@Rebecca
These fall under eco-friendly products but it is a big category and some may not know all the things that fall under eco-friendly products (for some reason I just was thinking of dishwashing soap, laundry detergent, body wash as eco/-friendly products). Maybe you could add Swedish cloths (or reusable dish wipes instead of disposable sponges (they can also be composted after), silicone covers (instead of plastic wrap), compostable bags (snack bags, sandwich bags, storage bags), wool dryer balls (instead of dryer sheets), refillable cleaning products, reusable produce bags, fabric paper towels that one washes (instead of paper towels), cloth diapers (instead of disposable - it was more time consuming but worth it), recycled paper products (printer paper, etc), low VOC/no VOC paints, carpooling, electric vehicles or hybrid vehicles, sharing seeds from your garden, releasing ladybugs or planting herbs that help repel pests instead of using pesticides, using natural fabrics (a lot of the sportswear and quick drying items release microplastics in our environment).
BINGO for most lines except rainwater (we are not allowed to by our city because they have to buy water from neighboring towns), public transportation (we work form home), solar panels are on our list of to dos but we have not had it installed yet (we had
more pressing home projects to deal with). We do have solar lights outside on our fence, solar floodlights, solar power banks, and a solar oven for camping. We have an electric car which my partner loves - it has a great range but we have to be careful if we want to roadtrip as not all areas have charging stations.