Monday, January 11, 2010

Green book of the week - Green Recovery by Andrew Winston

Today we review a green book that not only is a good fit to this tough economic period, but is also a great resource to help you survive the recession by implementing the right green strategies.


Our book today is:

Green Recovery: Get Lean, Get Smart, and Emerge from the Downturn on Top


Author: Andrew Winston

Andrew Winston , founder of Winston Eco-Strategies, is the co-author of Green to Gold, the best-selling guide to what works - and what doesn't - when companies go green. He is a globally recognized expert on green business, and has appeared in The Wall Street Journal, Time, BusinessWeek, Forbes, The New York Times, and CNBC. Andrew is dedicated to helping companies both large and small use environmental strategy to grow, create enduring value, and build stronger relationships with employees, customers, and other stakeholders. His clients have included Bank of America, HP, and IKEA.

Andrew bases his work on significant in-company business experience. His earlier career included advising companies on corporate strategy while at Boston Consulting Group and management positions in strategy and marketing at Time Warner and MTV. After these more traditional roles, Andrew pursued his passion to explore the overlap between business and environment. He served as the Director of the Corporate Environmental Strategy Project at Yale's renowned School of Forestry and Environmental Studies.

Andrew received his BA in Economics from Princeton, an MBA from Columbia, and a Masters of Environmental Management from Yale. He lives in Riverside, CT with his wife Christine and two young sons.

Publisher: Harvard Business Press

Published on:
August 2009

What this book is about?
(from the author's website)
How much money – and how many jobs – could your business save if you reduced energy use and waste by 25%? How would your business be impacted if oil reached $300 per barrel?

These might seem like odd questions to ask in the midst of a global recession–but they're not. Companies that shelve their green strategies until the economy improves will miss a huge opportunity to make their businesses stronger and more profitable.

Green Recovery argues that environmental challenges and increasing "green" awareness have not dissipated in the wake of the financial crisis. Business leaders must face both problems simultaneously. Fortunately, some of the same strategies that address environmental issues can help companies survive today's economic conditions and prosper when the good times return.

Going green is essentially about doing more with less. Viewed through this lens, green initiatives transform from costly luxuries to powerful recession-fighting, profit-making tools. This book shows how leaders — including Boeing, Disney, DuPont, Microsoft, Procter & Gamble, Toyota, and Wal-Mart — are ramping up efficiency, innovation, and employee motivation to save money quickly and preserve capital that can be reinvested for future growth.

Green Recovery offers a concise, engaging road map for using green initiatives to:

  • Get lean: generate immediate bottom-line savings by reducing energy use and waste
  • Get smart: use value-chain data to cut costs, reduce risks, and focus innovation efforts
  • Get creative: pose heretical questions that force you to find solutions to tomorrow's challenges today
  • Get engaged: give employees ownership of environmental goals and the tools to act on them

Green Recovery will help you unleash the power of green thinking to survive today's turmoil and chart a winning path to the future.

What we think about it?

This book is definitely the right book in the right time. Even though the economy seems to be doing a little bit better, many companies are still struggling to survive and continue their operations. I'm sure many of them didn't think "green" is the answer to their problems, but as the book is showing, it can definitely become their road to survival.

Winston is presenting very persuasive arguments and examples in his book for implementing green strategies as a way to survive today's economic conditions. The examples are especially important, because when you read that "following the green path, especially in hard times, can lead your company to higher profits and sustainable advantages", you want some proof. Winston, to his credit, gives you all the examples you want. And good ones too!

Winston knows to talk in the language of the targeted audience (aka business people) and hence is going straight to the bottom line - green don't look at green as extra cost, but as an investment with ROI and payback of usually not more than two years. He also explains how green strategies are always creating a win-win model, making your business not only greener, but also stronger and more competitive.

So if it's so simple, why haven't we seen all the CEOs of companies in trouble doing everything they can to go green? Winston doesn't escape this question and explains that there are two main reasons for that: "first, energy efficiency just hasn't seemed sexy..the second reason is the classic problem of the urgent versus the important. Most capital expenditures go to fix things that are broken. We can't help but focus on what's leaking."

Energy efficiency might not look sexier after reading this book, but you might see the definition of "broken" differently and get a better understanding of how "green" can fix it. As you read this book, you understand that the recession might be a nightmare, but it can also be an opportunity for a prosperous and more sustainable future.

Bottom line: Worth reading even if your company is doing pretty well now!


Disclosure: We received a copy of this book from the publisher.

Want to learn more about the book? Check out this interview with the author:

If you're looking for other interesting green-themed books, you are invited to check out our green books page on Eco-Libris website's green resources section.

Yours,
Raz @ Eco-Libris

Eco-Libris: Promoting sustainable reading!

Saturday, January 9, 2010

Are ebooks greener than paper books?

To tell you the truth, we don't know yet. Really!

The debate is still going on and we believe the final word haven't been said yet. As we're very interested in the answer, we follow the discussion very closely, looking for articles, researches and other sources of information that address this issue.

If you want to look at the data we collected so far, you're welcome to visit our website at www.ecolibris.net/ebooks.asp.

Here are some examples of the materials you will find there:

New report finds Kindle greener than physical books - is that really so?, Eco-Libris blog, September 5, 2009 - I was hoping this report is the final word on the debate on how green the Kindle is. Unfortunately I am afraid it's not. The two main issues that bothered me mostly in the report are the calculation of the carbon footprint of a single Kindle and the assumption about the number of e-books the average user is reading.

Are E-Readers Greener Than Books?, Green Inc. Blog (NYTimes.com), Joe Hutsko,, August 31, 2009 - Green Inc. blog is taking a look at the Cleantech Group's report and is also focusing on one of its weaknesses - the measurement of the Kindle's carbon footprint. They quote for example Casey Harrell, an international campaign coordinator for Greenpeace, which monitors the environmental impact of consumer electronics, who said e-readers remain something of an unknown variable.

Are ebooks really more environmentally friendly?, Brad's Reader, July 13, 2009 - Brad's Reader's conclusion is that ebooks are very much more friendly to our earth than print books. "Are ebooks perfect? No. There are still problems with energy consumption, raw materials used to make the ebook reading devices, properly disposing of old devices and so forth."

Are e-books an environmental choice?, Green Living, Christopher Mims, March 2, 2009 - Christopher Mims is also doing the comparison. His conclusion? "The short answer is almost certainly yes but only if you're comparing e-books to new books".

It's Easy Being Green: How to Be a Greener Reader, Center for American Progress, February 25, 2009 - "With the proliferation of e-book readers and online news, it seems an appropriate time to ask: What’s greenest way to read? In short: we’re not sure, and it depends."

Dear Science, The Stranger, Jonathan Golob, February 3, 2009 - Jonathan Golob is checking if reading The Stranger online actually is any greener than reading the printed-in-Yakima hard copy. His conclusion: "Still, on the whole, online is probably greener. (If 100 percent postconsumer recycled paper were used, print would be greener.)"

Ask Pablo: I've heard reading online uses more energy than printing documents. Can that be true?, Salon.com, Pablo Päster , September 8, 2008 - Pablo is replying to the following question: My parents are from the typewriter generation and insist on printing every document before they read it. Their argument is that reading it on the computer uses more energy than printing it out and turning the computer off. Is this true?

Would you like that book in paper or plastic?, Environmental Science & Technology, Erika Engelhaupt , May 7, 2008 - E-book readers save paper, but can a piece of plastic really be better for the environment? ES&T reporter Erika Engelhaupt is determined - very determined - to find out.

Screening environmental life cycle assessment of printed, web based and tablet e-paper newspaper, Center for Sustainable Communications at the Royal Institute of Technology, Asa Moberg, Martin Johansson, Goran Finnveden and Alex Jonsson, 2007 - Reading the newspaper 30 minutes a day on e-paper instead of a regular newspaper is environmentally preferable. If you read a Web-based newspaper instead, you can only read for ten minutes to produce the same load on the environment. This has been calculated in a study at the Royal Institute of Technology in Stockholm, Sweden.

Printed Scholarly Books and E-book Reading Devices: A Comparative Life Cycle Assessment of Two Book Options, Center for Sustainable Systems University of Michigan, Greg Kozak , August 24, 2003 - This paper presents the findings of a life-cycle assessment (LCA) of two different book options - electronic and print. It compared the life-cycle burdens and impacts of a college student reading 40 scholarly books and the equivalent amount of digitalized information using dedicated e-book reading device.

We invite you to check out the full list of materials on www.ecolibris.net/ebooks.asp, and of course if you're aware of an important article or research we somehow missed, please let us know!

Yours,
Raz @ Eco-Libris

Eco-Libris: promoting green reading!

Friday, January 8, 2010

The future of ebooks according to Tom Evans

This week, maybe due to CES 2010 that is taking place this week, e-Books and e-Readers are getting more attention everywhere and we're on this e-bandwagon as well!

Today we bring you an interesting video we found on Publishing Talk, with author Tom Evans of The Bookright talk with author Jackie Walker about the future of e-Books, especially with regards to the expected launch of Apple's Tablet later on this month.

You can find this video at http://www.publishingtalk.eu/blog/ebooks/the-future-of-the-ebook/

Yours,
Raz @ Eco-Libris

Eco-Libris: promoting green reading!

Thursday, January 7, 2010

The enTourage eDGe is presented at CES. Revolutionary? Yes! Green? Not sure yet.

We're hearing for a while about the potential of multifunctional devices to become the "Kindle Killer", and now we've got one of the first examples unveiled - the enTourage eDGe™.

GalleyCat reported that the new device, described as "combining the functions of an e-reader, netbook, notepad, and audio/video recorder and player in one", was presented on the opening of the Consumer Electronics Show (CES).

The shipping of the enTourage eDGe will begin next month and the price is $490. In return you'll receive "a comprehensive device that lets you read e-books, surf the Internet, take digital notes, send emails and instant messages, watch movies and listen to music anywhere, at any time." The promise as you can see already is that it does it all.

The advantages are many - big screen (9.7 inches), usage of e-Ink technology, built in WiFi, built-in 3 GB of usable memory, BlueTooth capability to add an external keyboard and much more.

And what about green advantages? well, two months ago, Asghar Mostafa, president and CEO of enTourage System said that "we set out to develop a product that would revolutionize consumer electronics, changing the way we work, live and play". The device definitely look and feel as a revolutionary one, but we can't really say if it's also a sustainable one.

On its webpage it says, for example, that "the lithium ion battery can last up to 16 hours of reading without recharging. One of the big advantages of the enTourage eDGe™ is that the battery can be replaced if it's ever necessary." But actually both the Kindle and the Nook have rechargeable and replaceable battery, so there's not much progress here.

I wish that once we'll see among the presented features of a new device "lower carbon footprint", with examples on its "green" features that make it eco-friendly. This will definitely be a true revolution when it comes to reading devices.

You can see more about the enTourage eDGe on this video:


Yours,
Raz @ Eco-Libris

Eco-Libris: promoting green reading!

Tuesday, January 5, 2010

Green printing tip no. 29: Why environmental views are not always in the core of business?

A new year (and a decade) began and we are back on our weekly series of green printing tips, where we bring you information on green printing in collaboration with Greg Barber, an experienced eco-friendly printer.

Today Greg is offering his view on the barriers that get businesses not to adopt greener printing practices.

What are the main reasons that environmental views are not always in the core of business?

Tip #29


The main reasons for not following the most appropriate environmental path in purchasing environmental printing , are lack of education and fear that it will cost too much money.

We started this topic in the new group in Linkedin called "Green Values In Business", with the question "Do you know the Definitions of Environmental terms"? Almost 100% of the people I ask do not know the definitions of the basic environmental terms.

Without that knowledge, you can be easily Green Washed. I pointed out earlier that printers that sell 14 PT coated business cards are using paper that was bleached with Chlorine Dioxide, which is called ECF (elementally chlorine free). Sounds good, but it isn't good. Chlorine mixed with other compounds will cause a deadly, toxic chemical called " Dioxin" to be created. Once in our
waterways, it will poison us.

The best bleaching process for paper making is PCF (processed chlorine free). No dioxins are created from this form of bleaching that uses Oxygen or Hydrogen Peroxide.

Lack of education and "not" lack of wanting to do the right thing. People don't know better. And, the fear of costing a lot more money. But, that could be a lack of education as well. Do you know that I have a 100% Post-Consumer Waste recycled paper that is "not" more expensive than many virgin opaque papers?

Most people do not know that I stock 100% PCW paper that will not increase the printing price, since my paper is under 90 cents per pound. Many of my clients are happy to learn these definitions so they can make the correct decisions that they "really" wanted to do in the first place.

I need my story told.

For additional information on green printing, please call Greg Barber at (973) 224-1132, or email greg@gregbarberco.com.

Also, if you have any questions you would like us to address in future tips please email us to info@ecolibris.net .

Latest tips:

Green Printing Tip #28 -
Green printing resolutions for the New Year!

Green Printing Tip #27 - Can you save money on paper on your next greeting cards order?

Green Printing Tip #26 - What can we do to reduce the carbon footprint of direct mailing campaigns?

You can find links to all the tips we published so far on our green printing tips page, which is part of our green printing tools & resources.

You can also find further valuable information on Greg Barber Company's website - http://www.gregbarberco.com.

Yours,

Raz @ Eco-Libris

Eco-Libris: promoting green printing!

Monday, January 4, 2010

Green book of the week: Green IT for Dummies

We are happy to open 2010 with a guest writer, David Calloway, who is a Green IT expert and is reviewing for our blog a new book on the Dummies series - Green IT for Dummies.






















Green IT for Dummies, by Carol Baroudi, Jeffrey Hill,
Arnold Reinhold, and Jhana Senxian. © 2009 Wiley Publishing.

Reviewed by David Calloway, Green IT Digest, http://GreenITDigest.blogspot.com

The For Dummies series may not be fine dining, but it can certainly be a favorite diner. This book deserves to be bought, used, and circulated widely in firms thinking about Greening Anything, not just IT. Whether you're already creating Green IT, or just wondering how to, this book will not collect dust on a shelf. However many Green IT books you collect, this is one you will turn to again and again, whether for a quick answer, or for a clear explanation to present to your uninitiated stakeholders.

There are many things that make IT the ideal place to launch a sustainability initiative, not the least of which is its fast payback. Cleaning up the data center, turning off workstations when not in use, and using less paper are just the start, which Forrester Research calls Green IT 1.0. Green IT 2.0 is everything IT can do to make the rest of civilization run better— what IBM calls the Smarter Planet.

Like all For Dummies books, this is not a detailed how-to manual, and won’t look that impressive on your bookshelf. It is a practical overview that anyone can pick up and get started with. It’s entertaining enough to read sequentially, if you’re really dedicated. More likely, you’ll read a few chapters, then skip around to answer particular questions. This topic-driven navigation is aided by a Contents at a Glance, a full Table of Contents, and a fairly comprehensive Index.

If Green IT has a downside, it is that it encompasses so many disciplines, a lot of discipline is needed to keep it all straight. Lead author Carol Baroudi and a team of mostly Aberdeen consultants worked their analytical magic to keep all the complexity simple, readable, and organized. You can start with a few pieces of low-hanging fruit, but the better you plan, measure, track and document, they say, the more bucks you’ll get back, faster, for every Green IT buck you spend.

Here are some of the things that make Green IT a big Win-Win-Win, all around:

* It's a Win for IT, which for decades has been sweeping inefficiencies under the rug of greater processing capacity.

* It's a Win for the organization, as technology creates new opportunities to connect, create, and manage, while spending and consuming less.

* It's a Win for the planet, giving us powerful tools to reduce consumption and pollution by tracking, managing, assuring, measuring, complying, and so on. When people know what to do, and they can see it's in their own best interest, they'll usually do the right thing. We're seeing that happen now, and information technology is making it possible.

Missing from this book is Green IT’s most profound talent: It is the least threatening way to begin addressing an organization's accumulated problems. With waste, inefficiency, and the Carbon Footprint now our common enemies, a sustainability initiative gets us all shooting at the problem, rather than at each other. However much or little each of us contributes, we can all share in the pride of accomplishment.

The author uses dollars and sense to neatly sidestep the Global Warming Disbelievers: "Ignoring the ideas in this book will cost you money. Pretty much everything we talk about reduces expenses." Greening IT is an excuse to identify and attack wasteful business processes, without appearing to attack people. It's something everybody can get behind, which makes it uniquely powerful. Meanwhile, as IT pros continue to lag behind other disciplines in getting the message, those others are taking over domains that really should involve IT: Smart buildings, smart highways, smart homes, smart cities, smart planet; heck, Smart Everything.

Here are summaries of the book's six sections:

Part I: Understanding the World of Green IT. Green IT is easy to explain because it's just two things: Making IT environmentally friendly, and using IT to make civilization sustainable. Green IT is clearly vital to the survival of our civilization.

Part II: Getting a Running Start. Identify your carbon and waste footprints, figure out where you want to go, and get ready to start.

Part III: Greening the Data Center. Greening data centers is called the Low Hanging Fruit because most are dirty and wasteful. Turns out the best practices of Green IT also make the whole enterprise more efficient, effective, and profitable. Go figure.

Part IV: Greening the Office. A healthier office for the environment is a healthier office for the people in it. Here’s a big bonus: Workers who buy in to greening their workplace become more excited, engaged, and productive workers.

Part V: Greening the Organization. To me, this means using IT to make the organization more green. In this book, it means non-IT improvements in lighting and landscaping, and IT's role in reducing e-waste. One short chapter hints at what IT can really do to Green the Organization, mentioning virtual presence, telecommuting, collaboration, the Cloud, and e-everything. I’ve partly filled that gap with some article links below.

Part IV: The Part of Tens (Resources, Ideas, and Suggestions). For Dummies books put all the “For More Information” links in a separate final section, rather than at the end of each chapter. The Appendix provides brief, practical forms and logs for launching a Green IT initiative. For more thorough ones, visit the US Department of Energy at http://www1.eere.energy.gov/industry/datacenters/.

It's possible that my complaints about this book really should be addressed in a different book: What IT can really do to Green an Organization. Until that book gets written, here are a few things IT, or ICT (Information and Communications Technology) as the Euros call it, is already doing:

- Reducing traffic. IBM's Congestion Pricing program in Stockholm "has reduced traffic in the Swedish capital by 18 percent, according to traffic authorities there." (http://www.ibm.com/news/us/en/2008/06/11/m923159k70006p69.html)

- Finding Profits in Redeploying Old Equipment. Cisco's global closed-loop reverse supply chain has enabled the firm to save $153 million in fiscal 2009 by collecting, then recycling or reusing, nearly 24 million pounds of returned electronic equipment. http://www.greenbiz.com/news/2009/12/08/cisco-touts-millions-saved-through-equipment-reuse-smaller-carbon-footprint.

- Mid-size EPA data center reduces energy costs 20% in less than a year, with help from The Green Grid. http://thegreengrid.org/en/Global/Content/white-papers/Assessment-of-EPA-Mid-Tier-Data-Center-At-Potomac-Yard.

- Amsterdam as Smart City: Going Green, Fast. With help from IBM, Cisco, Philips, and other companies, the city's infrastructure is becoming ultra energy-efficient, attracting global attention. http://www.businessweek.com/globalbiz/content/mar2009/gb20090313_662708.htm.


If you're looking for other interesting green-themed books, you are invited to check out our green books page on Eco-Libris website's green resources section.

Thursday, December 31, 2009

Annual assessments of Eco-Libris' planting partners are available online



(photo from
the Eco-Libris' planting areas in Panama, courtesy of SHI: Nursery of 2,000 trees including mahogany,cedro espino (Bombacopsis quinata), cedro amargo (Simarouba amara) and chime tree)

This is our last post for 2009 and we're happy to close the year with an update from our website - the annual assessments (2008-9) of our planting
partners are now available online!


Here's a little bit more about these assessments: as part of our pledge to quality service to our customers, we decided at the beginning of our operations to conduct annual assessments of our planting partners.The two main goals of these assessments are: 1. to verify the quality of the planting operations and to make sure the high standards we promise to our customers are kept and 2. to provide our customers with details on the tree planting operations they support to balance out their books.


This is the second year we're conducting these assessments. We do it under the guidance of our environmental advisor, Gili Koniak, and you are invited to read them via the links below. Links to both the first year's and second year's assessments for each of our planting partners on our planting partners page.


SHI's assessment: http://www.ecolibris.net/SHI_Assessment_second%20year.pdf

RIPPLE Africa's assessment: http://www.ecolibris.net/RIPPLE_ Africa_Assessment_2008-9.pdf

AIR's assessment: http://www.ecolibris.net/AIR_Assessment_2008-9.pdf

(photo from the Eco-Libris' planting areas in Panama, courtesy of SHI: Mr Guadalupe shows off his cedro espino)

A
s we reported earlier this year, we visited this year SHI and their planting operations in Panama. We will continue next year to work closely with our planting partners and we plan to visit at least one of the organizations on their planting sites.

We will keep you posted of course with more data, photos and hopefully also videos from the planting operations! Thanks again to our planting partners and to everyone that was involved in the work on the assessments.

Happy New Year!
Raz @ Eco-Libris

Eco-Libris: Promoting sustainable reading!