http://www.fastcompany.com/magazine/103/essay-resources.html

Resources: The Revolution Begins

Businesses large and small are finally seeing the green light. It isn't
just conscience--or all those nice young people in Guatemalan
sweaters--that's doing the trick. It's the sight of all that money.

From: Issue 103 | March 2006 |  Page 72 By: Chip Giller and David
Roberts Photographs by: Phillip Toledano

Let's talk about your butt--specifically, what it's sitting on.

Chances are, your chair is an unholy medley of polyvinyl chloride and
hazardous chemicals that drift into your lungs each time you shift your
weight. It was likely produced in a fossil-fuel-swilling factory that
in turn spews toxic pollution and effluents. And it's ultimately
destined for a landfill or incinerator, where it will emit carcinogenic
dioxins and endocrine-disrupting phthalates, the kind of
hormone-mimicking nasties that give male fish female genitalia and
small children cancer (or is it the other way around?). Now, envision
what you might be sitting on in 2016. Actually, never mind:
Office-furniture outfit Haworth already built it. It's called the Zody,
and it's made without PVC, CFCs, chrome, or any other toxic fixin's.
Ninety-eight percent of it can be recycled; some 50% of it already has
been. The energy used in the manufacturing process is completely offset
by wind-power credits, and when the chair is ready to retire, the
company will take it off your hands and reuse its components.

Unsurprisingly, Haworth is motivated by more than woodsy altruism.
"Haworth fundamentally believes that by being sustainable, you can be
more profitable," says its president and CEO, Franco Bianchi. The
lumbar-pampering chair isn't cheap to produce--nor, at $700 to $1,100
each, particularly cheap to buy--but the company believes there's money
to be made at the sweet spot where quality meets environmental
consciousness.

In isolation, the story of the Zody is a font of warm fuzzies. But if
the world is to avoid ecological catastrophe over the coming decade
(Sorry, did we say "ecological catastrophe"? We meant "multiple,
overlapping, mutually reinforcing ecological catastrophes"), it's going
to require more than benign furnishings. What we need is nothing less
than another industrial revolution--a wholesale conversion of the
familiar model of brute-force resource- and waste-intensive industry to
a model that mimics nature in its fecundity, flexibility, and
efficiency. And quickly, please.
That Sinking Feeling

Last year, more than 100 citizens of the tiny Pacific island nation of
Vanuatu permanently fled their seaside village because a succession of
strong waves and storms threatened to swallow it up. These unlucky
folks and their counterparts on other low-lying islands and buckling
shorelines are involuntary trendsetters, the world's first
climate-change refugees. And according to the Institute for Environment
and Human Security at the United Nations University, they may be joined
by as many as 50 million other environmental refugees by 2010.

The same fossil-fuel addiction that drives climate chaos also fouls the
air and dangerously distorts foreign policy. And things are only going
to get messier: Experts differ on exactly when we're going to run out
of cheap crude, but the consensus is that if you're under 40 (and
particulate pollution doesn't kill you early), you're likely to see it
in your lifetime.

In the meantime, billions more people will be lining up for whatever's
left. By 2050, the global population is expected to hit 9.2 billion, up
from today's 6.5 billion. That means the world is adding a Dallas a
week, and some of the fastest-growing spots on the planet--think China
and India--are those most rapidly upping their per-capita demand for
natural resources. We're razing rainforests, wiping out thousands of
species, slurping up a dwindling supply of fresh water, and
contaminating virtually every living creature with a witches' brew of
more than 70,000 synthetic chemicals. In fact, because toxic chemicals
tend to drift northward and accumulate in Arctic food chains, the
breast milk of some mothers in Greenland now technically qualifies as
hazardous waste.

Sound grim? Don't just sit there crying into your phthalates. There are
options--choose one!

The first is an old standby: doing nothing. Resource wars will break
out, environmental refugees will swarm the globe, people--mostly poor
people--will starve from drought and be wiped out by intense storms.
The world's rich will survive and probably prosper (they tend to), but
wealth disparities will skyrocket, presumably at a significant cost to
global political stability.

A second option: Educate the world's population to the point of
enlightenment so we all accept that we can live with much less,
materially speaking. The rich get poor, the poor stay poor--voluntary
simplicity, worldwide. Ahem.

Let's talk about the third option, then: the next industrial
revolution.

Reuse, Recycle, Rejoice

For decades, environmentalists have scolded the world's industrialized
societies, warning that they must grow less, consume less, slow down,
sacrifice. Human nature being what it is, that message found a rather
modest audience.

But a group of big thinkers has emerged in the past decade to put a new
twist on the green dream--people like William McDonough, Michael
Braungart, Amory Lovins, Janine Benyus, and Paul Hawken. Rather than
taking ecological principles primarily as moral prohibitions, they
suggest, why not see them as design challenges? Why not aim to build a
democratic, market-based civilization of prosperity and plenty that
puts humanity in a nurturing, rather than omnivorous, relationship with
the ecosystems it inhabits? Far from utopian, they say, it's largely
achievable in the next decade or so--and would ultimately cost far less
than our present trajectory.

Architect McDonough and chemist Braungart, authors of the landmark book
Cradle to Cradle, contend that every material used in the manufacturing
process should ultimately either biodegrade harmlessly or be reusable
with no loss of quality (unlike today's recycling, which is actually
downcycling). This radical model entirely eliminates the concept of
waste, including pollution; or, as they put it in their book: Waste
equals food.

Lovins, a sustainable-energy expert and head of the Rocky Mountain
Institute, a green think tank and consulting firm, is similarly fixated
on eliminating waste--especially wasted energy. He estimates that
preventable energy loss costs the global economy more than $1 trillion
a year and argues that efficiency is the most affordable energy source
in the United States. In a 2004 book, Winning the Oil Endgame (partly
funded by the Pentagon), Lovins and his RMI crew lay out a
market-centric strategy for weaning the United States off oil over the
next couple of decades through efficiency efforts and the strategic use
of existing technology. Net savings to the U.S. economy: $70 billion a
year by 2025.
Green Is Green

Lofty and appealing ideas, these, but what's actually happening on the
ground?

To begin with perhaps the most ambitious example: As part of the
China-U.S. Center for Sustainable Development, McDonough's
architectural firm is designing and overseeing construction of entire
city districts in China. Some 400 million rural Chinese are expected to
migrate to cities over the coming decade, and the government wants
urban centers to absorb the influx with minimal ecological impact. The
goal is to create dense urban areas that generate more power than they
consume through smart building techniques and solar technology--a
high-profile demonstration of cradle-to-cradle principles, if it
actually happens.

To date, though, McDonough has made more concrete progress with
corporate clients, including BASF, Nike, PepsiCo, and Ford Motor Co.,
which famously commissioned the architect to oversee a top-to-bottom
overhaul of its historic River Rouge plant in Dearborn, Michigan.

In fact, the past few months have seen blue-chip companies tripping
over themselves to go green. General Electric vowed to improve the
energy efficiency of its operations by 4% a year and double its
revenues from relatively clean products to $20 billion by 2010.
Wal-Mart, which has contracted with Lovins and RMI for advice, has
unveiled plans to double the fuel efficiency of its new trucks, cut
greenhouse-gas emissions from existing stores by 20%, and develop a
model green store. Energy giant BP just unveiled a new
alternative-energy division, which it says could produce $6 billion in
annual revenue by 2015.

Whole Foods announced in January that it would buy enough wind-power
credits to offset energy use at all of its U.S. stores, and Starbucks,
which said in 2005 that it would buy wind energy to meet 20% of
electricity needs at its U.S. stores, is this year adding 10%
postconsumer recycled content to its ubiquitous paper cups. That should
cut the need for new tree fiber by more than 5 million pounds a year,
the company says. Even McDonald's is shooting to get its first
green-building certification for a restaurant in Savannah, Georgia.

These heavyweight corporations don't need a windmill to see which way
the wind blows. And their sheer size means that even tentative,
incremental efforts have the potential to move markets. But the most
ambitious, inventive ideas are bubbling out of more agile, adaptable
small and midsize companies.

Take outdoor-clothing maker Patagonia. Ten years ago, it led the pack
in switching to 100% organic cotton; now it's asking folks to return
their old Capilene underwear (yes, they'd like you to wash it) to be
recycled into new garments.

In a similar vein, Hartmann & Forbes, which makes handwoven window
coverings from sustainably grown grasses and bamboo, just launched a
program to take them back at the end of their useful lives. Q
Collection, an upscale furniture maker, outflanks competitors by
eschewing formaldehyde, polyurethane, and flame retardants. GDiapers
are made of reusable cloth with flushable, compostable inserts.
IceStone is a glossy countertop material of recycled glass and
concrete.

Perhaps no other area is seeing as great a flurry of development as
clean energy. Solar cells are shrinking, wind turbines are getting more
efficient, and hydrokinetic energy--from the natural movement of
water--is being tapped as never before. Energy company Energetech, for
example, is teaming up with desalination company H2AU to develop
technology that harnesses wave power and uses it to make ocean water
drinkable. A prototype in the waters off of Port Kembla, Australia,
last year beat expectations; a full-scale version could power 1,400
homes a year, at a competitive cost, or produce 260 million gallons of
potable water--with zero emissions.

There are thousands of others, small firms and startups creating
nontoxic, modular, recyclable products; modeling more efficient
production; reducing their pollution. As in any new wave of innovation,
many--perhaps most--of these companies will fail, but each will add to
the expanding store of practical wisdom.

Flushable diapers and fancy chairs notwithstanding, we will never
recover the thousands of species lost, the old-growth forests and
Appalachian mountaintops leveled, or the lives cut short by poisons and
pollution. There is already enough carbon dioxide in the atmosphere to
guarantee at least some climatic disruption.

The European Union and U.S. states and cities are picking up some of
the legislative and regulatory slack, but at the national level here,
action to address these problems has been anemic at best and
counterproductive at worst--a collective failure of will that could
come back to haunt us. But if McDonough and company are right, the real
engine of environmental progress will turn out to be not government
action but the imagination and entrepreneurial spirit of thousands of
market-savvy, environmentally minded innovators.

As GE CEO and newly minted eco-evangelist Jeffrey Immelt is fond of
saying, "Green is green."

Chip Giller is founder and editor of Grist.org, an online environmental
magazine. David Roberts is a Grist.org senior writer. 



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