From the category archives:

Business

It’s time for a short break for me! Company has come to town – seven women I have not seen since high school graduation in 1972! The last thing I want to worry about these next few days while we have an amazing reunion (and recovery days afterward!) is posting to this blog, Twitter and Facebook. I’ll be back next week with a couple guest posts and hopefully some writing of my own.

I have gone back to school to be a Residential Planner. It will expand my real estate business, but it’s very time-consuming. And I miss getting up and writing in the morning! I have a few weeks off from school, so I hope to get caught up with desert verde, too, and bring you some original writing.

Meanwhile, go through the drop-downs in the navigation menu at the top of the page, and read Eco-living Tips, the Solar Building Series, and facts and news about Eco Building. Check out the Nature Quotes and Book selections, and visit the ads on the right side of the page to help keep this blog alive! There is lots to see while I’m gone a few days!

See you soon!

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(This is a guest post from Roy Gayhart, originally posted on his blog at Whole Solar, a Women Owned Small Business, which is part of an affiliated group of wholesale distributors and manufacturer’s representatives who share a passion for solar energy.)

I just got through listening to President Obama’s speech about the BP Oil Spill. When I wrote the blog What the BP Gulf Oil Spill Means to BP Solar in May, who could have imagined we’d be where we are now? Around that time government officials were estimating that oil was leaking at a rate of 5,000 barrels a day (a five-fold increase from initial estimates). A few days after that blog was written, NPR began reporting that the spill rate could be closer to 70,000 barrels per day. That set off a controversy, with BP’s COO disputing the NPR oilspill estimates. A month later, a US scientific team has fixed the estimates of the oil spill rate at between 35,000 to 60,000 barrels a day.

We are in day 57, with no end in sight. We’ve gone from “the largest oil spill in American history” to the “worst environmental disaster in American history.” We continue to hear about the chaotic manner in which BP has handled the crisis. We’ve gone from what was described in that earlier blog to the realization that the BP spill was turning the gulf into a dead zone.

In the earlier post that I’m updating here, I explored the branding repercussions affecting BP Solar. Since then, I as able to access a talk given by a BP Group Vice President of Marketing on April 26, 2001 at The CNN Fortune Time Global Marketing Forum in Rome, Italy. Her talk was titled “Branding in the 21st Century; A BP Perspective.” She points out BP at that time was “a company made up of 100,000 people thrown together as a result of a series of mergers and acquisitions. Almost overnight the new BP became:

> One of the biggest companies in the world with over 100,000 employees worldwide
> The largest oil and natural gas producer in the US and UK
> The largest non-OPEC oil producer in the world
> The world’s largest solar company
> And a company with more than 28,000 service stations world-wide.”

In somewhat of a sad foretelling manner she stated: “I believe at the end of the day, the strongest brands still result from powerful emotional connections that companies are able to make with the general population.” She went on to identify three themes that identify “what people expect, and demand, from great brands:

> Great brands deliver not what a company makes, but what customers need.
> Great brands make a positive impact in people’s lives.
> Great brands demonstrate alignment between external words and internal actions.”

Fast-forward from 2001 to 2010 – I’m reading articles titled You Don’t Trust BP? It’s Too Late, BP and Big Oil: Shut Down America’s Greenwashing Machine and Americans Don’t Care if BP Goes Bankrupt Paying for Oil Spill, Poll Shows. Somehow I doubt this was the branding goal BP had in mind.

So, again I ask, where does this put BP Solar? There hasn’t been a lot of press on BP Solar since the the Deepwater Horizon Oil Spill Distaster. Renewable Energy World tells us:

BP Solar With over 35 years of experience and installations in over 160 countries, BP Solar is one of the world’s largest solar companies and has manufacturing facilities in the U.S., Spain, India, and China.

As I wrote in the earlier blog, Home Depot has exclusively carried the BP Solar brand. Since I wrote that last blog, Home Depot in California has thrown out all of its long-time loyal solar installers and replaced them with Solar City. Perhaps this is a play to replace a tarnished brand with the Solar City brand. In any event, anyone buying solar panels at a California Home Depot will get BP Solar AND Solar City. This might apply in Home Depot Warehouses outside of California as well. Will it work for Home Depot, Solar City and BP Solar? I guess we continue to wait and see.

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It’s called a pen. It’s like a printer, hooked straight to my brain. Dale Dauten

When I think sustainability, I think big. I think houses, energy, solar, green building materials and post-construction waste. I don’t fret about most small things, like toothbrushes, but I do fret about disposable pens.

I write a lot. I write with a pen on paper. I know that is foreign to many of you, but, hey, call me old school. It won’t be the first time!

My pen stash seems to run out pretty fast, and when it does, I realize how many I have put in the landfill over the years. I cringe each time I make that toss into the trash and have tried lots of alternatives – fountain pens, refillable pens, cartridge pens, pencils. You name it, I have written with it. I suppose a pencil is the greenest as far as end-use waste, but its manufacture? Not so sure.

At Inhabitat yesterday, I found a pen that is 98% biodegradable! This is my answer! Everything but the ball and nib are biodegradable and non-toxic. The packaging is even recycled material, and the manufacturing company, Harbec, is one of the most sustainable in the US.

If I can toss a pen into the compost pile instead of the landfill, I will have that much less guilt about writing! What a great day that will be! These pens are ready to ship on April 30. I will get some and let you know how it works out.

I can also get notebooks made of 100% recycled post-consumer waste! I have hit pay dirt, and the guilt is washing away………

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(Nan’s Note: Yeah! This sounds great to me! This shows, too, that ‘green’ is not just about energy. It’s about decentralizing and supporting your neighbors. Technology is great, but we are so global, we forget we have a local world. That is where our sustainable efforts should begin – at home.)

By Leanne Tobias

What’s in store for green buildings and green business in 2010? Here are my predictions for the year’s emerging trends.

Retrofits – The mainstreaming of LEED for Existing Buildings: Operations & Maintenance (LEED-EBOM) — which requires compliance with EPA’s Energy Star program — gives property owners…

Energy Efficiency – As in 2009, operating cost efficiency remains an imperative for…

Alternative Energy – The use of the 30 percent investment tax credit for alternative energy should…

Localism/Regionalism – I’m also seeing reports that community or regional brands (as opposed to national or multi-national chains) are the hottest…

Greener Agriculture and Cityscapes – Localism/regionalism, when applied to the food chain, translates into…

Read the ends to those sentences at Greenbiz.com, and check out these books:

    

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(Nan’s Note: “The need to develop new consumption patterns is the mother of all innovation challenges. The race to dematerialize is on.” That was all I needed to read to convince me to post this article!

Consumers and businesses need to work in tandem to reduce waste. Corporations are making strides in waste reduction, but if consumers became more eco-conscious, it would double up the efforts of the business world.

Simplify! Consume less! Way less! Your planet and future generations depend on it!)

By Aron Cramer

With climate negotiations reaching an inconclusive end in Copenhagen, the action swings back from national governments and the intergovernmental process to you and me.

For many years, the idea of sustainable consumption has been embraced by NGOs and others, but widely shunned by business.

This is changing fast. Not only that, the signs of growing interest are coming from unlikely locations.

Find out where and what the solutions are in this article from Greenbiz.com – another on of my favorites for green business news.

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