Archive for the ‘Green Business Trends’ Category

Because climate change is just too hard to think about…

Sunday, March 14th, 2010

There’s a lot of discussion around lately about why and how the momentum to curb climate change is losing favor with the public. Some cite the economy and a lowering of priority for long term headaches like global warming. Others blame Climategate and the success of deniers to capitalize with their message against isolated data stumbles of this kind. Yet others cite the general public’s confusion between weather and climate and the horrible, wet, cold winter much of the US population experienced this year.

But the complex reasons for this probably also include the simple fact that the effort is so herculean, the consequences so daunting and the amount of energy and science and media focused on climate change and what to do about it over the past few years has just worn people down. When we’re all worrying about banks failing and keeping our jobs, we need a break from thinking about the end of the world.

Our guess is that after a brief break and once employment figures improve and the economy is more secure, the message about reducing CO2 and waste and finding new renewable energy resources will resonate with the vast majority once again. But we can’t stop fighting to make that happen, and perhaps a few good news stories about breakthroughs in clean technology here and there will help.

Here’s a link to the FT’s take on this and the Gallup poll released last week http://blogs.ft.com/energy-source/2010/03/12/why-is-the-public-cooling-on-climate-change/

Vancouver Makes a Case for Green at EVERY Olympics

Wednesday, February 24th, 2010

With the natural concern for global warming, it’s probably a given that all Winter Olympics will be competing to beat the previous “squeaky green” effort, and that’s a laudable and prominent PR-able goal.

But what about the summer Games? Just because those games don’t rely on ice and snow to make them possible doesn’t mean the fair weather sports shouldn’t be making an even bigger effort to go green. They are way bigger, way broader, more heavily attended, with all the accompanying cars, crowds, trash, pollution and CO2.

So it’s interesting to see how London is positioning itself, especially in that ultra-urban setting. The official site mostly mentions “green” in the traditional sense as an open park or common area. Hmmmm.

Here’s a great post wrapping up the Vancouver success story http://www.worldchanging.com/archives/010989.html

And a blog on the official London 2012 site giving some lip service to sustainability http://www.london2012.com/making-it-happen/sustainability/index.php

Hope for Green 2.0 in 2010

Wednesday, January 6th, 2010

Let’s face it, so many negatives couldn’t help but create a real malaise in 2009. The economic meltdown, corporate infidelity, Climate-Gate, war and disagreement in the Middle East, and the list goes on. We only perked up temporarily from time to time when a new statistic on jobs or the stock market was announced, then we fell right back into gloom.

But there’s a huge learning that’s come out of the mess and more and more folks are waking up to this. That we need to look at all of the above holistically and move on to Capitalism 2.0 and Politics 2.0 and Peace 2.0. That market forces need more management, with consideration to the long term and effects not just on the bottom line, but the populations affected.

Here’s the best summary we’ve seen on things like the renewable energy economy and COP15 and lots of other beginnings in 2009 that may act as a springboard for so many green possibilities this year and beyond:

http://www.worldchanging.com/archives/010923.html?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+worldchanging_fulltext+%28WorldChanging.com+Full+Text%29&utm_content=Google+Reader

Shame on e-waste

Sunday, November 15th, 2009

The electronics industry was about the last on the planet to wake up to reducing energy consumption, and now electronic waste is a growing scourge. Discarded TVs and computers are going to landfills faster than any other kind of waste, and one of the few GROWING categories. All driven by technology innovation, planned obsolescence and a consumer culture of gotta-have-the-gadget. The energy trade-offs are the same conundrum as buying a Prius: you never catch up with gasoline savings to the environmental cost of manufacturing the car itself.

So any and all suggestions for what to do with this stuff are welcome. We can’t all wear CD necklaces or use CPUs as end tables!

Great Treehugger article on the problem: http://www.treehugger.com/files/2009/11/america-recycles-day-value–proper-e-waste-recycling.php?dtc=th_rss

Green Homes For All

Tuesday, September 8th, 2009

We’re definitely getting somewhere when affordable housing gets green standards, too. — BGM

Habitat for Humanity Gets Greener

By Kate Galbraith

Habitat

Habitat for Humanity, the nonprofit home building organization headquartered in Americus, Ga., announced plans on Tuesday to build 5,000 “green” homes around the country for low-income families.

The homes, built over five years, will meet EnergyStar guidelines or other green building standards, like LEED. The project expands on a pilot program and is being done in conjunction with the Home Depot Foundation.
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Beyond Green

Monday, August 31st, 2009

Great new take on how the public sees social responsibility and reason to ponder. BGM

by Susan Nelson, Marketing Daily

We read and hear constantly about social responsibility — what it means, how to do it, who does it best. Often anecdotal and top down, the cacophony of pundits is painful. It might be refreshing and even important to let real people tell us what brands and companies they see as socially responsible.

To find out, we tapped into Landor’s consumer brand equity tool, BrandAsset® Valuator. In the United States, we measure 3,000 brands annually on more than 70 key measures of equity and imagery.
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