Exup’s Green Facts: the fastest way on the net to access open copyright “green” information!


Exup’s Green Fact Sheets are packed with facts and statistics that can punch up a paper, add pizzazz to a presentation, or make proposals more persuasive.

 

Expand your “Green” knowledge: green building, green energy, recycling, green economy, green landscaping, transportation, water use, and more.

 

Our Green Fact Sheet contains hundreds of fascinating facts based on meticulous research. We’ve spent hundreds of hours tracking down these facts and compiling them into a well-organized sheet so you can quickly and easily find the information you need. You’ll find solid facts from a range of reliable sources that you can quote with authority.

 

  • Save time and energy searching for green information.
  • All of Exup’s Green Facts are from reliable, verifiable and quotable sources.
  • Every fact is available to the public.
  • Each fact has a web link to its source.

 

Every fact has a link to a web page where it can be found, backed up by solid research, traceable to a paper, webpage, or an author. These links are gold mines, pathways to rich sources of information for further investigation.

 

Exup’s Green Fact Sheet

Active & Passive Heating and Cooling
Building Efficiency and Energy Use
Construction, Buildings and Materials
General Energy Statistics
Landscaping
Waste
Solar and Wind Energy
Non-Renewable Energy
Lighting
Green Economy
Transportation
Inside and Outside Water facts
Greenhouse Gases
Food & Composting
Trees
Recycling
Appliances

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See for yourself!
Check out our sample green facts and learn something new now!

 

  • Recycling

    Recycling aluminum cans saves 95 percent of the energy required to make the same amount of aluminum from its virgin source, bauxite.

    Source: Click here


  • Renewable Energy

    In 1954 Bell labs developed the first solar cell. It had an efficiency of 4.5%, and is still running today.

    Source: Click here


  • Water Conservation

    One drip per second out of a leaky faucet can waste 2,700 gallons of water per year.

    Source: Click here