Archive for the ‘Credit crunch green’ Category


Can the clock ever be turned back?

Friday, May 15th, 2009

I noticed a recent promotion where The Energy Saving Trust and the Imperial War Museum have teamed up to promote the ‘Wartime Spirit Campaign’ to encourage people to learn from the past how to reduce waste and save energy.

It all sounds very idealistic but as a nation we’re so institutionalised in luxury and the satisfying of all our immediate desires and wants that any lesser existence would seem inconceivable.

Personally I would love to grow my own vegetables but without land and being time poor it seems like an alien concept and very idealistic. Certainly this is the case whilst living in the inner sanctum of the urban metropolis where open space is a premium to say the least.

Philip Sellwood, chief executive of the Energy Saving Trust, said: “We are certainly not advocating a return to rationing or indeed enforced personal daily allowances. However if we could adopt just a few of the practices used during the war, such as recycling bath water for watering plants, then it would go a long way towards saving energy and reducing our carbon footprint.” I do quite like the idea of using the bath water on the plants although capturing the water from the shower might prove a little more difficult. I can’t in fact remember the last time I had a bath but I guess a lot of people still do. However,  I do remember fondly sharing baths with my siblings whist growing up to save on energy and time. In fact I know sharing a bath is one of the hot tips in the ‘We Are What We Do’ series of tips, although preferably with someone you love. See http://www.wearewhatwedo.org/actiontracker/action.php?action=8

Interestingly, research conducted by the Energy Saving Trust – which provides free advice to consumers on reducing their carbon emissions and works with retailers, builders and industry to increase the availability of energy efficient products – suggests the British public might not be averse to a bit of enforced frugality. I think the recession is fast forwarding this situation as a matter of necessity and that’s probably what people need to influence their behaviour patterns.

As part of the joint campaign, the Imperial War Museum has put together a number of examples of how wartime initiatives can be adapted for the modern world, including ‘make do and mend’, ‘is your journey really necessary?’ and ‘save fuel for battle’.

From a marketing point of view it’s fascinating to see the language used and the call to actions used in these advertising campaigns during the war prior to mass market communications and the overload of insidious messages we experience today through spam. I wonder how effective these posters were in engaging people and contributing to behaviour change compared to today’s multi-million pound integrated campaigns?

A lack of imagination from our leaders

Wednesday, December 3rd, 2008
The Prime Minister recently put his economic focus squarely on maintaining global demand.”With Britain continuing to lead the debate, economic recovery will work better if we all work together,” he said. “The benefits of any individual country’s fiscal action will be all the greater if this is part of a concerted and fairly distributed international response to maintain global demand.”

Surely some mishtake.

It is the economic focus on driving demand in the developed world that has left us with an environmentally depleted, inequitable and unsustainable global landscape.

Are we not ready for a focus on more nuanced fiscal policy that allows us to adapt to the inevitable changes in global demand patterns that come with the imperative for drastically reduced developed world resource consumption coupled with appropriate and intelligent investment in developing world economies?

The End of Sustainability?

Monday, September 22nd, 2008

The catastrophic meltdown of the financial markets is probably the first in a series of global wake-up calls which will trigger soul searching throughout the business community and government right down to individuals.

Although some might question whether the economic recession will force sustainability issues off the marketing agenda, I think that consumers will start to join the dots and understand the relationship between the excess profits associated with the unbridled financial markets, the social malaise in western societies and environmental degradation. If anything, here lies an opportunity for brands to revaluate their approach and messaging. What’s required is an honest approach whereby a ‘truth well told’ is based on facts, a reconnection with ethics and a realignment with the sustainability values of previous generations.

This should mean that frugality becomes a virtue and being conscious of ones total environmental footprint not just carbon footprint are inextricably linked to value, but value in the holistic sense, that we pay less, use less and waste less thereby adding true value to our lives.