Greenpeace, Has It Gone Too Far?

March 21st, 2012

In an article of Circuitree, Fern Abrams, the IPC’s director of environmental policy. discusses the latest edition of Greenpeace’s guide to greener electronics.  According to Abrams, it began as a way “to use publicity to nudge electronics companies toward better environmental performance” but they are now “asking (companies) to lobby for regulations to require all companies to remove these (hazardous) substances.”

The system deducts points for companies who don’t lobby for Greenpeace’s viewpoints. Abrams continues to say that “if companies do not agree with the Greenpeace viewpoint and do not speak out for fear of retribution, it becomes censorship.”

To read the article in its entirety, please visit Circuittree.

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What Are the True Impacts of Recent Oil Spill and Other Natural Disasters in the Gulf of Mexico?

June 10th, 2011

14-week Scientific Voyage to Study Important Ocean Habits and Ecosystem.

Albemarle Corporation, Ocean Alliance and the University of Southern Maine are coming together to study the impacts of recent oil spills and natural disasters in the Gulf of Mexico. The study will last 14-weeks and is expected to start from Key West, FL with a ten person team using a 93 foot floating laboratory called Odyssey. The team will collect samples from fish, squid, krill, sperm and Brydes whales, and the water from depths of up to 3,000 feet to try to monitor and gauge the health of the Gulf ecosystem. The start of this expedition was set to begin on June 8th.

For more information of this voyage and to learn more about Albemarle, Ocean Alliance and The Wise Laboratory at the University of Southern Maine, click here.

Do you know of other studies around this important environmental topic?

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An Electric Eco-Friendly Rolls-Royce?

April 23rd, 2011

Yes for a  few million bucks you can have one too, at least a prototype. Who would have thought someone with that kind of extra green cash would give much thought to a fuel saving eco-lux land yacht. Well apparently some do. In a 4-23-2011 Wall Street Journal, titled The Face of Green, the paper cited the 6,000 pound, battery operated, e-machine by Rolls-Royce.  The article claims even wealthy auto buyers have a multitude of motivations including being socially conscious and concerned about the earth. Read the full story.

Eco-friendly automobiles will continue be hot new offering from all the auto maker as all income consumer sectors seem to be desiring to be more responsible citizens, buy green and consume less fuel.

But, just how green will the auto buying market go? Will they care about the sustainability and full-cycle of the product they are buying? Will they demand eco-friendly flame retardants that could save their lives and will the release of carbon emissions from auto manufacturers be questioned?

Let’s hope so. Tell us what you think.

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Going Environmentally Green in April for 41 Years

April 12th, 2011

April has long been a busy month for “famous” days. Easter, April Fool’s Day and, of course, April 15 – tax day. But perhaps in the future an equally well known day will be April 22 — Earth Day. The brainchild of Gaylord Nelson, a US Senator from Wisconsin, it began in 1970 as an awareness experiment for our environment. Now it is internationally recognized and celebrated. And though there will probably always be disagreements and debate as to how environmental policies should work and at what level they should enacted, it’s now just a question of “how” not “if.”  That’s an advance worth celebrating.

In what way do you help the environment on Earth Day?

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Can Wal-Mart’s Green Index Make a Difference?

March 17th, 2011

By now most have heard that the world’s largest retailer, Wal-Mart, is developing a green index for products. A look inside the project reveals four major areas of “green” measurement: (1) energy and climate, (2) natural resources, (3) material efficiency, and (4) people and community. Since “green” means a different thing to almost anyone you might talk to, Wal-Mart’s approach might just start to give some common definition to what has been a highly subjective term. Even more interesting is how all their individual products will rank, and then the certain debate that will follow over the relative strength and importance of each of the criteria. Further, products that rank low will not only have to look at their own manufacturing practices, but also those of their suppliers. It may indeed spur competition between suppliers to contribute the lowest amount on non-green attributes to the manufacturers –in other words, voluntary, bottom-up, market-based environmentalism. What a radical thought!

Do you think the development of Wal-Mart’s green products will strengthen their brand? Or will the competition between their future suppliers turn ugly?

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Is Less the New More? Companies Eliminate to Provide Bigger Green Effort

January 21st, 2011


Will tube-less toilet paper make a difference?The following is an excerpt from the environmental themed advice column EarthTalk®, E/The Environmental Magazine that appeared in Creative Loafing.

In August 2009, Kimberly-Clark, the paper giant behind the Kleenex, Cottonelle and Scott brands and the largest manufacturer of tissue products in the world, gave in to pressure from Greenpeace and other environmental groups to clean up its act in regard to how it sources its wood fiber and how much recycled content it includes in its products. After various forms of public haranguing from Greenpeace, the company committed to sourcing 40 percent of its North American tissue fiber—some 600,000 tons yearly—from recycled sources or from forests certified as sustainable by the nonprofit Forest Stewardship Council (FSC). Also, by the end of 2011 Kimberly-Clark will stop buying non-FSC-certified wood fiber from Canada’s vast but fast-shrinking boreal forest—the largest old growth forest on the continent.

One outgrowth of this landmark agreement is Kimberly-Clark’s launch of Scott Naturals Tube-Free toilet paper which, to reduce waste is wound in such a way that it doesn’t need cardboard tubes. The company estimates that the 17 billion toilet paper tubes produced yearly in the U.S. account for some 160 million pounds of trash—most of us discard instead of recycle them. By eliminating the tubes, the company hopes to both save cardboard and allow customers to use every last piece of toilet paper, since the last one won’t have any glue on it to stick to the roll. The tube-free TP is being sold initially at Walmart and Sam’s Club stores in the Northeastern U.S. and will be launched nationally and beyond if it catches on with consumers.

Kimberly-Clark’s green awakening will no doubt benefit the tree farms and forests of the Southeast—the locus of logging operations in the U.S. these days—and it will also benefit Canada’s boreal forest, from which the company still sources a large amount of its wood fiber. North America’s largest ancient forest by far, the Canadian boreal forest provides habitat for more than a billion birds as well as many a threatened species, including woodland caribou, bald eagles, golden eagles and wolverines. It is also the world’s largest storehouse of terrestrial carbon—all those miles of trees, moss, soil and peat soak up an estimated 186 billions tons of carbon that would otherwise contribute to global warming. Despite its value to the environment, some 60 percent of Canada’s boreal forest has already been allocated to forestry companies for development and less than 10 percent of it is formally protected in any way. Clear-cut logging by Kimberly-Clark and its competitors has claimed half a million acres of boreal forest annually in Canada’s Ontario and Alberta provinces alone in recent years.

“Because of Kimberly-Clark’s place in the paper products market, the company’s new policy will send a strong signal to its competitors, Procter & Gamble, SCA and Georgia Pacific, that creating a policy that protects ancient forests is a key element of sustainable business,” reports Greenpeace. Of course, there are plenty of other brands of tissue paper that already make use of primarily recycled and/or sustainably harvested fiber—check out Greenpeace’s Recycled Tissue and Toilet Paper Guide to find out which ones—but they are not easily found at mainstream grocers and big box stores. The more shoppers go for greener options, the more the paper industry will take notice and modify their offerings accordingly.

Is this a good eco-innovation or a few more paper sheets of green marketing?

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Sea-Vacuation: Electrolux Reclaims Plastic from the Ocean Floor

December 10th, 2010

Original post from BrandChannel.com by Sheila Shayon

Electrolux is hoisting itself on its own petard. A leader in the manufacture of plastic appliances is leading a charge to green up and clean up our oceans in an initiative dubbed “Vac from the Sea.”

The preeminent vacuum cleaner brand is pulling out all the bottle stops to draw attention to the global need for recycled plastics to spur sustainable appliances. That’s why they’re now making vacuum cleaners from plastic litter on global ocean floors.

This past summer, Electrolux trolled the Pacific, Atlantic and Indian Oceans and the North and Mediterranean Seas in order to collect plastic refuse and craft five vacuum cleaner models, similar to its Ultra One Green model, constructed with 70% recycled plastics.

“While there is a hazardous amount of plastics floating around in our oceans, on land Electrolux experiences scarcity of recycled plastics needed for making sustainable home appliances,” commented Jonas Bodin, Creative Director Electrolux account, Prime.

“It is not about what you make of plastic, but about where it comes from. We worked on the concept of plastic reincarnation where plastic takes different life forms over and over again, inspired by the largest concentration of ocean waste in the world — the Pacific Ocean garbage patch.”

Read full story

Have you seen any other innovative ocean ideas?

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Will the Grass get Greener for Eco-marketers or Just Crop Up More Red Tape

October 13th, 2010

The Federal Trade commission, which last published guidelines for green marketing and advertising in 1998, issued an extensive new green guide and is seeking your feedback.

In making its announcement, the commission particularly called attention to a distinction between companies and consumers and the possibility of confusion or misleading statements. “. . . what companies think green claims mean and what consumers really understand are sometimes two different things,” said FTC Chairman Jon Leibowitz. “The proposed updates to the Green Guides will help businesses better align their product claims with consumer expectations.”

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All Aboard the Eco-Innovation Express

October 5th, 2010

Eco-friendly news, information from Earthwise - green businesses

According to some observers, at the leading companies, the four Ps of Marketing — price, place, promotion, and product — have been supplanted by the triple bottom line of sustainability: profit, people and planet. The new mantra reflects business performance in terms of environmental and human/societal outcomes as well as financial results.

Let’s look at Eco-Innovation, the subject of commentary in Bloomberg BusinessWeek.

Unfortunately, for G. Michael Maddock and Raphael Louis Vitón, too many corporations and businesses are mired in thinking about environmental concerns from the perspective of mitigation: the company got into trouble, perhaps with pollution, and the day has arrived when the problem area has to be cleaned up and remediated.

This defensive posture precludes looking at incorporating environmentally sound practices on a company-wide basis, from generating ideas for a product, to sourcing the materials to the very processes that create it, package it and bring it to the marketplace.

Here are some examples from the Maddock and Vitón story, plus some others that have embraced eco-innovation:

DuPont  and other chemical companies have transformed their products and processes with the principles of green chemistry, effectively reducing its environmental impact and the production and use of hazardous substances. A lesser-known company called Albemarle provides fire safety solutions for the electronics, auto and aviation sectors, under the Earthwise brand. Albemarle recently introduced an eco-friendly flame retardant that is non-bioaccumulative and recyclable. The fire safety solution is organically based, rather than mineral-based. It is a polymer, which means the chemical is too large to be absorbed by the body or animal life.

GE has fashioned Ecomagination, an initiative that responds to consumer demand “for cleaner and more energy-efficient product” that also will generate revenue growth for the company.

At Nike, sustainability is the responsibility of all employees, and every product is subject to a sustainability analysis.
Finally, IBM holds a periodic Global Eco-Efficiency Jam, a brainstorming session with global participation over 48-hours to cook up new ideas. Let’s take this one step further and acknowledge the impact of time or money in the eco-innovation process.

Over what timeframe will these programs roll-out?

What are the expenses and the potential cost-savings of embracing this approach?

What are expectations for the internal rate of return?

What are the opportunity costs of delaying its implementation — or of being distracted by other operational programs?

Recognizing that these situations will vary between companies and industries, they remain vital considerations in embarking on an eco-innovation strategy.

Perhaps a first step is to conduct a sustainability audit, as discussed in the next blog post.

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Who is Guiltiest of Greenwashing? NGOs, Corporations, Activists?

September 8th, 2010

Messaging about the environment and what’s best for the planet is very intense. The messengers are passionate and they have strong convictions behind their causes. Does this emotionally charged content always take the most eco-true path? Or does this messaging via ads, blogs and media coverage get coated with wild weed bias and bull?

Today corporations, emerging entrepreneurs, NGOs, learning institutes and activists are all in the sandbox. throwing, dodging, defending and advocating their story, but who is telling the truth and who is not?

How do consumers and business leaders know the difference between Pinocchio and the facts?  Is there a truth-test check list to guide us? Let us know what you think.

Green marketing resources
MarketingGreen (online publication)
From Greenwash to Great (Whitepaper by Oligvy Earth)

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