
Where
Are Green Consumers?
posted
27th July 2000
by
Joel Makower, journalist, author, writer and lecturer.
Makower serves as president of Green Business Network, producers
of www.greenbiz.com. Given that public-opinion
surveys report that roughly three Americans in four call themselves
"environmentalists," and that marketing studies tell us that roughly
7 in 10 consumers would gladly choose the greener product over its
less-green counterpart, why has green consumerism remained a largely
marginal aspect of shopping? Only a relative handful of consumers
regularly go out of their way to make environmentally preferable
buying choices. It seems the so-called green consumer movement was
one of those well- intended passing fancies, a testimony to Americans'
never-ending quest for simple, quick, and efficient solutions to
complex problems. What happened? Here are five reasons why the environment
has failed to become a mainstream market force:
1.There's
no mandate. Though polls tell us that most consumers prefer greener
products, the polls are misleading: they fail to ask the right questions.
If you pose a question as a green-versus-ungreen choice, everyone
prefers the greener choice. But if you probe deeper into consumer
attitudes, the real answer is that consumers will choose the greener
product -- IF it doesn't cost moreŠ comes from a brand they know
and trust . . . can be purchased at stores where they already shop
. . . doesn't require a significant change of habits to use . .
. and has at least the same level of quality, performance, and endurance
as the less-green alternative. That's a high hurdle for any product.
No wonder mainstream consumers turned off to environmentally conscious
shopping.
2.The
public is dazed and confused. Shopping with Mother Earth in mind
is no mean feat, even for the most savvy of shoppers. After all,
understanding the environmental implications of something as simple
as paper versus plastic shopping bags requires digesting a fair
amount of science, some of which is inconclusive, contradictory,
or simply arguable. Both, after all, come from limited, declining
resources, can be made from recycled material, and can be recycled.
Which is better? Even the scientists don't agree. (Of course, the
greenest bag is the reusable organic cotton or hemp bag you use
thousands of times before it must be turned into compost, but that
notion rarely gets considered at the end of a checkout line.)
3.People
lack perspective. Similarly, most people don't have a clue about
the relative environmental impacts of the things they do every day.
For example, a good many self-described green consumers don't seem
to find irony in jumping into their poorly tuned, gas-guzzling sport-utility
vehicles with a cold engine and underinflated tires to drive a couple
miles out of their way in bumper-to-bumper traffic in order to purchase
their favorite brand of recycled paper towels. Will buying the right
laundry detergent or ice cream make the world safe for gas-powered
lawn mowers, leaf blowers, and chain saws? You make the call. The
whole notion of green consumerism unwittingly contributes to this
lack of perspective. It implies that greener purchases can help
"save the earth." The dirty little secret of green consumerism is
that we're not likely to shop our way to environmental health.
4.Companies
making greener products are afraid to speak up. With good reason.
Those early purveyors of "degradable trash bags" and "ozone-friendly
aerosols" got their wrists slapped, so marketers are understandably
on making environmental claims, particularly those that are scientifically
debatable. And most companies aren't environmentally pure, so to
call attention to one's green goods risks calling attention to one's
ecological skeletons.
5.Green
benefits aren't always evident. As the Levi's example demonstrates,
many environmental initiatives companies take don't show up on product
labels. For example, Anheuser-Busch saves millions of pounds of
aluminum a year by shaving 1/8" off the diameter of its beer cans,
though they don't put eco-labels on cans of Busch and Bud. Nonetheless,
they're having a significant impact when you consider the energy
and resource inputs of aluminum, and the energy savings from trucking
lighter-weight cans. It's certainly a greater environmental contribution
than that of consumers pondering "paper versus plastic." For now,
it seems green consumerism is destined to be limited to the roughly
10% to 12% of the marketplace that pollsters tell us are willing
to regularly seek out and buy green products, regardless of how
much more they cost or what lengths one must go to find them. Despite
its frustrations, green consumerism remains a powerful, largely
untapped tool for environmental change. Every time we spend, we
cast a vote, for or against the environment. And the marketplace
isn't a democracy: It doesn't take 51% voting in one direction to
effect change. A relatively small number of consumers can be a potent
force. The model works. We just need to make it work smarter. .rs
and posters with messages that demand jobs and an end to poverty.
These foot-soldiers are mobilisi

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