Green is the New Orange this Halloween!

Posted October 11, 2016
Gorillas enjoying pumpkin enrichment to kick off HallZOOween. Choosing candy made with certified sustainable palm oil helps save gorilla & orangutan habitats.
Gorillas enjoying pumpkin enrichment to kick off HallZOOween. Choosing candy made with certified sustainable palm oil helps save gorilla & orangutan habitats.

Cincinnati Zoo helps consumers choose eeek-o-friendly sweets

Buying certain kinds of candy for the army of sweet-seeking ghouls and boys that might show up at your house this Halloween could save an orangutan’s life! The Sumatran orangutan stands on the edge of extinction in the wild because palm oil plantations have destroyed their rainforest habitat. The Cincinnati Zoo & Botanical Garden, also known as the greenest Zoo in America, has created a handy shopping guide to help consumers choose products made with Certified Sustainable Palm Oil (CSPO).

Palm oil, made from the fruit of the African oil palm tree, is the most widely-produced edible oil in the world and is used in soaps, cosmetics, snacks and candy. The crop is important to the economy and people in Indonesia and Malaysia, the primary location where it’s grown and harvested, but it can be produced in a responsible way without cutting down the rainforest –this is called sustainable palm oil. Selecting products made with CSPO helps protect wild orangutans and gorillas in parts of Africa where the oil is harvested.

Making thoughtful candy selections is just one way you can green your Halloween. Here are more green tips for the holiday from the Cincinnati Zoo and Formica Corporation, the Zoo’s official sustainability partner:

  • Collect candy in a reusable bag. Using the same bag again and again reduces waste and keeps trash out of the landfill.candy-infographic-2016_sustainable
  • Get creative with costumes! Make something from items you have at home, or pick up materials at a thrift store. For example, a broken, black umbrella can easily be made into a bat costume. Or, swap costumes with others to give those store-bought costumes a second life.
  • Make or reuse decorations. Old stockings make great spider webs!
  • Try passing out non-candy items such as stickers, pencils, crayons, temporary tattoos or coins.
  • Light the way using LED flashlights or petroleum-free candles.
  • Purchase pumpkins from local farms or grow your own! Compost the castaways when the holiday is over.
  • Jack-o-lanterns. Use the goodies inside your pumpkin. Toast the seeds and make pumpkin pie or muffins with the fruit.
  • Use make-up made from food. Most Halloween makeup found in stores contains toxic heavy metals including cadmium, arsenic, mercury and lead.

There are many ways to have a green Halloween this season! Doing so will help save natural resources, reduce waste and promote awareness for the conservation of species.
Don’t miss HallZOOween, presented by Frisch’s Big Boy, October 15-16, 22-23, & 29-30 from Noon – 5 p.m. at the Cincinnati Zoo & BOO-tanical Garden.  Children (12 and under) can fill up their treat bags as they trick-or-treat through the Zoo. BYOB (bring your own bag) to help the Zoo go green!

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The world famous Cincinnati Zoo & Botanical Garden is committed to inspiring visitors to care about wildlife and wild places.  It has been rated the #1 attraction locally and one of the top zoos in the nation by Zagat Survey.  It has also received rave reviews from Child Magazine, Parents Magazine, USA Today and TripAdvisor.  Over 1.5 million people visit the Zoo’s award-winning exhibits, and more than 500 animal and 3000 plant species annually. The Zoo, an accredited member of the Association of  Zoos & Aquariums (AZA), is internationally known for its success in the protection and propagation of endangered animals and plants and engages in research and conservation projects worldwide. Known as the #GreenestZooInAmerica, the Zoo is doing its part to conserve natural resources that are critical to saving wildlife and its habitats and is committed  to greening its daily operations and reducing its impact on the environment through the use of rain gardens, recycled building materials, solar panels and more. The Cincinnati Zoo is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization.