Conservation

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‘Going Green’ at Sea Aboard Disney Cruise Line®

Mechanics of Disney MagicProtecting the environment has always been a rich part of Disney’s history. From Walt’s earliest nature movies to the dedication of nearly one-third of Walt Disney World® Resort property as a wildlife conservation area, these core beliefs from the past carry on today.

In celebration of Earth Week, today we are taking a look at Disney Cruise Line® and their commitment to minimize impact on the environment through their everyday operation. Through the help of some state-of-the-art technology and dedication from Crew members, they are achieving their goals at being Environmental Stewards.

Here is a look at some of their current environmental initiatives:

  • Disney Cruise Line® ships feature an innovative, low-resistance, 100% non-toxic hull coating that reduces drag and increases fuel efficiency. Improved hydrodynamics are also used to maximize fuel efficiency
  • Smart technology is used to self-adjust temperatures and lighting throughout the ship. Use of highly efficient insulation and heat reflective paint has reduced the need for heating, ventilation, and cooling systems by 25%
  • During construction and refurbishments, lighter building materials are used when available, such as fiber optic cables in place of traditional copper cabling
  • Even the elevators guests use daily on board are magical – state-of-the-art gearless elevators use hoisting technology that is 40% more efficient than standard elevators
  • During the Broadway-style shows inside the Walt Disney Theatre, overhead winch motors that are used to raise and lower scenery for the shows generate electricity during the lowering process which is fed back into the ship’s power grid
  • LED lighting is used extensively throughout the ships.
  • Captains utilize special route optimization software to help select the safest and most energy-efficient route
  • Through their waste minimization plans, Crew members eliminate more than 405 tons of metals, glass, plastic and paper from traditional waste streams each year

These are just a few of the ways Disney Cruise Line® makes your “floating home at sea” a little more environmentally friendly!

Conservation – It begins with YOU

ConservationOver the past week, we have talked about how Disney Parks has taken a proactive approach to Environmental stewardship by:

  • Conserving water, energy, and ecosystems.
  • Reducing waste and greenhouse gas emissions
  • Inspiring others to take action for the environment

Now is when you step in! What changes can you and your family make that will positively impact the world around you? Disney Cast Members throughout the United States have made pledges to make their world a better place. It doesn’t take much – it can be something as simple as:

  • Raising the thermostat by 2 degrees in the summer and lower by 2 degrees in the winter
  • Using only reusable utensils and drinking containers during your daily life
  • Eating food that is caught, farmed or grown in an environmentally friendly way
  • Recycling anything and everything possible – even when you are away from home
  • Minimizing the use of fertilizer and pesticides

What is your pledge? Tell us in the comment section below.

By |2017-06-27T10:23:02-05:00April 22nd, 2012|Categories: Disney News, Walt Disney World News|Tags: , , |0 Comments

Walt Disney World® Resort – Growing Green

Cast Member RecyclingThe cast of the Walt Disney World® Resort has committed to minimizing their overall impact on the environment. Many operational changes have placed emphasis on effectively managing resource used through energy conservation and waste minimization, while also focusing on conserving the natural environment through science, education and leadership efforts.

Here is just a few of the many changes in day-to-day operations the Walt Disney World® Resort have implemented all in the name of conservation:

  • Walt Disney World® Resort has deployed more than 1,500 alternatively fueled vehicles-ranging from golf carts to Monorail trains to help lower emissions. They also replaced the entire fleet of Security vehicles with hybrids and other fuel-efficient options. This effort has reduced fuel consumption by an average of 33% per vehicle.
  • Walt Disney World® Resort installed energy-saving fixtures throughout the property. During an update at The Hall of Presidents, Cast Members replaced theatrical lighting with more efficient and longer-lasting LED fixtures. LEDs consuming only 3-to-13 watts can replace 75-to-100-watt incandescent bulbs with equivalent light output. LED fixtures are now used in 98 percent of the signs, decorations and Christmas trees at Walt Disney World Resort. Even Cinderella Castle glows “green” during the holidays with more than 170,000 LED white lights to glisten the Castle, using the equivalent energy of only 12 microwave ovens.
  • All 24 resort hotels at the Walt Disney World® Resort maintain the state’s Green Lodging designation – representing the largest number of Green Lodging-certified hotels in the state.
  • More than 92,000 tons of materials were recycled in 2010 at the Walt Disney World® Resort.
  • The Walt Disney World® Resort uses more than two billion gallons of reclaimed water a year for irrigation of landscape, washing buses and cleaning streets at theme parks and resorts. This amount of water could fill Spaceship Earth roughly 129 times.
  • Disney Harvest reduces food waste by gathering excess prepared food from Walt Disney World® Resort kitchens and distributing it through the Second Harvest Food Bank of Central Florida. More than 1,000 local children are fed weekly through this program. In 2010, Disney Harvest gave nearly 360,000 pounds of food to the hungry in Central Florida
  • Disney’s Animal Kingdom® Theme Park provides some unique forms of “waste.” In 2010, more than 4,680 tons of manure was sent to the compost facility from Disney’s Animal Kingdom and the Tri-Circle D Ranch, producing more than 9,000 tons of compost throughout the year.

Disneyland® Hotel Goes Green

After the recent renovations at the Disneyland® Hotel, you will notice that its exterior looks a little blue. But if you stare into that shade of blue, you will see a lot of “GREEN!”

Those blue tinted windows are just one of the many energy-efficient changes that were made at the Disneyland® Hotel.

Rona Kay, Manager of Disneyland® Hotel, explains how this historic hotel was made a little more environmentally friendly

Disney’s Vero Beach Resort’s Annual “Tour de Turtles” Event

Tour de TurtlesApproximately 50,000 female sea turtles come to lay their eggs in Florida each year, making its beaches one of the most important nesting areas in the world. In the US, as much as 90 percent of sea turtle nesting occurs in Florida, which serves as a primary nesting site for several species of endangered and threatened sea turtles. Among the oldest creatures on earth, sea turtles have remained essentially unchanged for 110 million years.

Disney’s Vero Beach Resort proudly hosts a program annually that was created by the Sea Turtle Conservancy, “Tour de Turtles.” It follows the marathon migration of 15 sea turtles representing four different species from their nesting beaches to their foraging grounds. The ultimate goal of “Tour de Turtles” is to inspire people to care about sea turtle conservation.

The turtles acts as an ambassador to raise awareness about a specific threat to sea turtles. One potential threat is light pollution on the beach. Since sea turtle hatchlings rely on moonlight to find their way to the ocean, many become disoriented and drawn off-course by artificial light sources. Another threat is of entanglement. Turtles can become tangled in trash and nets and drown.

Researchers from Disney’s Animal Programs and the Sea Turtle Conservancy track the sea turtles using satellite telemetry as they travel from their nesting beach to various feeding grounds. Using this technology, scientists learn about sea turtles’ habits at sea and the different migratory patterns of each species. This knowledge helps researchers, conservationists and governing agencies make more informed decisions about sea turtle conservation actions and policies. Guests at Disney’s Animal Kingdom® Theme Park can find out about this research and follow the tracks of the turtles when they visit the Wildlife Tracking Center in Rafiki’s Planet Watch.

Enjoy this video of the 2011 Tour de Turtles:

 

Disney Resorts – Saving Lives One Bar of Soap at a Time

Clean The World LogoEach year, millions of children worldwide die from hygiene-related illnesses because the essential items for proper hand washing are unobtainable to them. It is estimated that every 10 seconds a child dies from these types of illnesses – all preventable by just a single bar of soap!

An Orlando-based nonprofit organization, The Clean the World® Foundation, aims to stop these needless deaths from occurring by recycling used soap and shampoo and distributing them around the world to those living in poverty. With Walt Disney World® Resort’s 24 resort hotels located in central Florida, they play a key role in helping Clean the World® reach their goal. But it doesn’t end there – resort hotels at Disneyland® Resort in California as well as Aulani, a Disney Resort & Spa in Hawai’i, also recycle hygiene products with Clean the World®.

“Disney’s commitment to environmental sustainability permeates throughout the entire company. They are literally turning trash into treasure through Clean the World®, and that benefits the global community by creating a cleaner world” said Shawn Seipler, executive director of Clean the World®.

From Jan. – Sep. of 2010, Disney cast members collected more than 25,000 pounds of partially-used soaps, shampoos, conditioners and lotions from the nearly 28,000 hotel rooms on Walt Disney World® Resort property! This collection not only allows the cast members and guests to clean the world, but it repurposes something that was headed to the landfill.

After the discarded amenities are sanitized, Clean the World® distributes the items to people in need as part of their ongoing efforts to improve health and personal hygiene in impoverished areas worldwide. Some of these products are even donated to shelters and various organizations throughout the United States.

So next time you use that bar of soap in your resort room, smile knowing that it will soon be saving lives!

Environmental Awareness Part of Disneyland® Resort’s Heritage

With Earth Day only a week away, we are going to showcase some of the way Disney Parks focuses on the environment.

Walt Disney expressed his commitment to the conservation of natural resources more than 60 years ago and the Disneyland® Resort continuously looks for ways to make their daily operations more environmentally friendly.

Check out this video to see some of the ways in which Disneyland® Resort “goes GREEN!”.

Disney’s Animal Kingdom® Theme Park Celebrates ‘bEARTHday’

Earth Day ActivitiesA celebration is in order at Disney’s Animal Kingdom® Theme Park on April 22nd. Not only is it Earth Day, but the park will celebrate its 14th birthday!

Since 1998, Disney’s Animal Kingdom® Theme Park has told its guests a story about conservation each and every day of its operation. During this years Party for the Planet celebration on Earth Day, guests will find out what they can do to make their backyards wildlife-friendly as well as discover other ways to conserve wildlife and protect nature.

Special Earth Day activities at Disney’s Animal Kingdom® Theme Park include:

  • In Asia at Maharajah Jungle Trek, families can play a supermarket game and learn how their purchases can make a big difference for wildlife and wild places.
  • At Pangani Forest Exploration Trail in Africa, children can observe and identify chimpanzee tracks and clues left behind along trails as they move through the forest.
  • At Rafiki’s Planet Watch, guests will discover fun ways to spend time in nature with their families as well as face painters and caricature artists. Families can also visit the Chimpanzee Research Station and participate in a variety of activities based on real conservation work.

Even if you don’t get to experience one of the special Earth Day activities, be sure to check out the sand sculpture outside of the park entrance celebrating the release of “Chimpanzee’, Disneynature’s newest True Life Adventure film!

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