Create a Ripple Effect
Note: I am not affilated with any company or organization mentioned here.
Tuesday, 28 October 2008
The End of Economics and What it Will Do for You!
What? End economics?
That's right I said it.
"But isn't economics important?" you may ask.
Well...what is economics?
Economics is a human construct developed by brainy mathematical people to study money. That's my definition anyway. Dictionary.com defines economics as: the science that deals with the production, distribution, and consumption of goods and services, or the material welfare of humankind.
I missed out the part about the "welfare of human kind." I'm not so surprised as the "welfare of human kind" doesn't actually factor into traditional economics. See that's the problem with allowing brainy mathematical people to rule the world. Anyone that good at math has GOT to have a corresponding emotional and empathy deficit. Either that or its just a conincidence that all my math teachers have been quite cold fish.
Consider the fact that modern economies MUST expand in order to be considered healthy. The entire economic system on which we live and which we depend on for survival is built upon the theory that never ending expansion is the key to our health and well being. Unfortunately we have a finite number of resources on this planet. The more we expand and use them up, the more scarce and expensive they come and the more unstable our economies become - which leads catastrophic economic meltdown like....
...a complete lack of credit and the failure of the world's financial system.
But that would never happen. Would it?
I was recently on treehugger.com and noticed an interview with David Suzuki under the radio links. David Suzuki is Canada's premier environmentalist. Listen to what he has to say at the following link.
http://ads.treehugger.com/thtv_files/audio/TH%20Radio/Podcasts/TH%20Radio%2024.mp3
Consider this: If the concept of never ending expansion of economic activity (ie. use of resources expands on a never ending scale) is impossible then we MUST go through recession and economic hard times every few years or decades and, perhaps, massive depressions every 70 - 100 years or so.
Now, with the current financial crisis at hand, we have the chance to fix this fatally flawed model and to save ourselves and our planet. I mean, massive changes are going to be made to our economic models and the way we define wealth as a result of this so let's get it right. This means that you will have a more secure future, be able to make more money long term, will live in a less polluted world, enjoy greater health, and a more positive outlook for your children. It all boils down to sustainability. Economists have created an unsustainable system which only measures money and it's exchange as the basis for our well being. It's time we factored our resources, our health, our quality of life, and the legacy we leave behind for our children into the equation. How do we do this?
Listen to David Suzuki and come back another day for some ideas
Next up: GDP - Gross Domestic Product or Gosh Darn Problem?
Sunday, 16 December 2007
The Most Terrifying Video You'll Ever See & The Manpollo Project
Watch this video folks. It could change your life.
There is now a link to this video and the follow up videos that were posted on YouTube in the upper right hand corner of this blog.
The Manpollo Project
The Manpollo Project is a simple to follow index of the follow up videos to The Most Terrifying Video You Will Ever See. It's useful because when you're on YouTube the videos don't appear in the correct order and you have to keep searching for them. It was created by someone other than the original person who posted on YouTube under the name Manpollo Project after the name of one of the videos in the series.
Take your time and watch them all over the next few days or weeks. If it does nothing more than improve your ability to think critically and to understand the nature of science then it has served its purpose. Very impressive and mind expanding stuff.
Here's the Effortless thing you can do. Email it or send it to friends. Spread the word. Now THAT'S easy.
Friday, 14 December 2007
Who Knew Gore Could be so Inspirational
Gore Urges Climate-Change Action Regardless of U.S.
By Kim Chipman and Gemma Daley
Dec. 13 (Bloomberg) -- Former U.S. Vice President Al Gore urged countries to aggressively move ahead on a new global climate change treaty in the face of opposition from his home country.
Nations pushing to set tough new mandatory limits on global warming pollution must ``find the grace to navigate around this enormous obstacle,'' Gore told delegates on the Indonesian island of Bali at United Nations-sponsored talks on climate change.
Gore's criticism of the U.S. received applause from delegates. The Bush administration's refusal to accept specific emissions-reduction targets is spurring division at the UN talks, with the European Union and China insisting on targets. The Bali meeting is aimed at starting negotiations for a climate accord to replace the Kyoto Protocol, which runs out in 2012.
``I'm not an official of the U.S. and not bound by official niceties,'' said Gore, 59, who earlier this week received a Nobel Peace Prize for his work on raising awareness of climate change. ``I'm going to speak an inconvenient truth: my own country --the U.S. -- is principally responsible for obstructing progress here in Bali.''
Gore urged delegates to move past their anger at the U.S. and forge ahead with the understanding that Bush will be leaving office in almost a year. A new administration, whether Democrat or Republican, probably will embrace more climate-friendly policies, he said.
`Blank Space'
``Do all of the difficult work that needs to be done and save a large, open, blank space in your document and put a footnote by it,'' Gore said. Negotiators should write: ``This doc is incomplete, but we are going to move forward anyway.''
Gore also stressed that mandatory emissions targets must be part of a climate treaty that takes effect in 2010, two years before the current pact expires.
``We can't afford to wait another five years to replace Kyoto,'' Gore said, adding that some scientists say the world may have less than 10 years to start curbing emissions to avoid the most devastating effects of climate change.
Gore cited recent floods throughout Africa, fires in the U.S., droughts in Australia and ``massive flooding'' in Mexico, unexpected melting in Antarctica and the disappearing polar ice cap as signs of what he calls a ``planetary emergency.''
``That phrase still sounds shrill to some ears but it's deadly accurate,'' Gore said. ``These and other challenges are getting more difficult to ignore.''
Climate Research
More than a century of climate change research, including this year's findings of the UN Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, which shared this year's Nobel Peace Prize with Gore, says that the burning of fossil fuels through cars, power plants and other human activities is causing the world's temperatures and sea levels to rise.
The IPCC said earlier this year that humans are very likely contributing to climate change, and the planet's warming emissions must peak in 2015 and then begin to decline to avoid large scale, irreversible climate shifts.
``Why haven't we yet reacted?'' Gore asked. He later compared what he considers the passivity of some nations in the face of the ``climate crisis'' to world leaders in 1938 who didn't take seriously the threat of German Nazi leader Adolf Hitler.
Gore's appearance at the UN climate talks put him back in a familiar arena. As former President Bill Clinton's vice president, Gore spearheaded efforts to persuade countries to reach agreement on the 1997 Kyoto Protocol, which came close to collapsing several times.
Gore's Influence
``When Gore came to Kyoto as vice president, he gave a speech that turned the negotiations around,'' David Doniger, former head of climate policy at the Environmental Protection Agency during the Clinton administration, said in an interview after Gore's speech today.
``He also did a lot of work in the back rooms that turned the negotiations around, and I think he's doing that again,'' said Doniger, now policy director of the Climate Center at the Natural Resources Defense Council. ``I'm sure he's working face- to-face in the back rooms to give people the fortitude and the courage to do this.''
The UN meeting, which is set to end tomorrow, has attracted politicians including Democratic Senator John Kerry of Massachusetts and New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg, who spoke in Bali today.
Shifting Attitudes
Like Gore, Bloomberg stressed the shifting attitudes in the U.S. toward climate change, exemplified by legislation in Congress to cap national carbon emissions. The climate bill was approved by a Senate committee last week.
``The fact that our Congress is seriously debating cap-and- trade legislation shows just how far America has come in just the last year,'' Bloomberg said in a speech at a Bali event sponsored by Environmental Defense, a New York-based advocacy group.
Bloomberg called for ``robust public debate'' on caps and a tax on all U.S. oil, natural gas and coal producers to encourage reduced use of fuels that contribute the most to air pollution and global warming. Bloomberg is the founder and majority owner of Bloomberg LP, the parent company of Bloomberg News.
To contact the reporter on this story: Kim Chipman in Nusa Dua, Indonesia, at kchipman@bloomberg.net .
Last Updated: December 13, 2007 11:55 ESTDo Something!
From The Times
Wake up and smell the smoke of disaster
Camilla Cavendish; Why are we so cool about climate change?
A collective groan in the office when I mutter that I might write about the UN's “state of the planet” report. What a turn-off: gloomy stats about mankind changing the weather, and destroying species and forests.
Environmentalists may get off on climate porn, but most people just turn away. “If it was really so bad, they'd do something,” says one colleague, without specifying who “they” are. The human tendency to convince yourself that everything is OK, because no one else is worried, is deeply ingrained.
Psychologists studied this phenomenon after the 1964 murder of Kitty Genovese. She was repeatedly attacked, outside her New York flat, by a stranger over the space of half an hour. Witness to that event were 38 people who stood at their windows but did not even dial for help. They just peered into the dark, listening to her screams, until she died.
John Darley and Bibb Latané later ran a series of experiments that confirmed that the more people who witness an event the less responsible any one of them feels. We assume that someone else is better qualified to respond. We are afraid to be the only one to make a fuss. “Social etiquette” trumps common sense.
Background
Our tendency to shrug off responsibility seems to hold true even when we ourselves are in danger. Darley and Latané asked a series of college students to sit in a room and fill out a questionnaire. When smoke started to pour into the room through a vent, the others, all actors, ignored it and went on writing calmly. Ninety per cent of subjects copied the actors, even when the smoke became so thick that they could barely see and were coughing. But subjects who were alone in the room, under the same conditions, almost all reported the smoke as an emergency. That is an astonishing finding - that the inaction of other people can make us underestimate threats to our own safety.
In the past few weeks we have been told, by reputable sources, that the oceans are warming faster than anyone predicted. That species are becoming extinct a hundred times faster than fossils record. That fresh water supplies, critical to food production, are under strain. That we are approaching tipping points that may make climate change irreversible. This stuff makes me feel pretty desperate. I would think that other people would worry too. But then I go to the office, and to friends' houses, and no one mentions it. Nor do the politicians.
I am not claiming that there is a conspiracy of silence about environmental issues. On the contrary, some people argue there is too much noise. In most British offices, as the wisps come up the vent, the influence of the media probably means that there is more than one person looking concerned. But not a critical mass. When Darley and Latané put three non-actors in the room, they were more likely to call for help. But still only a third did.
It is human nature to wait for someone else to go first. So despite the noise from green groups, we look for get-out clauses. We blame India and China, or big corporations. People who write cheques to save cute monkeys from extinction also buy soap and margarine made from palm oil, whose production is devastating the tropical forests where the monkeys live. People who buy cloth shopping bags to reduce waste then fill them with water in plastic bottles that are shipped to China to be burnt. The part of our brain that is programmed to imitate dominates the part cued to self-preservation — especially when the threats are complex and long-term.
Could we send the herd in the other direction? Maybe. Ten years after Darley and Latané defined the bystander effect, another professor taught his pupils to overcome it. Arthur Beaman showed students films of the smoke experiment. He explained the psychology. And in future those students were, apparently, almost twice as likely as others to react to help other people.
Given the importance that companies and governments apparently place on environmental issues, it is astonishing how little attention has been paid to the psychological aspects.
Two years ago a small study for the Sustainable Development Commission found that UK households that generated their own energy, through solar power, wind turbines or air source heat pumps, became more likely to conserve energy. They would buy A-rated appliances and turn things off.
This didn't just apply to rich eco-fanatics: it applied equally to social housing tenants. Irrespective of whether they had chosen it or not, the process of generating their own energy seems to have given many people an “emotional connection”, says the study. The visibility of the solar panels or wind turbines made them proud to be pioneers.
In January I counted a Toyota Prius hybrid car on almost every one of the rich streets in a part of London just east of my house. Yesterday I did another count. They seemed to have spawned into two or three. That is the power of imitation, for people who can afford it. But how do you get other people to imitate behaviour that is less visible: buying less, travelling less or changing their electricity supplier? The answers must surely lie in social etiquette. If we are programmed to act like lemmings, then we must give some people incentives to break out and publicise their activities. Opinion- formers need to make visible changes in their own behaviour, which they have notably failed to do.
But the smoke is coming up through the vent. If enough people start talking about the smoke, perhaps others will start to see it too. And if enough people act, the rest may follow. For that, it seems, is human nature.
Sunday, 9 December 2007
Kill Standby Drainage With this Handy Device
Direct link to the product is: http://nigelsecostore.com/acatalog/OneClick_IntelliPlug.html
On it I discovered this lovely little device. Granted its not sexy but what it does is quite exciting! You can get it elsewhere but here they explain what it is, how it works and, perhaps most importantly, that is recommended by the Energy Saving Trust. I've already recommended this organisation so I trust that this device does what it says it does. Also it was a good deal cheaper than some other similar devices I've seen out there.Here's the description:
Plug your desktop computer into the master socket on the IntelliPlug, and your peripheral devices (printer, monitor, scanner, etc) into the other sockets and when you turn your computer on (or off), the IntelliPlug detects this and turns everything else on (or off) - saving you the hassle, and most importantly, stopping you from leaving them on standby.
- Leaving appliances on standby wastes a huge amount of energy, making the IntelliPlug a great tool for helping you to live a more eco-friendly life.
- It will also work with your hi-fi amplifier and separates (CD player, tuner etc).
- Recommended by the Energy Saving Trust, it has received a number of excellent reviews.
- Specification:
- - this unit will automatically determine the on and off power level of any desktop computer or hi-fi audio visual amplifier to automatically power peripheral equipment, only when in use.
- Lowest standby power of 0.4 of a watt saving an average 35 watts per hour depending on the number of connected peripherals.
- Reaction time 5 seconds.
- Maximum Power 13 amps.
- This product can pay for itself in less than a year of use.
- PLEASE NOTE: NOT SUITABLE FOR LAPTOPS
Saturday, 8 December 2007
Groovy Green
It's got great articles, but more importantly, it aims helps gives book reviews, product review, product suggestions along with great education.
Interesting with effortless ideas for saving the planet! I like it!
http://groovygreen.com/
Wednesday, 21 November 2007
At the Risk of Sounding Controversial...
Written:
A Disturbing Connection
Saturday, 17 November 2007
Switch to Green Power - The Biggest Step You Can Take is Probably the Easiest
Fight Climate Change With Your Energy Bill!
Sorting out how to switch to green power in the UK is actually easy as some of the biggest suppliers have zero C02 emission energy. In Canada it's a little trickier but not much.
This is such an obvious way to reduce C02 emissions it's hard to believe more people aren't doing it. I read in the newspaper in London that British Gas and Electricity had created a 100% green energy option but had only had a few hundred customers sign up this year. I scratched my head and wondered how much they'd publicised this option. Probably very little. I put this down to the simple fact that most people don't know the option exists. If they do they assume it will be more expensive, complicated or unreliable. It might be a bit of a pain to switch your energy supplier folks but do it once and go carbon neutral forever!
Green Suppliers in Britain Ethiscore rating (out of 20)
Use Which? (see link under orgainsations) to calculate your tariff.
Green Energy Suppliers in Canada
As mentioned it's a little trickier in Canada as there are less green suppliers and you may actually end up paying a bit more. You won't have to do get another hook up or install anything with any of these companies. You just sign up with them and get your power from the grid as per usual. Your power won't be interrupted during the switch.
Here's the thing though: In Ontario power is subsidised by tax dollars. When you hear that price has been "capped" it means that once the cost goes above certain level then tax dollars pay the extra amount. So your energy may be capped at 5.5 cents per kilowatt hour but taxes dollars are, in effect, subsidising energy usage. By switching to a green provider you're freeing up tax dollars for other things like health care and social services. The government should also be lobbied to move subsidies from C02 producing sources to green sources.
Here are some Green Power suppliers for you in Canada.
ONTARIO:
Bullfrog - Great option. N
Electricity Choices - Great calculator to show cost vs. C02 saved
Alberta:
Enmax - 100% wind power
I'll be updating this with more information shortly. If you have any companies to recommend please do so!
Sunday, 11 November 2007
Energy Saving Trust - Not as Boring as it Sounds
This is a great site with all kinds of practical and easy to implement suggestions. The site is obviously British but the energy tips are applicable to all. Great site.
Click on the "What can I do Today?" tab for a great list of tips and easy interactive demonstrations. Check the links on the left for:
*I love the "How Effecient is Your Home?" link. It pulls up a graphic of a house that you click on and it shows you areas where you lose heat, energy and tells you how much money and CO2 you would save by making a change.
*The REALLY simple stuff is under "Cheap and Simple Tips."
*There's a list of the "Top Energy Saving Measures."
Check out all the great information on your impact on climate, environmental products, home improvements, and even how to generate your own renewable energy (and get grants for it!).
Have I mentioned that most of these measures will SAVE you money. Once again...with sustainability everyone's a winner.
Monday, 5 November 2007
Transisition Towns
Here's their explanation from their website:
What is a Transition Town (or village / city / forest / island)?
A Transition Initiative is a community that is unleashing its own latent collective genius to look Peak Oil and Climate Change squarely in the eye and to discover and implement ways to address this BIG question:
- "for all those aspects of life that this community needs in order to sustainitself and thrive, how do we significantly increase resilience (to mitigatethe effects of Peak Oil) and drastically reduce carbon emissions (tomitigate the effects of Climate Change)?"
The resulting coordinated range of projects across all these areas of life leads to a collectively designed energy descent pathway.
The community also recognises two crucial points:
- that we used immense amounts of creativity, ingenuity and adaptability on the way up the energy upslope, and that there's no reason for us not to do the same on the downslope
- if we collectively plan and act early enough there's every likelihood that we can create a way of living that's significantly more connected, more vibrant and more in touch with our environment than the oil-addicted treadmill that we find ourselves on today.
Sunday, 4 November 2007
Ethical Consumer Magazine and Website
The parent company of Ethiscore - which I previously talked about on this blog - are a fantastic organisation that researches companies business practices. They research the operations of companies then recommend them based on their actions AND quality and price.
As they say on their website:
20 years of independent research into the social and environmental records of companies.
Discover the truth about the brands and products we buy, from baby food to broadband, washing machines to wine.
Learn about alternative products from more ethical companies, what to avoid and what are the Best Buys.
Once again you can find quality products, good value, and ethical conduct. Everyone wins again!
Due to the fact that no funding comes from advertising there is a yearly fee to subscribe.
Saturday, 3 November 2007
Ethiscore
A friend of mine advised me to avoid overuse of the term "ethical" on this blog if I wanted to reach more than just those who had already converted to the environmental cause. The environmental cynic would supposedly be turned off by talking about ethical companies as shopping ethically is, I assume, so hard to do. After all most companies out source to third world nations for labour, engage in harmful pollution, and put the bottom line ahead of everything else.
I used to agree, however, I'm finding out there's a lot of great changes going on out there and a lot of opportunity to use companies that are more ethical and environmentally friendly. The more consumers change their spending habits the more companies will change their ways.
Which brings me to Ethiscore.
Here's a great organisation that researches and ranks companies based on their ethical conduct. It researches companies practices in the following areas.
So now you can find out which companies are the most ethical and take it from there. My plan is to look at companies ethical and environmental policies and then look at price and service. If the price is way too high then I just won't use them. If there service is not good then I won't use it either. I'm certain I'll end up using a company that has better ethical and environmental practices than if I hadn't looked into it though.
As mentioned earlier on this blog I signed up for a Smile bank account based on the fact they have a great ethical policy, great rates, lower fees and great customer service. According to Ethiscore.org they rate a 7 out of 20 which is surprisingly low. The highest bank was Norwich & Peterborough internet banking and they rated just 13.5 out of 20. I could hang my head and give up or I could note that Lloyds TSB (my former bank) ranks a shocking 2.5 out of 20. In fact most of the big banks rank 4.5 or under. Go to http://www.ethiscore.org/ to see the rankings.
Ethiscore is a consumer funded organisation so there is a fee to join. 15 pounds gets you a years subscription.
Friday, 2 November 2007
Abel and Cole
They have a mandate to source as much as they can locally and even plan their delivery routes based on the most efficient routes so as to reduce CO2.
They've won customer service awards and have scored 14th on the list of best companies to work for in the UK.
The Farmers Choice Initiative
They also have a charitable initiative wherein they generate funding for schools and support local farmers. Here's some info from their site. I hope to set this up with my school shortly.
- The Farmer's Choice has been designed to raise maximum funds for minimum effort (sounds "effortless" to me)
- Selling just 50 bags per week will raise around £3,000 per year for your school and takes just one person under an hour per week
- 25% of what parents and teachers spend on their fresh organic produce goes straight to the school
- Not only are you helping your school, you are also helping local British growers, as we give them 40% of the bag price
Thursday, 1 November 2007
Ethical Superstore
An online store with a HUGE range of products. One of the best things I noticed as I was surfing the site was a solar powered charger for electronic devices like phones and ipods. Great idea on so many levels.First it's obviously portable so you can make sure your phone/ipod doesn't run out of juice.
Secondly why not use it at home and save on electricity? There's a huge issue coming up about products on standby and products that chargers that continue to suck electricity despite the battery being fully charged. In fact, California has just passed the "Vampire Slayer Act" (seriously!) to combat this kind of thing.
What's Standby?
Anything that displays a clock or any other information when you turn it off is still using electricity. Many TVs and computers don't fully power down when turned off.
Estimates of energy used from products on standby range from 10% - 30% of your energy bill!!!
The only knock I have on The Ethical Superstore is they seem to be expensive.
Tuesday, 30 October 2007
Anita Roddick - Founder of The Body Shop
The Body Shop has been under fire for not following through on their environmental commitments but I found out that after Roddick took the company public she was eventually fired by the board of her own company when the environmental policies that made the company so inspirational and successful got in the way of maximum profit.
Anyway here's the quote.
Tragically, she died yesterday aged just 64 from a brain hemorhage. A truly remarkable activist, environmental campaigner and ethical entrepreneur, here are some of her own inspirational words...
I believe in businesses where you engage in creative thinking, and where you form some of your deepest relationships. If it isn't about the production of the human spirit, we are in big trouble. I didn't go to business school, didn't care about financial stuff and the stock market. I want to work for a company that contributes to and is part of the community. I want something not just to invest in. I want something to believe in. If I can't do something for the public good, what the hell am I doing? Consumers have not been told effectively enough that they have huge power and that purchasing and shopping involve a moral choice. If I had learned more about business ahead of time, I would have been shaped into believing that it was only about finances and quality management. If you are an activist, you bring the activism of your life into your business, or if you love creative art, you can bring that in. If you do things well, do them better. Be daring, be first, be different, be just. If you think you're too small to have an impact, try going to bed with a mosquito. Look at the Quakers - they were excellent business people that never lied, never stole; they cared for their employees and the community which gave them the wealth. They never took more money out than they put back in.
Nobody talks of entrepreneurship as survival, but that's exactly what it is and what nurtures creative thinking. One of the interesting things is once we started to get smarter and understand the issues more, and when we realized that we were going to be a real voice, then we ventured out with an extraordinary social justice agenda.
The Body Shop Foundation is run by our staff and supports social activism and environmental activism. We don't tend to support big agencies. There is no scientific answer for success. You can't define it. You've simply got to live it and do it.
Vigilante consumers are working with human rights groups, environmental groups - the grass roots movement - and are definitely challenging corporations. We have been creating a whole range of publications for developing the activist. All knowledge should be shaped into action and we have been proselytizing that for many years. We turned all the shops into action stations to educate the public on certain issues such as human rights. We were all social activists, and the activism sort of transferred itself into a new environmental movement.
When you run an entrepreneurial business, you have hurry sickness - you don't look back, you advance and consolidate. But it is such fun.
Years ago nobody was elected on the economic ticket. It was either the education platform, or it was health or it was other issues. It is only recently that economic values have superceded every other human value.
It's a bummer.
Monday, 29 October 2007
If I Had to Recommend One Film and One Book...
An Inconvenient Truth changed my entire perspective on Global Warming and the environment. I've transformed somehow from a city boy who cares a toss for trees to one who is seriously concerned and determined to get active on the environment. I'm not a nature loving person at all. I'm concerned for the state of the planet and the very real possibility it may become uninhabitable to humans and most other species in the near future. I'm sure the cockroaches will be fine but the rest of us are in trouble. So to that end check out:
There will be those who want to split hairs and dispute minor facts in the movie but he's right and the big picture is accurate. In my opinion this is the most important movie ever made.
Good News For a Change by David Suzuki and Holly Dressel
USwitch
Which?
They do all kinds of testing...I just wish I had the job of the guy on the left there.
They have no affiliation with any company and accept no advertising so there is a fee to be a member but it's well worth it as the support saves you money. They have campaigns which result in increased consumer and employee rights as well.
Great organization.
David Suzuki.com

David Suzuki is Canada's foremost Environmentalist.
His site offers 10 easy things you can do to help fix the environment and they're all easy, practical, and beneficial to your pocket book as well as the environment. One of the suggestions was go one day a week without eating meat. I read this several years ago and did it off and on. This tiny first step lead to me becoming a Vegetarian about 7 weeks ago.
Anyway check out the 10 things you can do list. Forget going veggie. The rest of the stuff is easy man and I mean EASY!
http://www.davidsuzuki.org/Climate_Change/What_You_Can_Do/at_home.asp
These steps can be taken in any country - not just Canada.
Give Or Take
Give or Take gives you the option to put some, none, or all of your cash back reward towards charities. They also give 100% of their commissions back and not just a percentage.
I've sent an enquiry asking them how they are funded if they give all their commissions away but they're recommended by The Gaurdian, have won some awards, and are getting some good press. I'll keep you posted on the reply to my question.