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PROJECT POLAR BEAR
TEAM
(left to right) Sam Leist, Emily Goldstein
and Kaitlin O'Bryan |
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Louisville Zoo teens work to save
polar bears and environment through the help of local
businesses
Three Louisville Zoo teens are working to
make a difference in the world by encouraging local area businesses
to help the environment and save polar bears by reducing carbon
emissions.
The teens—University of Louisville freshman
Emily Goldstein, Saint Xavier High School senior Sam Leist and
Atherton High School sophomore Kaitlin O’Bryan—have developed a free
Energy Use Evaluation Kit for local businesses and organizations
that evaluates the business’ energy use and offers easy
energy-saving options to implement. In addition to the kit, the
teens are making presentations to local businesses to educate
employees on the importance of using less energy and asking them to
sign a carbon emissions reduction pledge.
“Considering that people spend a third of
their lives at work, and that commercial buildings produce 45
percent of the nation’s greenhouse gases, it is obvious that making
even small changes at work could add up to huge changes in the
environment,” Goldstein said. “It can also add up to significant
monetary savings for the businesses, too!”
The teens have entered their Energy Use
Evaluation Kit and website
louisvillezoo.org/projectpolarbear into Polar Bears
International’s Project Polar Bear contest, which challenges teens
to develop community projects that will reduce the carbon dioxide
load in the atmosphere. The contest ends December 31.
“The Project Polar Bear contest is a way
for small groups of young people to make a big difference, and we
are doing just that!” Leist said. “Through Polar Bears International
and the Louisville Zoo, we have learned about what is happening to
the polar bear and the arctic and its impact on the Louisville area.
Our goal is to make the changes necessary that will not only save
the polar bear, but the entire planet.”
The teens’ website not only contains the
Energy Use Evaluation Kit and carbon emissions reduction pledge, but
it also features information and resources on polar bears and
climate change in the form of quizzes, a photo gallery and journal.
More than 15 businesses including
Louisville Metro Government, Jefferson County Public Schools, TARC
and Luckett & Farley have already signed the pledge saving more than
14 million pounds of carbon.
“One ton of CO2 fills up a football
stadium,” O’Bryan said, “so we are very happy that these businesses
have pledged to save more than 7,000 stadiums worth of CO2
emissions. And that’s just so far—we want more businesses and
organizations to sign on.”
This is the second year a team of
Louisville teens entered Polar Bears International’s Project Polar
Bear contest. Last year, the team of Goldstein and Brandie Farkas
won the grand prize—a 6-day, 5-night trip to the polar bear capital
of the world in Canada to see polar bears in the wild, go dog
sledding and gaze at the Northern Lights. They are going next month.
(You can read more at
louisvillezoo.org/news/press/MR/MR%2009-05-04_polar.htm.)
The grand prize for this year’s competition
is also a trip to see polar bears in the wild near the Western
Hudson Bay as well as to be featured in a short Polar Bears
International film.
“I can’t imagine a world without polar
bears,” Goldstein said. “These magnificent animals exemplify the
awesome beauty of the arctic. Yet polar bears and their ecosystem
are on the brink of destruction and extinction, threatened by our
abuse and neglect. The mighty, magnificent polar bear has become a
symbol of hope for a change in our global policies, in our need to
fix the damage the human race has caused.”
For more information on how to obtain the
teen’s free Energy Use Evaluation Kit as well as schedule the teens
to talk to your organization or business, visit
louisvillezoo.org/projectpolarbear, call (502) 426-4399 or
e-mail
projectpolarbear@yahoo.com.
For more information on Polar Bears
International’s Project Polar Bear contest, visit
www.polarbearsinternational.org/project-polar-bear.
-- MEDIA OPPORTUNITY --
If you would like to interview Emily
Goldstein, Sam Leist and Kaitlin O’Bryan, please contact Louisville
Zoo Public Relations Manager Kara Bussabarger at (502) 238-5331.
***
The Louisville Zoo, a non-profit organization and state zoo of
Kentucky, is dedicated to bettering the bond between people and our
planet by providing excellent care for animals, a great experience
for visitors, and leadership in scientific research and conservation
education. The Zoo is accredited by the American Association of
Museums (AAM) and by the Association of Zoos and Aquariums (AZA).
For more information, visit louisvillezoo.org.
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