Even The Biggest Boxes Can Go Green
Green Futures 

The man who builds Wal-Mart's massive retail outlets is going against the grain 
by working from an "eco-template" that saves energy and water and dramatically 
reduces greenhouse gas emissions, Terry Slavin writes for Green Futures. 

John Duggan runs Gazeley. They build vast warehouses for Wal-Mart. Can this be 
the cutting edge of sustainability? The 58-year old chairman of Gazeley is not 
one to shirk a challenge. His company, based in Milton Keynes, is a wholly 
owned Wal-Mart subsidiary, and one of the largest warehouse developers in 
Europe. The retail warehousing business, he freely admits, is unsustainable. 
"Over 80 percent of goods that go into the retail machine end up in the bin in 
four years' time; 40 percent of truck journeys are empty." 

But there are many villains in the piece. "The whole economic system is 
unsustainable in terms of how we do it at the moment," he says. So Duggan has 
been working from within -- to clean up his own corner of the system. 

What he has done at Gazeley, together with U.S. eco-architect Bill McDonough 
and U.K. photovoltaics specialists Solarcentury, is to develop an 
"eco-template" for environmentally friendly warehousing. 

Occupiers pay no more than what they would for an unadorned tin roof and four 
walls, but get 11 energy- and water-saving features fitted as standard. These 
include solar thermal heating, storm water collection, energy-efficient 
lighting, recyclable floor coverings, water-saving toilets and timber from 
sustainable sources. All developments also feature some other renewable 
technology, such as ground source heat pumps, photovoltaics and wind turbines. 

The company says its tenants enjoy average energy savings of 8 percent, and 50 
percent cuts in water usage on a standard warehouse. Where Gazeley also fits 
out the interior of the warehouses, with low-energy heating and lighting 
systems, the environmental impact is much more dramatic. 

A 3.4-million-square-foot development planned for Milton Keynes will cut CO2 
emissions by a projected 67 percent over its 25-year life. 

Asked how Gazeley can afford to do this and remain competitive, Duggan makes 
clear that the 'eco' in the eco-template stands for 'economical' as well as 
'ecological.' 

"It adds a small percentage to the build cost," he admits, but the eco-template 
design helps smooth progress through the planning system, and also attracts 
five-star customers such as John Lewis, Woolworths and B&Q at an early stage in 
development. "Letting them out earlier more than makes up for any extra build 
costs," Duggan says. "There's a strong business basis for this." 

Competitors are scrambling to recruit their own environmental consultants, but 
Duggan is not worried. "By the time the rest catch up we'll be down the road 
and on to the next stage," he says breezily. 

The "next stage" is zero carbon and zero waste; an industrial system which 
mimics nature in that all waste becomes "technical nutrients." In this he 
echoes McDonough, who helped him see the light four years ago when he addressed 
a group of Gazeley executives. 

"Until recently, I took the view that environmentalists were irresponsible," 
says Duggan. "They didn't care about the economic and social side. But Bill 
McDonough had such a positive take: let's rethink the way we make things so it 
has a positive rather than negative impact. I felt his approach was 
unassailable intellectually, as well as good business sense. We all share the 
same planet." 

Without claiming that Gazeley's eco-template project was the tail that wagged 
the Wal-Mart dog, Duggan points out that it started in 2003, a full two years 
before the retail giant's company-wide drive for the environmental high ground. 
"We'd been feeding this in [to Wal-Mart] for a long time," he says, "and they'd 
been positive and supportive." 

In the U.K., Gazeley has found common cause with the Renewable Energy 
Association and David Cameron's Conservatives, who chose Gazeley's first U.K. 
eco-template warehouse in Bedford as the venue for a press conference calling 
for renewables in all new major property developments. But Duggan denies that 
he’s party-political. As he says, "the Tories approached us. I’m happy to talk 
with any politician prepared to take a long-term view to the biggest issue 
facing mankind." 

Duggan himself is in for the long haul. "It’s a 20-25 year project at least to 
tackle these issues," he says. "Who knows if we have that time? We’re trying to 
do what we can in our own sphere of influence -- one building at a time." 

Terry Slavin is a regular writer for the Observer, specialising in 
environmental issues. 
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