EDF Innovation Exchange Blog

Making green business the new business as usual

 

Posts in 'Supply Chain'

Product Lifecycles Next on Corporate Energy Agenda

I’m convinced that the principles of environmental sustainability have gained a firm foothold at today’s leading companies. Why? Because even in the grip of the worst recession in 30 years, companies across the Fortune 500 list – from Wal-Mart (1) and GE(6) to Owens Corning (422) and SunGard (435) – are actively pursuing sustainability agendas.

At the same time, legislation to cap greenhouse gas emissions is making its way through Congress and the world community is preparing to hammer out a new climate treaty in Copenhagen this December.

So are we done? Not by a long shot.

While many on the biggest companies “get it,” there remains “the next 50,000” – those companies that make up mainstream corporate America that don’t yet get environmental sustainability or worse, haven’t even heard of it. So where must we go from here to spread environmental sustainability from the Fortune 500 to the next 50,000? Read more »

Giving a Green Light to Greenhouse Gas Savings

The hullabaloo in Washington is great fun to watch, but the fact is that many, many companies will not be directly regulated under any new climate bill that gets passed.  So why should companies care?  Well, from 30,000 feet, here’s one reason:

McKinsey Graphic 1

It’s from a McKinsey report that shows the estimated cost for CO2 abatement using various technologies.  The vertical axis shows cost per ton of emission reductions.  And all the blocks hanging below the horizon represent things we can do now that have “negative cost” – in other words, we save more money than we spend.  Notice that virtually every one of them involves energy and fuel efficiency.  We can get four or five gigatons of emissions savings – that’s four or five billion tons of emissions reductions – while saving money!  So the opportunity is huge. Read more »

Is the Customer Always Right? Yes, When it Comes to Sustainability.

Greg Andeck leads EDF's Corporate Partnerships "Innovation Pipeline" to identify and develop groundbreaking environmental initiatives with leading U.S. companies.

The world’s leading companies all conduct extensive research to determine what their customers want and how they want it.  Whether they hire firms like Synovate or Millward Brown, or do consumer research in-house, companies know the value of crafting products that fit their customers’ needs and desires.

This is why it’s so perplexing that companies don’t do the same when developing substantive sustainability strategies.  All too often, companies launch campaigns that are later accused of greenwashing or limit their efforts to indirect efficiency improvements, when it’s their core product that really needs the greening.  It turns out that by paying more attention to their customers, companies can unlock solutions for true environmental innovation and get richly rewarded for doing so.

Taking a Page from Environmental LCAs Read more »

Harnessing Market Power for the Environment

Here at Environmental Defense Fund (EDF), we look for market based solutions to environmental problems. As the guy in charge of managing our partnership pipeline process, I’m constantly on the lookout for new win-win environmental and business solutions we can pioneer with companies. I’m often asked how we identify the companies that we partner with. And increasingly the word I use is LEVERAGE.

Read more »

Wal-Mart's Sustainability Index: Thoughts from an (almost) insider

Fresh out of Wal-Mart’s quarterly “Sustainability Milestone Meeting,” where the company announced its intention to create and support a Sustainability Index to measure and rate the environmental attributes of products, I’m left with a lot of questions – and also a lot of hope for the future.

I won’t attempt to recap the discussions already swirling around the blogosphere about whether or not this effort is real (Joel Makower’s blog does a pretty good job of summing up the issues). Instead, I’ll give a sample of what I heard today and why we need to help ensure its success.

Amidst the normal hullabaloo of a Wal-Mart event – part business meeting, part tent revival – two key executives reinforced that they understand the imperative of sustainability and why the company needs to act. Read more »

I’ve Seen the Future…and it’s Transparent

Reflecting on my past week in Southern China, where I’ve been working with Walmart to help reach its ambitious environmental goals announced last October, my head keeps coming back to an extraordinary meeting I had with Liam Casey, the CEO of PCH International, a trading company responsible for sourcing many of the electronics (and other goods) common on US store shelves.

Casual China watchers may recognize Liam from the story James Fallows wrote about him in The Atlantic in 2007 (which subsequently became a chapter in Postcards from Tomorrow Square) and posts from Fallow’s blog, or from the radio profile the BBC ran on him this April.  Virtually all of the reports have referred to Liam with the honorary title of “Mr. China”, for his detailed grasp of the country and the emerging, and continuously changing, business culture.  Having read (and listened to) all of this background material prior to our meeting, I was ready to be impressed, but I was not quite prepared to be as dazzled as I was by PCH’s business model, or the software systems it has established to provide complete transparency into the products it sources.   Read more »

Green Eats

Today EDF and Restaurant Associates (part of the foodservice giant Compass Group) released the Green Dining Best Practices, a comprehensive set of science-based recommendations for environmentally friendly dining. The recommendations cover twelve key dining categories related to food purchase and facility operation, and will be updated over time as new best practices evolve.

The project began over a year and a half ago in response to a growing number of inquiries we were getting from companies confused by the plethora of "green" solutions being recommended to them by the media, vendors, and suppliers. Some of the questions included: what's more important local or organic? What do I do about bottled water? Is this biodegradable package really more environmentally friendly? Frankly, they were confused. And no wonder. Read more »

Don't lament GM; seize the green opportunity

On June 1, General Motors will announce plans for restructuring its business or entering bankruptcy. No matter what happens, the impact will be seismic. Looming changes at the Big Three will undoubtedly result in job losses and closed factories, with health care plans and retirement savings at risk for thousands of workers and their families.

While we face these challenges, we may also have a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to radically transform the auto industry. More than 50 years ago, GM President Charles Wilson reportedly said that, “What’s good for General Motors is good for the country.” The opposite may also be true – that what’s good for the country’s air quality and energy security may help lift GM out of chaos.

Last week the auto industry bowed to the inevitable and accepted new higher fuel economy standards. This is a step in the right direction, but it represents only a fraction of what the auto industry could do. Instead of a piecemeal approach, car companies could use their unique place in American life to bring environmental leadership into the design, production, sale, service, financing, insurance, and even use of the cars and trucks they sell.

The most immediate opportunity is at Saturn, which GM has said it wants to sell, and for which there are at least two interested buyers. Launched in 1985 as a competitive response to the success of small-car imports, Saturn has sold over four million vehicles, of which 3.3 million are still on the road. The Saturn brand stood for distinctive, low-priced, fuel-efficient cars and a best-in-class customer experience with “no haggle” pricing.

At launch, then GM CEO Roger Smith declared that "Saturn is the key to GM's long-term competitiveness, survival and success. Its mission: … [to] affirm that American ingenuity, American technology and American productivity can once again be the model and the inspiration for the rest of the world." We now know that vision was never fully realized. Still, the Saturn brand is distinctive in the car marketplace, and Saturn buyers exhibit a loyalty to the “Saturn experience” that positions it to lead the way to a new kind of car company.

Imagine a car buying experience that really is no hassle for the customer and the planet. What would this look like? Saturn showrooms would become showcases where customers are guaranteed not only no haggle pricing, but also no haggle mileage, with all vehicles meeting high fuel economy standards as well as “green” design standards for materials, production and recycling

Saturn dealers would do more than just sell cars. They would offer training on how to drive and maintain your vehicle to get peak performance and lower fuel costs. They would develop new financing programs with better rates for higher mileage cars, and build partnerships with insurance companies to provide mileage-based policies that reward lower mileage (and therefore lower risk) drivers. After all, as fuel bills and insurance bills and car payments go down, customer satisfaction, return business and word-of-mouth reputation goes up.

Some dealers might even help their customers find car-pool options, or might offer hourly rentals on small, fuel efficient cars. On the surface it might seem nonsensical for a dealer to offer alternatives to car ownership, but it fits right in if we think of dealerships not as sellers of cars, but as providers of mobility. These kinds of mobility services have environmental benefits, but they also represent new revenue streams for the dealer and create an entirely new customer base and experience.

Last but not least, dealers will need to “walk the talk” by building and operating their showrooms and service centers with the lowest possible environmental footprint. Energy efficient lighting and ventilation systems, water conservation, minimal use of toxic materials, waste recycling – all would be hallmarks of a Saturn facility.

Shareholders and regulators should challenge any party interested in acquiring Saturn to demonstrate how it will create a different kind of car company, committed to building high-quality, fuel efficient cars that are designed, manufactured, sold and repaired with both the customer and the environment as objectives.

This truly would be a new kind of car company. And might just be a glimpse of a hard-to-find silver lining in the auto industry downturn that is impacting so many hardworking Americans.

Gwen Ruta is vice president of corporate partnerships at the Environmental Defense Fund. She is based in Boston, Massachusetts.

This post originally ran in the Detroit Free Press on May 29th.

The Best Little Government Program You Never Heard Of

Everyone's heard of agricultural extension agents – the people who sit down with farmers and ranchers to provide expert advice on what fertilizer to use and where to get a loan for a new harvester.

But who knew – there's another team of government experts who do the same thing for manufacturers.  No, not tips on fertilizer use…but ideas about how manufacturers can run their businesses more intelligently.  Their staff includes engineers, efficiency experts, and a wide range of other smart people.

The Commerce Department's Manufacturing Extension Partnership ("MEP") has 1,600 – you read that right – experts who help companies do manufacturing better and cheaper.  (Technically, the MEP does this in partnership with states, not all by itself.)  The MEP supports 59 centers in nearly 400 locations in every state and Puerto Rico.  You can find one near you on the MEP website.

The MEP's bread and butter has been helping manufacturers cut costs, with a focus on "lean" manufacturing techniques.  But increasingly, the MEP has been focusing on sustainability.  What does that mean?  Two things:  (1) minimizing energy use and environmental impacts and (2) seeking out business opportunities in clean energy and energy efficiency.

I was lucky enough to be invited to do a couple of presentations to the MEP's annual conference in late April 2009.  You can see my slide deck below.   I tried to communicate the great work that Duke University has been doing, under the watchful eye of our own Jackie Roberts, in documenting all of the ways that companies can make money as we move towards clean energy and energy efficiency.

But what I learned as a listener down there was this:  MEP is very eager to be part of the climate / clean energy solution.  And as far as they're concerned, they are successful only if the companies they are working with are successful.

If you know of manufacturers that would like to get some low-priced, expert help, give the MEP a call…. or let me know, and I'll get them in touch with the right people.


Climate Change: Current Policy Landscape and Implications for U.S. Industry
View more presentations from edf_innovex.

Into the Lion's Den: An Enviro at GlobalChem

I entered the room with more than a little trepidation; as a toxicologist and risk assessor, I know how heated the debate can get regarding the safety of chemicals used in consumer products.  As an employee of EDF, I also knew that I was outnumbered by industry.  Also, the title of the panel, for which I was a speaker, was loaded:  Market Sustainability – The Retail Regulator.  Not only does industry have to worry about being regulated by Federal and State governments, but retailers, too!But my message was (and is) essentially a positive one:  there are many benefits for formulators to commit to a program of sustainability and green chemistry, substituting known hazardous chemicals with safer chemical substitutes.  These benefits include: safer working conditions and reduced need for engineering controls and protective equipment, fewer releases of hazardous chemicals to the environment, less hazardous waste disposal, safer consumer products (even when misused!), and such down-stream benefits as fewer chemicals going down the drain and into wastewater treatment plants.  How could anyone NOT like this? Read more »

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