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By Nate Lippens Special to MSN
The rising awareness of global warming has sparked a mass interest in
environmentalism that exceeds the early conservation movement of the 1970s. Part
of this sea change is due to an increased celebrity presence in all matters
green. It isn't just talk. Whether it's forsaking a limo in favor of driving a
hybrid car to the Oscars or fitting their homes with solar panels, many
celebrities are embracing and living green lifestyles.
Actors such as Morgan Freeman, Johnny Depp, Orlando Bloom and Kirsten Dunst drive electric or fuel-efficient cars.
Canadian singer Alanis Morisette, who earned the 2003 Environmental Media
Association Missions in Music Award for campaigning against oil drilling in
Alaska, has a solar home and drives a Prius. She also plans to make her next
tour eco-friendly. Neil Young's entire 2004 North American tour was fueled with
biodiesel.
Others have taken their personal environments off-road. Sitcom star Julia Louis-Dreyfus and her husband, writer/producer
Brad Hall, have been environmentalists for years. Their newly designed home near
Santa Barbara, Calif., has been singled out as a showcase of green design and
state-of-the-art energy efficiency mechanisms. Cate Blanchett's Sydney home is solar-powered. The
Oscar-winning actress, who is a co-director of the Sydney Theatre Company, plans
to equip the theatre's building with solar panels and rainwater-collection
systems.
Former Agent 007 Pierce Brosnan has been active in environmental
causes for years. He frequently posts topics online and discusses with magazines
how he and his family have gone green. They consume organic foods, use
eco-friendly cleaning products and services, recycle, have an organic garden and
compost. Their self-designed house has floor radiant heat and solar vents.
Edward Norton, who grew up with environmentalist
parents, has taken eco-consciousness from his solar home to the homes of others
by spreading the word among other actors. He launched the BP Solar Neighbours
Program in 2003, which matches each celebrity purchase of a solar-energy home
system with a solar installation in a low-income family home in Los Angeles. Don Cheadle, Alicia Silverstone, Salma Hayek and Brad Pitt have all participated in the project.
Leonardo DiCaprio has made it a personal and artistic
crusade to bring attention to environmental issues. The actor uses his fame to
promote green organizations through his Web site, which is divided between
causes and his acting career. He is, in fact, a longtime environmentalist,
having interviewed President Clinton in 2000 for an ABC Earth Day television
special. Currently he serves on the boards of the Natural Resources Defense
Council and Global Green USA. His upcoming eco-documentary, "11th Hour," which
he produced, co-wrote and narrated, includes the participation of more than 70
experts from various fields on the subject of global warming. DiCaprio lives in
a solar house and drives a biodiesel car.
One of the environmental activists with a long track record is Robert Redford. The Oscar-winning icon, now 70, got
involved with the grassroots conservation movement when he was 24. At the time,
he purchased two acres of land in Utah, which has since grown to 5,000 acres and
become the site for the Sundance Institute. In his forties, he became a trustee
of the Natural Resources Defense Council and later the founder of the Institute
for Resource Management. In April 2007, the Sundance Channel launched a weekly
three-hour slot called "The Green" dedicated to the environment. Redford's "The
Heat Is On" campaign is aimed at making global warming a talking point for the
2008 U.S. presidential election. However, Redford doesn't only make a difference
through causes; he also uses solar power for his home and drives a biodiesel
vehicle.
Daryl Hannah has become a noted eco-celebrity. She
was arrested in June 2006 for staging a 23-day tree sit-in during a bid to
preserve an urban community garden in Los Angeles. The actress not only tours
the country discussing green issues but also attempts to establish a national
biodiesel standard. Determined to stave off fears that producing some green
fuels may do more harm than good for the environment, Hannah and Willie Nelson
are spearheading a group called The Sustainable Biofuels Alliance. They are
pushing to establish norms for biodiesel production by September 2007, which
will place checks on the supply chain and accredit firms producing green fuels.
Hannah lives one of the most environmentally radical lifestyles of any green
celebrity. She lives completely off-grid in the Rocky Mountains on an organic
farm. |