Green Office Week Explained

Green Office Week (now Green Month) is a British annual awareness week that encourages workers across the UK to make small changes to their working habits to positively impact the environment. The week raises awareness of key green issues, providing office workers with the practical advice, tools and help they need to create a more sustainable way of working. The week is held during the second week of May each year.[1] [2] It is run by the Avery labelling company.[3]

The week has activities designed to promote the idea of greener working practices. These have included Q&A seminars and interactive digital tools.

History

The first Green Office Week was launched in 2009.[4] This was in response to research showing that UK employees felt they were being held back from being environmentally friendly at work because of a lack of empowerment and facilities. The week set out to ‘champion change’ by raising awareness of the issues workers identified as holding them back from environmentally friendly working.

Since 2009, the week has been held on an annual basis, with organisations, businesses and local councils using the week as a platform to encourage behaviour change.

What happens during Green Office Week

During the week, there is a different focus each day:

Green Offices for Dummies

As part of Green Office Week, a specially commissioned guide was produced in partnership with the worldwide reference series For Dummies. Green Offices for Dummies covers a range of practical ways that workers can implement more sustainable working practices. The guide contains a number of case studies that look at the businesses case for becoming environmentally friendlier. The guide was released in 2009.[6]

Eco-bikes

Throughout the week eco-bikes visit cities across the UK. They will be around major transport links including train and tube stations during rush hour and in the city centre at lunchtimes.

Office workers will be able to get a copy of Green Offices for Dummies Guides. The bikes will be in the following cities:-

Results of the 2010 national survey with YouGov

At the start of 2010 Avery conducted a national environment survey with YouGov to find out office workers’ views on helping the environment. These results were published during Green Office Week;[7] the most popular actions during the week were recycling paper and switching off equipment and lights when not in use.

2020s

In the 2020s, Avery now runs a "Green Month".[8]

External links

Notes and References

  1. https://palife.co.uk/news/get-inspired-by-green-office-week/ PA Life website, Get inspired by Green Office Week, article by Molly Dyson dated May 13, 2015
  2. https://www.worksmartpa.com/worksmart-pa-news/green-office-week-takes-inspiration-from-next-generation-to-turn-offices-green-in-21-days/ Work Smart PA website, Green Office Week takes inspiration from next generation to turn offices green in 21 days, article dated March 4, 2017
  3. https://www.avery.co.uk/blog/family-and-home/eco/how-to-engage-your-office-into-recycling Avery website, How to engage your office into recycling, retrieved November 26, 2024
  4. https://www.bizspace.co.uk/news/uk-workers-call-greener-offices/ BizSpace website, UK workers call for greener offices article dated May 2013
  5. https://www.savemoneycutcarbon.com/learn-save/green-office-week-day-2-focuses-on-transport-as-part-of-the-uk-sustainability-drive/ Save Money Cut Carbon website, Green Office Week day 2 focuses on Transport in the UK sustainability drive, article by Mark Sait dated May 14, 2013
  6. https://z-lib.io/book/14617957 Z Lib website
  7. https://yougov.co.uk/society/articles/1547-is-your-office-going-green2 YouGov website, Is Your Office Going Green, article dated May 13, 2011
  8. https://www.avery.co.uk/blog/family-and-home/eco/kick-off-green-month Avery website, Kick off Green Month