Advertisement The Margaret Beaufort Institute of TheologyThe Margaret Beaufort Institute of Theology Would you like to advertise on ICN? Click to learn more.

Reflection: Christmas and the planet


What is it about Christmas that requires us to consume and waste with such abandon? If we took seriously the traditional message of the season, that a stable is a suitable birthplace for a God, that the powerful will be brought low, that even princes only need three gifts, Christmas might be good for the planet. Instead we eat and drink and spend as if we were celebrating the birth of the free-market economy.

Mike Berners-Lee, in his book How Bad are Bananas? - The Carbon Footprint of Everything, considers unwanted presents, wasted food, travel, fairy lights and cards and comes up with the following estimate of how much Christmas can contribute to climate change:

4 kg *CO2e per adult for a low-carbon scenario
280 kg CO2e per adult UK on average
1.5 tonnes CO2e per adult for a high-carbon scenario
(For comparison, a banana is 80g CO2e and a return flight to Hong Kong is 3.4 tonnes CO2e.)

Apparently, if we are an average adult we spend £400 on presents, of which only half will be really wanted. We spend £150 extra on food, wasting a third of it, and send 20 cards, with most of the carbon footprint coming from the delivery rather than the paper.

To make you feel thrifty here's what a high-carbon Christmas costs: £1000 on presents of which only 30% will be really wanted, splendid displays of non-LED lights, 200 cards and 500 miles extra driving in a large car.

Some parts of the way your family spends Christmas you will want to keep, but maybe there are some other bits that you were just looking for an excuse to give up. Mike Berners-Lee suggests the following:

i) Buy less food so it doesn't get wasted
ii) Drop that idea that the cost of your presents has any relationship to the value you place on your friendships - be generous to the planet and give thoughtful presents with the receipt so they can be returned. iii) LED lights - and less of them
iv) Video-Skype your distant relatives and make plans to see them properly another time
v) Make a pact with your friends to keep all gifts below a strict limit of £1 and donate the savings to charity

Source: www.operationnoah.org/

Adverts

Sisters of the Holy Cross

We offer publicity space for Catholic groups/organisations. See our advertising page if you would like more information.

We Need Your Support

ICN aims to provide speedy and accurate news coverage of all subjects of interest to Catholics and the wider Christian community. As our audience increases - so do our costs. We need your help to continue this work.

You can support our journalism by advertising with us or donating to ICN.

Mobile Menu Toggle Icon