Reduce, Reuse, Recycle
Watts in your House?
From Farm to Fumes
Globally Green
100

This color-coded bin is often used for collecting recyclable paper, plastic, and cans.

What is the blue bin?

100

Not leaving the water running during this daily hygiene activity saves 8 gallons of water a day

What is brushing your teeth?

100
The main greenhouse gas cattle produce
What is methane?
100

The number of National Parks in the U.S.

What is 63?

200

Recycling one ton of this material saves 17 trees, 7,000 gallons of water, and 4,000 kilowatts of energy.

What is paper?

200

This common household appliance uses the most electricity annually, often accounting for up to 13% of your energy bill.

What is a refrigerator? 

200

The word for food grown without GMOs, man-made fertilizers, pesticides; growth regulators or livestock feed additives

What is organic?

200

This country produces the most overall waste

What is the United States? 

300

8 million metric tons of this material ends up in our oceans each year

What is plastic?

300

The average American uses 17.2 gallons of water a day on this activity

What is a shower?

300

This meat leaves the biggest environmental footprint

What is lamb?

300

In 1991, this Scandinavian country became the first in the world to ban aluminum cans.

What is Denmark?

400

This natural textile, commonly used in clothing, can be recycled into new fabrics.

What is cotton?

400
This appliance/device uses the most water in a household
What is the toilet?
400

The main greenhouse gas produced by vehicles

What is CO2?

400

This European country leads the world in recycling rates, with over 60% of its waste recycled.

What is Germany?

500

The vegetable you should NEVER compost

What is an onion/garlic?

500

One of the two most eco-friendly lights (looking for the name)

What is (CFL) compact Florescent bulbs or LEDs?

500

One of the 7 most sustainable foods to grow (looking for the name)

What are Grasses such as wheat, barley, oats, rice and buckwheat, and beans, and peas?

500

This island nation introduced a “bottle deposit” law in 1979, where citizens earn money for returning beverage containers.

What is Iceland? 

M
e
n
u