Archive for the ‘innovation’ Category


Reducing Deforestation And “Digital Media Tree-Wash”

Monday, December 21st, 2009

Article reproduced, author: Donald Carli*

Most people will tell you that they care about saving our forests, but they tend to be uninformed or misinformed when it comes to knowing the causes of deforestation or some of the places being affected most significantly by land use change that kills trees, pollutes rivers and contributes to climate change. Until recently the conventional wisdom has been to demonize paper and print media as the major culprit behind “killing trees” and to idealize digital media as “green and groovy” alternative without consideration for the full backstory or life cycle footprint of either.

Pixels Don’t Grow on Trees

Paper and print media supply chains are far from being sustainable, but may be far less of a threat to forests than the “Tree-Wash” claims about how digital media saves trees or how pixels are greener than pages. “Tree-Wash” is my term for a special class of “greenwash” making false, misleading or unsupported marketing claims that ignore the causes of deforestation associated with digital media, or that fail to identify the actual trees and forests allegedly being saved or planted.

However, the Copenhagen Climate Summit and technologies developed to verify land use are likely to play a major role in changing the status quo with regard to foot-printing forests, identifying trees and the calculating the climate impacts of coal-powered IT.

Are You Seeing REDD yet?

Deforestation and the sustainable management of the world’s forests are serious issues that should be top of mind given the world’s focus on climate change. Trees sequester carbon equal to half of their dry weight, and scientists estimate that as much 20 percent of total emissions of the greenhouse gas carbon dioxide (CO2) are emitted due to deforestation, land use change and forest degradation. For that reason, Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and Forest Degradation (REDD) is a major issue that will be addressed in Copenhagen.

Sustainable forestry will play an increasingly important role in supporting the literacy and sanitary existence of the world’s growing population. In addition to providing millions of jobs and providing the wood fiber used to produce over 350 million tons of paper per year, the world’s forests also serve as the planet’s “lungs” by converting or “sequestering” atmospheric carbon dioxide into woody biomass and providing other important environmental services. In addition, sustainably harvested forest biomass will increasingly be employed by a new generation of integrated biorefineries to replace fossil fuel energy and petrochemical feedstocks.

According to some reports just one day’s deforestation is equivalent to the greenhouse gas emissions of eight million people flying to New York; in order to address such a serious challenge and provide a basis to monitoring the reduction of deforestation and forest degradation, an impressive array of geo-locative and remote sensing capabilities are being developed to map the world’s forests and identify the location of individual trees with startling precision.

For example, as part of the Global Forest Resources Assessment 2010, the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO) and its member countries and partners is undertaking a global remote sensing survey of forests covering the whole land surface of the Earth. FAO is also providing technical support for national forest assessments and the establishment of national forest monitoring systems. See: Global Forest Resources Assessment

Do You See the Forest or the Trees?

Remote sensing of forest biomass and geo-locative tagging of trees will become increasingly important as the exemption of carbon dioxide emissions from bioenergy use will only be appropriate if there is a system that also counts emissions from deforesting land and land use activities that degrade forest ecologies. In that way, if biomass for energy use results in deforestation, emissions are counted as land use emissions equivalent to fossil fuel emissions. However, these new applications will also be making it possible to stem the tsunami of “Go Digital, Save Trees” Tree-Wash marketing claims that many marketers of e-billing, e-books and digital media have been flooding the market with.

One of the little known but significant causes of deforestation in the United States related to digital media is the practice of Mountain Top Removal, employed to mine the coal used to generate electricity in states like West Virginia. In 2008 over 41 million tons of coal were extracted by means of Mountain Top Removal in West Virginia. Coal provides the majority of electric power in 32 states, and 99 percent of the electricity generated in West Virginia comes from coal.

The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) estimates that by 2013 an area the size of Delaware will have been deforested to extract coal. In addition to the greenhouse gas emissions associated with the energy consumed by digital media’s IT infrastructure, the deforestation, toxic air pollution and water pollution impacts associated with coal mining, coal combustion and coal waste need to be considered before making claims about digital media being greener than print or saving trees.

Truth in Augmented Reality

Deforestation, illegal logging and land-use changes that result in greenhouse gas emissions and other environmental damage are serious matters that billions of people care about. With today’s advanced remote sensing and geo-location capabilities consumers have every reason to expect marketers making claims about their offerings saving trees, or resulting in the planting of trees, to identify the trees in question and account for the life cycle impacts associated with their products. Even if the FTC does not yet prosecute such cases, that would not preclude a competitor from calling on the National Advertising Review Council to review the truthfulness and accuracy of a green marketing claim.

As we enter the “Post Madoff” trust-but-verify age of social-media powered transparency and climate awareness, it is becoming more possible and important than ever to monitor the green message content and supply chain impacts of advertising. Pixels may not grow on trees, but it is increasingly likely that remote sensing and augmented reality pixels can and will be used to hold marketers responsible for the carbon footprint of their media supply chains and the truthfulness and accuracy of advertising claims they make about saving or planting trees.

*Author: Donald Carli
Senior Research Fellow
Institute for Sustainable Communication
http://www.sustaincom.org

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Submit your Sustainability Ads to ACT Responsible by the 15 April

Tuesday, March 31st, 2009

ACT - Advertising Community Together is a non-profit association that showcases ads on social, environmental and sustainable development accessible on its website. They also produce a worldwide touring exhibition shown at public and professional events, conferences and debates within the communication industry. Its goal is to promote and inspire responsible communication on sustainability, equitable development and social responsibility. ACT shows how advertising professionals from all continents can use their core talent - creativity - to play a significant role in addressing today’s crucial world issues.

They are preparing a new exhibition that will be premiered in Cannes 20-26 June 2009 before starting its annual world tour. It illustrates the main issues of Sustainable Development from the environmental to the social and demonstrates the power of “creativity” on today’s crucial issues.

They are gathering worldwide ads about sustainable development themes :

- Environnemental Ads: Visual communication examples regarding environmental areas, such as Water Preservation, Climate Change, Biodiversity and natural areas Protection, Desertification, Renewable Energies…
- Social Ads: Visual illustrations on subjects such as Solidarity, Human Rights, Childhood Protection, Poverty, Education, Sanitation, Racism…and also Alcohol Abuse, Drug Addiction, Personal Health, Road Safety, Obesity Prevention, Organ Donation,..

Why become part of the ACT Exhibition?

- After 7 years, ACT is now well known by the Advertising Community as a key player in Communication and Sustainable Development topics.
- Be part of a great Worldtour of Exhibitions including Cannes 2009. Since Cannes 2008, The Expo has been seen in over 10 locations around the world including the NY Advertising Week, EACA Euro Effies, Golden Drum, IAA and more.

See www.act-responsible.org

Newspaper Jacket Keeps Homeless People Warm

Friday, January 23rd, 2009

It’s great to see innovation that has the potential to make a real difference. We’re starting to see a plethora of new green gadgets but often the simplest ideas are the best.

Aiming to make things a fraction easier for homeless people in Canada—who face winter temperatures of as low as -30 degrees Celsius—Canadian ad agency TAXI developed the 15 Below Jacket, a garment that owes its insulating properties to old newspapers. Distributed to the homeless by the Salvation Army, the jacket’s durable, waterproof and wind-resistant case has internal pockets in the sleeves, body and hood for its owner to fill with newspaper. Readily available from recycling bins, bunched-up newspaper is an excellent insulating material.

The garment was named ‘15 Below’ to reference the Celsius mark at which a cold warning is issued, urging the homeless to get off the streets. It’s also a nod to the design competiton that produced it, which celebrates TAXI’s 15th birthday. Creative director Steve Mykolyn came up with the concept, winning the privilege of testing his prototype in a meat locker. Supervised by a paramedic, the design helped him survive eight hours in -28 degree conditions, after which 3,000 jackets went into production (in December 2007).

When stuffed, the jacket—created by Canadian designer Lida Baday—looks like a garment anybody could wear, avoiding stigmatization of its wearers. In the summer months it can be emptied and used as a raincoat, folded up into a backpack to be transported, or filled and used as a pillow. An altruistic project that rubs off very well on all involved, sponsors are currently being sought to fund distribution in other countries.

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?

Running the numbers - Art & Climate Change

Saturday, November 22nd, 2008

Running the Numbers looks at contemporary American culture through the austere lens of statistics. Each image portrays a specific quantity of something: fifteen million sheets of office paper (five minutes of paper use); 106,000 aluminum cans (thirty seconds of can consumption) and so on. The artist hopes that images representing these quantities might have a different effect than the raw numbers alone, such as we find daily in articles and books. Statistics can feel abstract and anesthetizing, making it difficult to connect with and make meaning of 3.6 million SUV sales in one year.

This project visually examines these vast and bizarre measures of our society, in large intricately detailed prints assembled from thousands of smaller photographs. Employing themes such as the near versus the far, and the one versus the many. The artist hopes to raise some questions about the role of the individual in a society that is increasingly enormous, incomprehensible, and overwhelming. Running the Numbers images will look at some issues that are more global in scope: the world’s oceans, African issues, species extinctions.

To see the work visit

http://www.chrisjordan.com/current_set2.php

Green Awards 2008 Winners Announced

Friday, November 21st, 2008

 

The third Green Awards have culminated at the Brewery, London with the winners of 13 categories and the overall ‘Grand-prix’ winner being announced. Initiated to reward businesses for communicating sustainability in a creative and original way, the awards emphasise the role that needs to be played by the marketing and communications industries in informing people about green issues, products and lifestyle choices.

The evening was enlivened by rousing speeches from Climate Change Co-ordinator from the United Nations Environment Programme, Mr Kaveh Zahedi, Friends of the Earth Chair Simon Counsell and Baroness Peta Buscombe, Chief Executive of the Advertising Association.

The Grand Prix rewards the campaign which, in the opinion of the expert judging panel, best exemplified an outstanding environmental message, and had the greatest sustainable impact. This accolade went to Nokia for their ‘Power of We’ for their corporate employee engagement programme.

The judges were impressed by the results of the campaign: 73% of worldwide employees are aware of their environmental initiatives, over 1200 environmental champions have signed up with the target of a further 1000 in the next 3 months – with employees making over 4000 pledges with the number growing every day.It was agreed the campaign was a really engaging way of getting employees on board – it really was very practically based, anybody could do it, it wasn’t preachy and it seemed to be doing the business. Less a green campaign than an entire organisational cultural shift.
 
Other notable winners included Green Thing ‘Walk the Walk’ for Best Green Digital and the We Want Tap Campaign for Best Green Integrated under £50,000 Budget.

According to Baroness Peta Buscombe, Chief Executive, The Advertising Association “The Awards demonstrate our industry’s commitment to promoting positive environmental change. The environment is an issue where we are all looking for solutions, it is important to ours and future generations and is one in which the communications industry can play a powerful role.”

Two new categories were introduced in 2008. Best Green Campaigner and Best Green International Campaign. Nick Nuttall, Spokesperson to the Executive Director of the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) and Head of Media commented “The marketing industry is both part of the problem but also a big part of the solution to the challenge of climate change and the wider sustainability challenges facing over six billion people. UNEP is delighted that the Green Awards is evolving from its solid base in the UK to inspire creativity and campaigning globally by attracting entrants from all of the world”.

- ENDS  -

Editor’s Notes: All winners and commendations.

Best Outdoor Advertisement (under £50,000)
sponsored by Clear Channel Outdoor

International Fund for Animal Welfare: IFAW on the Underground

Best Outdoor Advertisement (over £50,000)
sponsored by Clear Channel Outdoor

Coca-Cola Great Britain: Talent From Trash

Best Press (no budget split)

CLG and COI: COI Energy Efficiency Check-up

Best Direct Mail (no budget split)
sponsored by Guardian Direct Marketing

International Fund for Animal Welfare: MP Humpback Adoption Campaign

Best Radio (no winner)

Gcap Media - Commended

Best Green Digital (No budget split)
sponsored by Propel Earth

Green Thing: Walk the walk

Best Internal Communications (under £50,000)
sponsored by B.sustainable

Punch Taverns: How big is your Carbon Footprint?’

Best Internal Communications (over £50,000)
sponsored by B.sustainable

Nokia: The power of We

Best Audiovisual (under £50,000)
sponsored by ITN Source.

BDH and the Soil Association: One Planet Food

Best Audio-visual (over £50,000)
sponsored by ITN Source

DEFRA: ACT ON CO2, Save Money, Save Energy Campaign

Best International Campaign (no budget split)

Romanian National Water Administration: Let’s keep the waters clean
 
UNEP and UITP: The Voice of Reason (Age 6)

mtc touch, Lebanon - Commendation

Best Campaigner (no budget split)
sponsored by Media Training Masterclasses

Batteryrecycling-uk.co.uk

Neil Jennings Associates Community Interest Company - Commendation

Best Packaging (under £50,000)
sponsored by ASDA.

Lush: Squeaky Green Shampoo Bar

Angus Soft Fruits & Adare - Commendation

Best Packaging (over £50,000)
sponsored by ASDA

Cadbury: Cadbury Eco-Eggs

Best Website, (under £50,000)

Friends of the Earth: The Big Ask

Best Website (over £50,000)

Largeblue: green.tv

Best PR (under £50,000)
sponsored by Planet 2050, Weber Shandwick’s

United Utilities Plc: Tap Into Water

Best PR (over £50,000) - No winner

Best Integrated (under £50,000)

We Want Tap: Tap
 
For more information, visit www.greenawards.co.uk  or contact: Green Awards Team: + 44 (0) 207 6085220

Creative Collections

Wednesday, September 17th, 2008

It was really refreshing to see the entries arriving in for this years Green Awards. One of the exciting aspects of Climate Change if I can be positive about such a negative is the opportunities for brands to innovate in their product ranges and for new companies to emerge with niche offerings that might become fairly mainstream in time.

The funniest entry for me this year which is one that actually didn’t make it in time for the deadline but is still worthy of mention - the Skooperbox. The Skooperbox Dog ‘Scoop’ Box is an alternative to plastic bags for all you Dog owners. Made of 100% recycled paper which is 100% biodegradable it demonstrates that companies have real opportunities to review every aspect of our busy lives to find truly alternative ways to make a difference.