Everything about the challenge

Everything about the challenge

The “Nothing New” Challenge is a free program launched by Zero Waste France to help you change your relationship with objects  and your consumption. The goal is to reduce your purchases of new items  as much as you can for one year.

The Challenge is a process for which you will never be judged or evaluated. Do your best, for yourself, for the planet and for its inhabitants.

The Challenge includes all everyday life objects (clothes, books, furniture, tech devices, home appliances, games…). It excludes food, cosmetic and hygiene products.

What’s the problem with new items?

Before arriving in your hands, each new object is responsible for many negative impacts from an environmental, but also social and health point of view.

183 kilos of raw materials

to make a smartphone

Source : Ademe

TO CREATE A NEW OBJECT, YOU NEED RAW MATERIALS.

The manufacture of a smartphone requires 183 kg of raw materials: metals (up to 50 different ores including gold, silver and rare ores) and plastic. For a microwave, it amounts to more than two tons of raw materials.

2 500 litres of water

to make a t-shirt

Source : Water footprint

NEW OBJECTS EXHAUST RESOURCES AND DESTROY BIODIVERSITY.

To make a t-shit, you first need cotton fields, whose culture require a lot of water (2 500 liters for a single t-shirt!) and pesticides! ! And pesticides mean the destruction of natural ecosystems and adverse health effects, especially for those who work in the fields.

4 times round the world

to make a smartphone

Source : Ademe

NEW OBJECTS POLLUTE.

The manufacturing stages take place in different parts of the planet: our phone has already travelled around the world four times before ending up in our pocket and the carbon footprint of a television is equivalent to a round trip from Paris to Nice by plane before it is even turned on.

18 euro cents on a 29€ t-shirt

earned by a textile worker

Source : Fairwear Fondation

CHEAP PRICES DO NOT EXIST, THERE IS ALWAYS SOMEONE WHO PAYS.

Being able to buy new items at low cost is no miracle: the people at the beginning of the production chain (extraction of metals, work in the fields or factories…), work in deplorable conditions and at indecent wages.

2,5 tons of objects

in your house

Source : Ademe

DON’T WE ALREADY HAVE ENOUGH?

We have 2.5 tons of objects in our house, the weight of a hippopotamus. Do we need all this? How much do we really use on a daily basis? There are already so many objects in circulation, we might as well use them first.

NOTHING NEW: HOW TO?

If it costs so much to the planet and its inhabitants, why not slow down?

  1. By asking yourself every time you intend to buy something: do I really need that ?
  2. By opting as much as possible for alternatives to new items: buying second-hand, repairing, borrowing, exchange…

ONE REGISTRATION = ONE VOICE

In addition to awareness campaigns such as the “Nothing New” Challenge, Zero Waste France acts at the legal level to influence laws and enforce them, because it is obviously necessary that in parallel to your commitment, companies change their practices!

It is thanks to your registration that we can count the number of participants and use it as a political and media tool to grow our influence.

47519 participants

A COLLECTIVE ADVENTURE

Throughout the year, Zero Waste France helps you rethink your consumption and change your purchasing practices by creating online tools and organizing events throughout France. The “Nothing New” Challenge is also a community of participants who exchange tips and items. Zero Waste France contributes to creating mutual aid and connecting the people who participate.

social

Get inspired on the facebook group of the “Nothing new” challenge and on the instagram account!

the ambassadors of the challenge

They support the Challenge and, like you, try to buy as few new items as possible throughout the year.

Aline Gubri

Aline Gubri

créatrice du blog Consommons sainement

Camille Binet

Camille Binet

créatrice du compte instagram lilacam

Catherine Dauriac

Catherine Dauriac

présidente de Fashion Revolution France

Clément Chabot & Pierre-Alain Lévêque

Clément Chabot & Pierre-Alain Lévêque

fondateurs du Low Tech Lab

Cyril Dion

Cyril Dion

auteur et réalisateur

Jean-François Julliard

Jean-François Julliard

directeur général de Greenpeace France

Julien Vidal

Julien Vidal

auteur et fondateur de ça commence par moi

Laëtitia Vasseur

Laëtitia Vasseur

co-fondatrice de HOP

Nayla Ajaltouni

Nayla Ajaltouni

coordinatrice du collectif Ethique sur l’étiquette

Philippe Bihouix

Philippe Bihouix

auteur, spécialiste low-tech et épuisement des ressources minérales

valere correard

Valère Corréard

journaliste et co-fondateur du média ID l’info durable

Valérie Guillard

Valérie Guillard

auteure et chercheuse sur la sobriété

The MAIF supports the “Nothing New” Challenge.

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