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site renovation

For anyone who was following our posts regularly, we apologize that our pace has recently dropped off. To explain, our summer was filled with more travel and activity than anticipated. I would love to believe that maintaining a blog while traveling is easy. After all, the applications needed were loaded on both our iPads. [...]

Earth Day origins

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In 1999, Advertising Age magazine compiled a list of the best advertising campaigns of the century. Many of their selections occurred in the 1960s; an era that many consider an advertising golden age. The AMC television series Mad Men quite accurately depicts New York’s Madison Avenue during that time period. Atop the magazine’s list is Volkswagen’s Think Small campaign that launched late in 1959 and ran for more than a decade. The campaign slogan, Think Small, was the work of Julian Koenig while at the firm Doyle Dane Bernbach. Koenig is a legendary copywriter who eventually co-founded the firm Papert Koenig Lois. He’s responsible for the now famous tag line – Timex: It takes a licking and keeps on ticking. His genius was making the complex look easy. He was a master at boiling down product attributes to their essential and developing catchy memorable phrases that resonate with audiences. His work seems effortlessly timeless.

julian koenig

Julian Koenig

He is also credited with naming an event celebrating its fortieth anniversary today – Earth Day. The story goes something like this. Koenig was a member of the Earth Day organizing committee, the event was planned to take place on April 22, Koenig’s birthday – Earth Day rhymes with birthday – that easy. Thank goodness organizers didn’t go with their initial name – National Environment Teach-In. Fortunately, smart marketing won. The name is as memorable and meaningful today as it was forty years ago.

Late in 1969, U.S. Senator from Wisconsin Gaylord Nelson delivered a presentation to a small group in Seattle, WA where he proposed an idea for a national teach-in dedicated to environmental issues. Coastal damage caused by a devastating oil spill near Santa Barbara, CA earlier that year left a lasting impression which moved him to action. The activism and demonstration tinged decade of the 1960s was coming to a close, but Senator Nelson knew that environmentalism interest begun with Rachel Carson’s book Silent Spring was beginning to gain momentum. In his opinion, the pace wasn’t fast enough and national awareness of natural depredation needed a jump start.

Read more Earth Day origins

Fireclay Tile throws in the towel

While so many companies are working hard to move their business to more environmentally favorable practices, Fireclay Tile has decided to throw in the towel and join the rest of the polluting toxic world. It’s a very sad turn of events. The notice below tells the whole story:

Of course owner Paul Burns [...]

is it greenwash: Montana Ghost Wood

Image from Montana Ghost Wood web site

We regularly troll the Web for new construction material sourcing leads. Whenever we see a company we’ve not heard, we’re excited to research and investigate. Several months ago such a new material source caught my attention. Posted on a LinkedIn Green Building Products group discussion board, someone [...]

looking back, looking forward

I suppose it’s customary around this time of the year for any publication around to take a look at the year just recently ended and what lies ahead for the next twelve months. Just over a year ago I started this blog as a test. I was with another A/E firm wondering if I could even [...]

black friday waste

Black Friday is once again upon us. It’s the largest single shopping day in the United States. Since we’re the largest consumer economy in the world, it’s also the world’s biggest single shopping day. Yet, while we in the US are lining up at stores awaiting their doors to open at ridiculous hours, elsewhere [...]

where’s my free market 2

cash registerIn my last post on this issue I wrote about the oil and gas industries. With this post I’ll cover their partners in market manipulation, US automakers.

The original Ford Model T achieved 13 to 21 miles per gallon and could run on gasoline, kerosene, and ethanol. It rolled off the assembly line more than one hundred years ago. But visit the web site of any US automaker today and you’ll find vehicles listed with worse fuel economy. I’ll admit that’s not a totally fair comparison. Cars today are far heavier than those of a century ago. But it raises an interesting question – how would today’s models compare on a mileage per pound comparison?

Fifty years ago, General Motors was the world’s most dominant automaker. The expression – what’s good for GM is good for America – was true. It’s wasn’t just a clever marketing slogan. At the height of its success, GM controlled fifty percent of the market – half of all cars sold. Today, they only have a twenty percent market share and are the number two manufacturer behind Toyota. And Toyota did that with fifteen hundred dealerships compared to GM’s seven thousand. During WWII, General Motors and the other US automakers transitioned their factories from auto and truck production to military craft, armaments, and equipment in a matter of months. It was an unprecedented reshaping of US industry like none other in history. But today the big three can’t even get out of their own way.

Since then US automakers have attempted to block every effort to improve efficiency, reduce emissions, improve safety, and more. They routinely fight government plans to raise CAFE (Corporate Average Fuel Economy) standards. As a result, cars manufactured in the US cannot be sold in other parts of the world. Europe, China, Australia, and others have higher fuel economy standards. How is it that other countries have been able to figure it out, but the best minds in America cannot? Honda, Toyota, and Nissan all have higher fleet mileage than any domestic brand.

With every government effort to improve safety or environmental impact, Detroit has used the time work argument that any change will increase cost passed on to the consumer. In 1994 when California was debating low emission standards they cried wolf again and claimed that modifications would increase each auto by $800. After the legislation passed the price tag per auto was actually $80.

Several years ago I attended a presentation by a Toyota representative where they acknowledged their products rely on a fuel with a dwindling supply. They understand and accept the fact that to be in business fifty years from now their cars will have to run on another fuel. They aren’t waiting for more crude to be discovered, they aren’t resting on their laurels, they aren’t waiting for someone else for figure it out for them, they are aggressively pursuing alternative locomotive options.

Read more where’s my free market 2

national vs. global interests

Recently I’ve read a number of sustainability opposition books such as Green Hell, The Really Inconvenient Truths, plus others and I’ve been seeing similar arguments in them all. Common among them are themes suggesting sustainability is a euphemism for socialism and other mechanisms to gain control of your life. There are repeated claims how [...]

where’s my free market 1

With the election of Barack Obama there seems to be a great deal more discussion in the news about free market economics versus a government controlled and regulated one. Any time you hear a sustainability opponent broadcast the merits of the free market and suggest that going green is the same as socialism, what [...]

choose change: blog action day

We probably all have friends or family who don’t respond well to change, and when faced with the need to change experience extreme discomfort. And we probably also know people who thrive on change. Which one are you? For me, I’m comfortable with change, but don’t necessarily thrive on it. I understand and accept [...]