Tag: Oprina

  • Environmentally-friendly businesses in Romania

    Environmentally-friendly businesses in Romania

    75% of the respondents in the same
    2019 survey showed their interest in environmentally focused campaigns on waste
    management while 86% were concerned about deforestation. People’s involvement
    in environmentally focused campaigns is lower though, 38% of the Romanians
    would participate in waste management activities while only 33% would get
    involved in reforestation campaigns.








    There are more and more
    initiatives, either individual or belonging to smaller groups, of involvement
    in curbing pollution and other environmentally friendly activities. A case in
    point is Dinu Drog, a lawyer from Bucharest, who founded a civic engagement
    group involved in solving some of the issues currently facing the district he lives
    in.








    Mr. Drog has recently become an
    entrepreneur in the field of renewable energy. Late last year, upon the
    initiative of one of his neighbours, he set up a renewable energy cooperative
    together with a Dutch partner. The cooperative, which initially had 15 members
    now, two months after its launch, boasts a total number of 140. But what
    exactly is a renewable energy cooperative? Here is Dinu Drog at the microphone.






    Dinu Drog: A renewable
    energy cooperative is actually an energy community, a business vehicle, which
    provides renewable energy to the members of this network. At the same time it
    produces energy in keeping with the EU legislation. Energy democracy is a trend
    in Europe nowadays with a view to involving its citizens in this process of
    producing energy by means of solar panels. We, the members of this cooperative,
    are presently holding talks for the purchase of an entire solar field. For the
    time being the cooperative is functioning as an investment fund and its members
    are making interest in exchange for their contributions.






    Members of the aforementioned
    energy cooperative are also shareholders; they benefit from the energy they
    produce but they are going to turn into suppliers as soon as they have obtained
    a production license. Sometimes these cooperatives are allowed to invest in
    renewable energy facilities. Although unique in Romania and Eastern Europe at
    this time, Mr. Drog’s cooperative is an example of civic engagement proving the
    increasing concern some citizens have for the world they live in and the air
    they are breathing. Here is Dinu Drog at the microphone again.








    Dinu Drog: Individual
    solutions are easy to find, if people want to. They can start by sorting waste,
    recycling, monitoring electricity consumption…But we also need public instruments,
    communities, whose contribution to this initiative is even greater because it
    brings people with the same degree of interest in sustainability and
    environmentally -friendly activities together.






    Another example of
    environmentally-friendly entrepreneurship is the Seneca publishing house, which
    describes itself as Romania’s first green publishing house. The enterprise also
    includes a bookshop and a cafeteria showcasing books on environment and where
    visitors pay for the time spent rather than for the drinks, which they prepare
    themselves out of natural ingredients. Here is director Stefania Oprina with
    more on how a green publishing house is actually working.






    Stefania Oprina: When you
    make a product, you need to take into consideration the environment. We produce
    books, and that means we need to use recycled paper and we also recycle the
    waste resulting from the production process. We use this paper to print
    leaflets or other materials in order to avoid using fresh paper. The type of
    ink that we use is also a special one, and all these efforts eventually pay off
    as the final result is very beautiful books, always well-received by readers
    who know that less trees had been cut for their production.








    The growing interest of the
    Romanians in environment preservation has been proven by the fact that ‘The
    Almost Zero Waste Family’, a book written by Jeremie Pichon and Benedicte Moret
    was a best-seller at the Gaudeamus Book Fair last year. Here is Stefania Oprina
    again.








    Stefania Oprina: People are
    already looking for practical solutions to apply. They carry reusable textile
    bags to avoid using plastics and are no longer using plastic forks and knives
    for the same reason. Some are interested in recipes of less polluting
    detergents in a bid to save money and time both in supermarkets and at home
    because these recipes allow them to produce the quantity of detergent they
    need.








    All these initiatives, ranging from
    investment in renewable energy to avoiding the use of plastics or polluting washing
    powders are indicative of the Romanians’ growing interest in a cleaner and
    healthier environment.






    (translated by bill)