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Nigel’s Green Web Awards - the winners!

Tuesday, August 5th, 2008 by Nigel

Web Awards

I’m extremely excited and very proud to announce the winners of the Nigel’s Green Web Awards 2008. More than any medium today, the web has the power to create communities that can change the world, to inform, and to shape opinion. I believe that what we can achieve online today will have a massive influence on what the world becomes tomorrow.

Our mission in creating our Green Web Awards was to find the people who were in the vanguard of creating a greener future online, because as I said here a few weeks ago, there isn’t enough kudos given to those who get it right.

This is about helping the green web grow. So Nigel’s Eco Store was really fortunate to get on board some outstanding figures to judge the awards - people like Bonnie Alter from treehugger.com, Adam Vaughan from Smart Planet, Ed Gillespie from Futerra and Tracy Stokes of EcoStreet, all people with great green credentials who also know what makes the web tick.

The web is now a central part of our lives. We expect the sites we visit to be authoritative, dynamic and talking to us in ways that we understand. I hope we’ve been able to shine a light on some of the very best green web sites there are. I was pleased to see some of my favourites come up.

Take a look at the winners and judge for yourselves. And then Have Your Say:

You’ve seen what our judges think are the Best Green Websites of 2008 – tell us what sites you think should have won, leave a comment or some feedback below….


21 Responses to “Nigel’s Green Web Awards - the winners!”

  1. Julia Chanteray Says:

    You might want to look at Tiger Enterprise for the most green company - check them out at www.reuseitdontloseit.co.uk
    Tiger take surplus building materials from the big building contractors and resell them to the public and the small builders. With 25% of the UK’s carbon footprint coming from the construction industry, and 30% of materials being wasted you can see how Tiger is making a real contribution to the environment.
    And, yes I do have an interest in the company, as they’re my clients, but they’re clients because I think its such as wonderful idea.

  2. Sienna Says:

    For Green Travel my vote goes to www.isanyonegoingto.com
    Bringing Car Pooling to the 21st Century.
    www.isanyonegoingto.com uses Social Networking to circumvent the awkwardness of sharing a vehicle journey.
    Give it a try….

  3. Janie Williams Says:

    What a great marketing ploy! Hardly partial voting for your own company or for a fellow judges’. Thought they were meant o be impartial - hardly ethical and lacks credibility!

  4. The Green Gal Says:

    Great idea! Several of those sites definitely get my vote - Smart Planet, Innocent, Ecover, We Are What We Do among them. I’m quite a fan of Times Online’s Eco Worrier, Natural Collection and Self Sufficientish too.

  5. Nigel Says:

    Janie - none of the judges were allowed to vote for their own site, and all the results were earned on merit from the other judges voting from them. If we had stopped judges voting for other judges’ sites that would have excluded deserving sites like Treehugger, EcoStreet or Green Thing…

  6. Janie Williams Says:

    Well for awards to be impartial you need an absolute independent panel - the eco world is full of alliances so to me these awards lack credibility. I like the idea of what you have done but to me this is just a marketing stunt! It works though…

  7. GreenBean Says:

    Ha

    You forgot www.renew-reuse-recycle.com. Its a great site for all of you interested in domestic renewables, solar heating, PV, and windturbines and the like.

    GreenBean

  8. Pipa Brooke Says:

    Congrats to the winners.There are so many great eco sites and another one I would love to share is ecobites.com - a green community with loads of green / eco info. http://ecobites.com/

  9. asummers Says:

    Here’s another good one…www.greensolutionsmag.com. It’s an on-line magazine designed to report information about environmental solutions and services, expert recommendations, best practices, products, tools and other solution-based news and resources to help economies, communities, businesses and individuals with alternative options that they can implement to create sustainability, prevent destructive impacts on or improve the quality of the environment.

  10. Emily Says:

    You might want to look at http://www.ecovian.com as a green community website, lots of great content, especially around local businesses & issues

  11. Adrian Windisch Says:

    I would give a greenwash award to one of the judges, Joanna Yarrow, whose blog isnt a blog but a website, and its sponsored by ariel! http://www.doagoodturn.co.uk/sustainability_media/sustainability_joanna_blog.php at the footer says Procter & Gamble 2007©. So much for independent thinking.

  12. Mr.B Says:

    Get a bunch of bloggers who have picked up a bit of knowledge on the topic here and there and get them to pad each other’s backs instead of asking some people who actually know about environmental issues. Where’s the quality assurance? Don’t turn the eco world into an exclusive club of maties! It’s supposed to catch on to the greater public! Congrats to the winners!

  13. Richard Says:

    Your credibility was shot as soon as I saw the judges judging the judges. Throw it open for the web surfers to decide and your winners would automatically become losers…but, there is no fun in that. For example, I used to visit treehugger and ecostreet, but they are losing the plot to genuine lifestyle communities like www.ecobites.com who have a genuine interest in all things healthy, not just a way of making money.

  14. JD Says:

    @Mr.B: So you don’t consider bloggers as experts then? In my experience bloggers (the good ones anyway) often know more about the subjects they blog about than many of the the established ‘experts’. Think of how much research and reading usually goes into the average blog post…!

    @Richard - its not like the judges all voted for each other - only a few of the judges’s own sites won an award. But I agree that opening the voting to the public would be cool for next time. Oh and i dont understand your point about ‘not just a way of making money’ - ecobites.com has ads on its site too! (btw you’re not this Richard are you? http://ecobites.com/teamcontact ;))

  15. brendan Says:

    to explain green energy, carbon offsets, and what an individual or company can do about it all, i like to refer people to www.nativeenergy.com Yes, they are selling their own renewable energy and offsets, but nonetheless, their site is a good source to explain what an offset really is (or isn’t), what renewable energy is, what is ‘additionality,’ and so on, in plain language.
    my opinion, anyway.

  16. Adam Says:

    As one of the judges I think a lot of you make the valid point of judges’ sites winning, which is hard to avoid in this format. Next time it would be good if anyone was allowed to vote for the sites they think are best too.

  17. Samui Travel Says:

    well this is useful… (at least for me)

    very thanks

    ——————————–
    Best Travel at Thailand

  18. R. Hatwell Says:

    BBC Bloom for best Climate Change Website category

    Bloom is a new BBC website that aims to cut through the climate change confusion and empower people to adopt more climate-friendly lifestyles: www.bbc.co.uk/bloom

  19. R. Hatwell Says:

    Or BBC Thread for Ethical Fashion:

    www.bbc.co.uk/thread

  20. KyleT Says:

    Oh for goodness sake - can’t you see, Nigel, that even in stating the judges ‘didn’t vote for themselves’ still doesnt make it ok that the judges websites won awards? It’s clearly just a load of shameless backslapping! You can’t seriously expect intelligent people to fall for it.

    Leave it to the PEOPLE to decided what websites are most USEFUL TO THEM, not the people who make the websites.

    Extremely unethical, no matter how you spin it.

  21. Looby Says:

    I think what you have done is a great idea, but its such a shame that the sites that are getting all the recognition are the bigger brands - many of whom are recently jumping on the band wagon.

    In addition, when it comes to green beauty, and toxin free beauty, I think its a shame that the awards didn’t recognise many of the stores who really are doing great things with ranges etc.

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