Is Your Business Killing the Home of Christmas?

And 5 Easy Ways Your Business Can Become More Environmentally Friendly...  Climate change in the North Pole probably feels way...

And 5 Easy Ways Your Business Can Become More Environmentally Friendly...

 Climate change in the North Pole probably feels way above your pay grade.

Perhaps, you’re a small local business: a boutique gym or mid-size company specialising in fitness equipment. You might even be the VP of a franchised gym group.

The climate crisis is a global emergency, but the polar ice caps are a long way from your office. Energym is based in Birmingham, so it’s a long way from our office, too. And isn’t it ridiculous when someone asks if your business is killing the home of Christmas?

You’re not dropping bombs on icebergs, clubbing elves over the head, sniping at polar bears from helicopters or bulldozing the Claus family home.

Nothing so egregious, but we’re all contributing to a climate emergency.

Every person, every company has to start somewhere, and there are some really simple things that you can do as a business to reduce your impact on the environment.

We’ll discuss that below, but we’d like to tell give you some context about what climate change in the North Pole looks like (all elf jokes aside), and why it’s so important that we stop it.

 



Where is the North Pole?

 

The North Pole sounds like a made-up place.

In Christmas lore, it’s the home of Santa Claus. 

(which doesn’t help).

But where actually is it?

The North Pole is the northernmost place on Earth. There’s the Geographic North Pole located in the Arctic Ocean under a sheet of floating ice. And then there’s the Magnetic North Pole which is where compasses point to (but which actually moves around a bit).

The North Pole gets 24 hours of sunlight in the summer and 24 hours of darkness in the winter.

According to The National Geographic, the nearest territory is Nunavut (a Canadian territory). Greenland (the closest place you’ve probably heard of) is 440 miles away.

 

arctic fox close up in the snow

What’s at the North Pole?


Aside from a workshop of elves?

There’s very limited human activity.

The North Pole isn’t a permanent landmass (it’s a floating sheet of ice, remember), so it would be almost impossible to establish permanent research stations or human habitation there.

There’s an interesting selection of animals calling it home: Polar bears, Arctic foxes, Walruses, ringed seals and a number of bird species.

 

What are the Effects of Climate Change on the North Pole?

 

Polar Ice Cap Reduction

Writing on the Smithsonian website, Maggy Hunter Benson explains that a global rise in temperature has decreased the amount of ice at the poles.

White ice is so important in that region because it reflects the sun’s energy back into space, and without it.

“Earth would absorb more solar radiation—and our climate would be even warmer”.

Maggy Hunter Benson

Worryingly, The Arctic Ocean could be entirely ice-free during August and September by 2060, according to an article published on the IOP website.

 

Magnetic Drift

 

The Magnetic North Pole is now drifting further East, which many scientists now believe is a direct result of climate change.

The Poles naturally move a few meters each century, but speaking to National Geographic, Surendra Adhikari, an Earth scientist at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in California, says that since 2000 the Pole’s drift has made “a dramatic change”.

Scientists are hoping to understand more about why this has happened, but it’s believed to be due to glacial loss in Greenland and Antarctica as well as water loss in other parts of the world.

 

Decline in Animal Populations


There’s also been a 50% decline in the number of reindeer and caribou grazing on the Arctic tundra in the last 2 decades.

 

Toxic Algae Blooms


Warmer temperatures are encouraging toxic algae blooms in the Arctic affecting food eaten by animals and humans.

 

Polar Lightning

 

Lightning strikes were recently recorded within 300 miles of the North Pole which is incredibly rare; it’s often too cold for polar lightening. The Independent also reported that there have above-average temperatures at the Pole this summer.


 

Why Should My Business Worry About Climate Change in the North Pole?

 

People sitting in an office having a meeting

 

You wouldn’t ignore a fire burning through the top floor of your building just because you didn’t start it or because you can’t smell or see it yet.

The climate crisis is a global one, and soon it’s going to start affecting your personal and professional life.

Your people, products, consumers and customers can exist anywhere on Earth.

We used the North Pole as an example because it’s where Father Christmas lives.

But ask some children, and they’ll say he lives in Lapland.

Lapland is in Northern Finland, and in December gets around 20 to 30 cm of snowfall.

Only in early December 2018, it didn’t.

Tourists arrived for a winter wonderland, and were greeted with a light sprinkling of powder and solid ground. Rising temperatures were blamed for delaying the expected snowfall.

That’s happening a few hours away in Finland.

But it’s hard to appreciate a climate emergency when your business isn’t being personally affected yet. Your role is key, however. Businesses can start at the ground level and build up towards their sustainability goals, inspiring employees and customers to do the same.



5 Easy Ways Your Business Can Become More Environmentally Friendly

Man looking at a screen in an office

These aren’t enough to reverse climate change alone, but they’re a great start for any businesses unsure of how to proceed.

 

  • Provide chilled drinking water for your employees and encourage them to bring in reusable bottles.

    You could put a ban on plastic or supply biodegradable cups instead.

    In the UK, we’re very fortunate to have fresh drinking water straight from the tap.

    Encourage team members to ditch plastic in the workplace.
  • Make sure you have ample recycling facilities on site and that everyone is clear on how to distribute their rubbish into the different categories.

    A box of paper, plastic and food waste might be enough for a small office.

    You could add a clothing collection bin and encourage employees to donate to charity or to swap between themselves rather than sending unwanted items to landfill.

    You could even incentivise this.

    Energym believes in incentivising clean energy use to encourage people to make more environmentally friendly decisions. It's why its RE:GEN bike is electricity-generating, so you can create clean energy with every workout. Energym has also partnered with Sweatcoin, incentivising riders to exercise and earn digital currency to spend on products and rewards.

  • Where possible, make use of video conferencing rather than travelling to meet clients. It saves money, time and reduces your carbon footprint. You could even encourage employees to work from home saving them from a long commute.

  • Switch to LED light bulbs and reduce your energy bills. Changing from fluorescent lights also stops the toxic materials from ending up in a landfill. LED also lasts 6 times longer.

 

Your business is contributing to the climate crisis, but we’re all contributing to the climate emergency,

But it’s how we act now that will end up defining how we survive, not just as business owners but as a species.

And anyway, who wants to explain to their grandchildren that they didn’t do enough to stop killing the home of Christmas.

Find out more about Energym's electricity-generating indoor bike for the home. OR take a look at our commercial offerings, helping gyms reduce their energy bills and offices increase wellbeing among employees. 

Back to blog

Leave a comment

Please note, comments need to be approved before they are published.

Join the RE:VOLUTION

Solutions for every setting