The main purpose of this ongoing blog will be to track planetary extreme, or record temperatures related to climate change. Any reports I see of ETs will be listed below the main topic of the day. I’ll refer to record temperatures as ETs (not extraterrestrials).😉
Main Topic: Sustainable Shipping Practices
Dear Diary. I have been asked to repost an article written just for this site on shipping practices, which I’m doing for today’s main topic. The state of our current lifestyles is very bad for the environment. Many items are manufactured then packaged and then shipped direct to people, requiring more packaging than ever before as consumerism ramps up while world economies remain O.K. All of this requires a lot of energy and, you guessed it, a lot of carbon. In light of the climate crisis, it behooves companies to move items using the least amount of energy possible…and if possible, via electric vehicles.
The following article describes how companies can and should ship items with the least harmful effect on our environment:
Image Source: Pexels
Sustainable Shipping Practices: Maximizing the Shelf Life of Temperature Sensitive Products During Climate Crisis
The summer of 2023 was touted as the planet’s hottest one yet. No, this is not a feat worth celebrating. It’s another reason to continue sounding the alarm. And if you’re a business owner handling temperature-sensitive products, climate change should be just as or even more worrying.
In an increasingly competitive marketplace, speed is a crucial factor. But that doesn’t mean quality should take a backseat. This is especially true when dealing with temperature-sensitive items. You need to deliver and deliver at the right temperature for it to count.
However, this is easier said than done. Shipping temperature-sensitive items requires solid transport planning and forward-thinking. And in the climate crisis we’re in, doing business sustainably is key. That means you also need to be conscious of the environmental footprint your business leaves behind whenever you prepare, pack, and ship your goods.
So, what exactly does sustainable shipping entail? In this blog, we’ll look into the various practical yet effective ways to ship temperature-sensitive products while minimizing environmental impact.
Top Tips: Sustainable Shipping of Temperature-Sensitive Goods
Are you a business owner who wants to enhance your eco-friendly efforts? Or do you need cost-effective ways to sustainably ship your products while maintaining temperature stability? Whatever the case may be, you need to adopt these top tips to sustainably move your goods without the costly temperature fluctuations:
Efficient Warehouse Management
Sustainable shipping should start with efficient warehouse management. It’s essential to have a holistic approach to sustainable business operations to maximize your impact. In addition, preserving the quality of your goods while in storage helps increase the chances of maintaining its quality while in transit.
Consider installing energy-efficient cooling and heating systems like evaporating cooling or high-efficiency heat pumps to maintain the right temperature in your warehouse.
Another factor that can impact temperature is the inventory levels. Overstocking and understocking can significantly impact the climate in stockrooms. For example, too many stocks can lead to unnecessary warm temperature levels and require more energy to cool the warehouse.
Poor conditions and inefficient inventory levels can be avoided with both modern tools and useful inventory management practices. Data analytics can help you forecast more accurately, allowing you only to store the optimal number of stocks of a certain product. This is especially crucial when handling easily perishable and temperature-sensitive goods. The First-In-First-Out inventory method is an approach that can be done with or without modern tools. It’s a widely-used method that basically means you must ship out older inventory before new ones to avoid spoilage and better track stock movement.
Eco-Friendly Packaging
Another simple way to sustainably ship your temperature-sensitive goods is using eco-friendly packing methods. Using the right-sized boxes or pouches helps reduce the excess weight and space, allowing you to maximize the space in your transport vehicle, lessening the need for more trips and emissions.
You can also consider reusable insulated packaging to stabilize the temperature of your goods while in transit. This helps preserve the products being delivered while cutting down the need to buy new packaging every time you ship out to your buyers.
Of course, it’s important to note that you can find environmentally-friendly packaging for whatever use. Whether it’s biodegradable packing peanuts or seaweed packaging, little changes to your daily operations can help contribute to a more sustainable business landscape.
Improve Route Planning
Planning delivery routes is an excellent way to reduce fuel consumption. And the longer your products are in transit, the higher the risk of temperature fluctuations. By improving your route planning, you can cut down the duration of deliveries and get your product to your buyer’s door faster. All these help avoid the additional cost and environmental impact of reshipment to replace damaged or spoiled goods.
Another way to improve your deliveries is by using energy-efficient vehicles. Using alternative transportation modes like electric or hybrid trucks or even trains for long-distance shipments can help reduce the environmental impact of each delivery.
Supply Chain Optimization
Another way to maximize the effects of your eco-friendly efforts is by collaborating with your supply chain partners. Working with your suppliers, truckers, and retail partners can help ensure your plan will help optimize the whole life cycle of your products. You can also work together to identify unnecessary steps in the supply chain that you can eliminate to reduce time in transit and the risk of product damage due to fluctuating temperatures.
Conclusion
Doing your business responsibly has taken a bigger meaning in light of the growing consciousness around climate change. If you want to sustainably sell temperature-sensitive products, adopting the most eco-friendly business practices is crucial. This way, you’re not just keeping your customers and shareholders happy with the quality of the product; you’re also contributing to steering the industry toward a more sustainable future.
It’s also important to stay up-to-date with environmental regulations and safety standards. Doing so ensures you’re shipping your temperature-sensitive products legally and safely, protecting you from costly penalties and regulatory issues. You must also welcome continuous improvement. The sustainable movement is continuously evolving. New technologies and industry best practices will surely come up. Consider learning and adopting these new methods to keep your cool (or warmth) even in a highly competitive business landscape.
Here are some “ET’s” recorded from around the planet the last couple of days, their consequences, and some extreme temperature outlooks, as well as any extreme precipitation reports:
Exceptional warmth in the Mediterranean and Eastern Europe:
— Extreme Temperatures Around The World (@extremetemps) October 30, 2023
39C in Algeria,37C Tunisia and Libya,36C Israel
34.7C in Turkey,34.1C Cyprus,33.1C Italy and widespread 25/29C in the Balkans and Caucasus
Many November records will fall in Eastern Europe and in North Africa. pic.twitter.com/QRhNrm0u2Q
30.0C Final max. temperature yesterday at Lima Von Humboldt/La Molina, in Peru.
— Extreme Temperatures Around The World (@extremetemps) October 30, 2023
An exceptional October record beaten with huge margin. https://t.co/tTvPainGAY
Under a typical Niño pattern,the temperature differences in #Argentina between the North and the South are huger than usual:
— Extreme Temperatures Around The World (@extremetemps) October 30, 2023
For example yesterday Rivadavia in the North reached 43C,while the resort town of Bariloche had a wintry day with snow and only +3.5C Tmax:40C difference. pic.twitter.com/emJEURQobA
A cold spell to report,at last
— Extreme Temperatures Around The World (@extremetemps) October 30, 2023
Late cold blast in Southern Africa where temperatures in some areas collapsed by nearly 20C in 24 hours from record heat to wintry temperatures.
The tallest mountains >3000m of the tiny Kingdom of Lesotho are freezing and some snow might be falling pic.twitter.com/0nBz98Bk5N
Totally insane warmth today in North Korea:
— Extreme Temperatures Around The World (@extremetemps) October 30, 2023
Temperature rose to 26.6C in the coastal city of Wonsan, this heat is absolutely unprecedented in North Korea:temperatures never rose above 25.2C so late.
November national record might fall on 1-3 November. pic.twitter.com/Fn1YakrwHs
Records are still falling all over the planet!
— Thierry Goose (@ThierryGooseBC) October 29, 2023
🌡️36.7°C Brazzaville/Maya-Maya Airport, #Congo 🇨🇬
➡️ New monthly record & only 0.1°C from the October national record.
🌡️34.7°C Agalega Island, #Mauritius 🇲🇺
➡️ New October national record beaten for the umpteenth time this month. pic.twitter.com/9FgW3mwQjW
The cold air mass in slowly advancing Southeast in the United States.
— Extreme Temperatures Around The World (@extremetemps) October 29, 2023
Today the Min. in the Utah sinkhole of Peters Sinks was -30F, but far from the record set in October 2019.
Still very warm in the Southeast and >95F in Texas for the last couple of days. pic.twitter.com/6cWjPJsS2m
Houston went from 89° yesterday to a projected high of 49° today.
— Matthew Cappucci (@MatthewCappucci) October 30, 2023
(The 41° drop that occurred in 15 hours ties for the most dramatic drop on record in the autumn.)
Headline: Strong fall cold front sweeping across the country https://t.co/c6qnlQcTmx
Over the last 5 days, DC has seen an average high of 80! This is the 2nd warmest stretch so late in season on record.
— Capital Weather Gang (@capitalweather) October 30, 2023
Temps right now 75-80 again, so a SIXTH straight day near 80 is probable.
More info on this crazy warmth: https://t.co/AuUGm7tTTj
Pictured: Current temps (1p) pic.twitter.com/Lif0GyJnsI
Here is More Climate and Weather News from Monday:
(As usual, this will be a fluid post in which more information gets added during the day as it crosses my radar, crediting all who have put it on-line. Items will be archived on this site for posterity. In most instances click on the pictures of each tweet to see each article. The most noteworthy items will be listed first.)
Breaking news
— Bill McGuire (@ProfBillMcGuire) October 30, 2023
CLIMATE CRISIS: CARBON EMISSIONS BUDGET IS NOW TINY, SCIENTISTS SAY
"To retain the 50% chance of a 1.5C limit, emissions would have to plunge to net zero by 2034"
Some of us have been saying for years that 1.5C is practically impossiblehttps://t.co/7Yw0Vm7nia
Tropical countries, like Brazil, tend to have lower year-to-year (and seasonal) temperature variability than regions like the USA & Europe.
— Dr. Robert Rohde (@RARohde) October 30, 2023
As a result, tropical ecosystems are often less tolerant of change.
And yet, their climate is being pushed far from the historical range. pic.twitter.com/ggDfrmc7XW
#Otis was one of the most rapidly intensifying tropical cyclones on record and hit #Acapulco, Mexico, at Category 5 strength 25 Oct, causing death and devastation.@CopernicusEMS Rapid Mapping Team image shows extent of the damage.https://t.co/VbtMoOxNnZ#EarlyWarningsForAll pic.twitter.com/t8sO5DcBHE
— World Meteorological Organization (@WMO) October 30, 2023
There's more happening to weather extremes now than can be explained by thermodynamics, i.e. everything getting warmer, evaporation increasing, the atmosphere holding more energy and water.
— Prof. Stefan Rahmstorf 🌏 🦣 (@rahmstorf) October 30, 2023
Also changing: jet stream, polar vortex, planetary waves & Atlantic ocean circulation.… pic.twitter.com/qVfXvHi9zw
100 years of July-August-September temperature anomalies over land through 2023. It's going to get hotter.
— Zack Labe (@ZLabe) October 30, 2023
Data from https://t.co/8pB26Jcqph pic.twitter.com/K0kY5yGXEE
75-year change in average annual temperature. 🔥🔥🔥 pic.twitter.com/ETHWeY3np4
— Brian Brettschneider (@Climatologist49) October 30, 2023
A first look at the CryoSat-2/SMOS merged product for #Arctic sea ice thickness this fall – sea ice is thinner than last year across most of the ice pack
— Zack Labe (@ZLabe) October 29, 2023
This graphic will now be updated weekly at https://t.co/qXpJKsA27B pic.twitter.com/ANXj3kpuMv
Today from the base of Mt. Everest, I saw for myself the terrible impact of the climate crisis on the Himalayas.
— António Guterres (@antonioguterres) October 30, 2023
As temperatures rise, glacier melt increases – threatening the lives and livelihoods of entire communities.#ClimateAction can’t wait. pic.twitter.com/Ih12Qb8roi
Your 'moment of doom' for Oct. 30, 2023 ~ What's scarier than a zombie virus?
— Prof. Eliot Jacobson (@EliotJacobson) October 30, 2023
"In just the top ten feet or so of frozen ground, there is around one trillion tons of carbon. That’s double the total amount that’s currently in the atmosphere"https://t.co/i0WiBDB7P8
Extreme weather and climate-related events over the last 50 years caused a whopping $4.3 trillion in economic losses worldwide, a May 2023 report from the World Meteorological Organization says.https://t.co/Tt7VlzIa35
— Inside Climate News (@insideclimate) October 30, 2023
Extreme weather and climate-related events over the last 50 years caused a whopping $4.3 trillion in economic losses worldwide, a May 2023 report from the World Meteorological Organization says.https://t.co/Tt7VlzIa35
— Inside Climate News (@insideclimate) October 30, 2023
Today’s News on Sustainable, Traditional Polluting Energy from Fossil Fuel, and the Green Revolution:
"Many Conservative US Politicians Push For Anti-Clean Energy Legislation" by @c4tuna31 for @cleantechnica https://t.co/jV7qYELE5O
— Prof Michael E. Mann (@MichaelEMann) October 30, 2023
🦇 #PrivateJets: a modern-day horror story 🎃
— Greenpeace International (@Greenpeace) October 30, 2023
It's terrifying to see how such a small group of people can contribute so much to the climate crisis
Some facts 🧵👇#BanPrivateJets #Halloweenhttps://t.co/2XTJhImqD0
Guest post: Why all fossil fuels must decline rapidly to stay below 1.5C | @climateploy @st_pye @SEI_Erickson @CelineGuivarch @ElinaBru Prof Roberto Schaeffer
— Carbon Brief (@CarbonBrief) October 30, 2023
Read: https://t.co/srEGt61PFE pic.twitter.com/bxQfp1no8M
This is the world's 2nd largest offshore wind project. It will provide enough clean energy to power the homes of 1.3 million families.
— Mike Hudema (@MikeHudema) October 29, 2023
We have so many solutions. Implement them. #ActOnClimate #climate #energy #renewables pic.twitter.com/iP7XsKGnki
Future generations go burn yourself in hell This world will not be for you
— GO GREEN (@ECOWARRIORSS) October 30, 2023
The UK government has granted 27 oil and gas licences for projects in the North Sea.https://t.co/aLdx9zEXsX pic.twitter.com/mJasqTPL06
More from the Weather Department:
Storm Ciarán is a particularly deep area of low pressure that will bring impacts from late Wednesday.
— BBC Weather (@bbcweather) October 30, 2023
– Damaging gusts of wind in S Eng & Channel Isles
– Heavy rain spreading north
– Risk of flooding with already saturated ground.https://t.co/7oWC75Z4Wz pic.twitter.com/VXOExyHRP1
Wow, #StormCiarán looks to be another climate monster in the making. Southern England and Northern France may see conditions never witnessed before. We are entering a new era of storms. Increasing the energy in the system is only going to make things much worse in the future. pic.twitter.com/7YxW1mAK2a
— Peter Dynes (@PGDynes) October 30, 2023
Monday NHC update on the tropics. Low pressure expected to head west this week. Chances bumped up to 50% for development. https://t.co/Hk3pbO7x8H pic.twitter.com/HvzkAAnBi9
— Mike's Weather Page (@tropicalupdate) October 30, 2023
The potential system in the Caribbean definitely fits within overall November climo – most systems down there either go into Central America or across Cuba this time of year. Pretty rare to see them during El Niño, though – Ida in 2009 was the last one and only 2 on record. pic.twitter.com/HUolNcWGEp
— Andy Hazelton (@AndyHazelton) October 30, 2023
Latest EURO/GFS ensembles on potential Caribbean low this week. EURO less than yesterday on turn north. GFS staying consistent. Timing with upper high pressure later this week on a trek west or a turn north. https://t.co/Hk3pbO7x8H pic.twitter.com/tW9hHDh9dz
— Mike's Weather Page (@tropicalupdate) October 30, 2023
Here are the Key Messages for Tropical Storm #Pilar for Monday morning. Heavy rains causing flash flooding over portions of Central America from El Salvador southward to Nicaragua is the largest concern at this time. More: https://t.co/Oy8uoeSibM pic.twitter.com/aVR0OJW9wA
— NHC Eastern Pacific (@NHC_Pacific) October 30, 2023
Dramatic cold front sweeping east. It's legit. Highs temps in Houston dropping from upper 80s to upper 40s. DC near 80 today but only near 50 Tuesday. Contributed to 5-10" of snow around Denver.
— Capital Weather Gang (@capitalweather) October 30, 2023
Details: https://t.co/hJgqMVBdt9 pic.twitter.com/tjlYZgsrbT
Mundane pattern this week as coldest air of the season settles south. Classic AC to Heat scenario for millions of you as last weeks arctic air finally makes it east and south. Expect more freeze areas tonight farther south and east. pic.twitter.com/pgJLfgADJQ
— Jim Cantore (@JimCantore) October 30, 2023
Brrr…
— Scott Duncan (@ScottDuncanWX) October 30, 2023
A chilly Halloween for much of North America.
Watch the cold air ooze south, reaching all the way to the Gulf of Mexico pic.twitter.com/lxb4g1820V
Not uncommon to get large swings in temperature at this time of year especailly in this part of the world.
— Scott Duncan (@ScottDuncanWX) October 30, 2023
An impressive cool-down nonetheless. pic.twitter.com/ZHCdkfD82L
More on the Environment and Nature:
Horrendous fires in Australia
— GO GREEN (@ECOWARRIORSS) October 30, 2023
Last time Australia has major fires in 2020 over 3 billion animals died https://t.co/tcQql4ZVDO
Scientists have only begun to uncover the extent of pollution from tires.
— Yale Environment 360 (@YaleE360) October 29, 2023
Recent research shows that particulate pollution from tires and brakes far exceeds pollution from tailpipes.https://t.co/vxGEi9QmwG
“When you do the math, this means that more than half the water siphoned from the Colorado River is used to grow food for beef and dairy cattle…”https://t.co/hpuYJgMfra
— Dr. Jonathan Foley (@GlobalEcoGuy) October 30, 2023
Cities are not made from concrete, steel and glass, but by the communities who live in them.
— Greenpeace International (@Greenpeace) October 30, 2023
Cities bring people together. Communities bring them to life! 🌼#UrbanJustice #UrbanOctober
Animation: @BiotaStudios pic.twitter.com/X459siCBzr
Seagrass prevents coastal erosion, stores carbon, and contributes to food security.
— UN Environment Programme (@UNEP) October 29, 2023
However, these vital ecosystems are in decline.
Join #GenerationRestoration & take action for our precious ecosystems: https://t.co/H6MrgMDj2G pic.twitter.com/F5vuWWAkad
More on Other Science and the Beauty of Earth and this Universe:
So sad to hear of the passing of climate action champion DR @SaleemulHuq
— GO GREEN (@ECOWARRIORSS) October 30, 2023
Death will not silence his voice
I and many others will live to carry on his message
He was a fearless fighter for climate action especially for the poorest countries
RIP Saleemul Huq pic.twitter.com/3Dadf6eoIT
Gorgeous halo and double sun dog this morning! https://t.co/FaLtBK2oTE
— Chris Bianchi (@BianchiWeather) October 30, 2023
I always have to wonder how long it takes humanity to understand that we are part of nature and not the other way around. Clean water, fresh air, forests, wetlands and oceans that store carbon and produce oxygen. And….. nature delights us with its wonderful sight💚🌱☘️🌿🌲🌳🍀 pic.twitter.com/6J5jGXibdd
— Green is a mission (@Greenisamissio1) October 30, 2023
🎶The midnight hour is close at hand…🎶
— Chandra Observatory (@chandraxray) October 30, 2023
Located about 16,000 light-years from Earth, the "bones" of a ghostly cosmic hand have been revealed by @NASA's Chandra & IXPE telescopes. Enter if you dare: https://t.co/vijq7yb1ft Happy #Halloween!🎃 pic.twitter.com/ZiWEpWLaZZ