eventually disposed all contribute to how it impacts the environment.
Electronics
Fast fashion
Plastic
Decreasing your impact
While Ashford notes that our current consumer culture often encourages waste, there are steps people can take to cut back on how much their holiday shopping might cost the environment.
Jarett Emert, an investment manager at the Carbonfund.org Foundation, a group that manages carbon-offset projects, says choices that reduce the number of cars and trucks on the ground can have a positive impact.
“This can be accomplished by, for instance, requesting bundled shipping when purchasing multiple items or by reducing the number of trips you make while shopping,” he says. Carbonfund.org also allows individuals to buy carbon offsets.
Environmental groups like Greenpeace also encourage consumers to think longterm when purchasing an item. Buying used products or those made from “upcycled,” or recycled content, helps decrease the resource inputs. Gifting experiences or time can also serve as alternatives to physical items. Consumers can also take their own reusable bags shopping, to eschew disposable ones, and wrap gifts in cloth bags or recycled paper.
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