Advertisement
 
 
Don Carli, Vice President, Conferences, at SustainCommWorld

Green Media Matters

By Lisa Wellman, Don Carli, Kathleen Kaiser

About Don

Don is executive vice president, Conferences, at SustainCommWorld and a senior research fellow with the Institute for Sustainable Communication. He has been a leading researcher, author and lecturer in sustainability for the last decade.

Don's 30 year business career history includes being president and founder of Nima Hunter Inc., a marketing consultancy that has executed engagements for Adobe, Agfa, Anderson Cenveo, Integrity Interactive, Kodak and NPES.

 
Lisa Wellman

Lisa Wellman

Kathleen Kaiser

Kathleen Kaiser

Are you prepared to fight for print’s future?

 
Sustainability, energy security and climate change are challenging issues that are compelling every business, every government and every individual to rethink the ways in which they employ energy, source materials and manage waste as well as redefine what it means to be “greener.” As printing sales continue their record breaking declines, it’s a natural inclination to want to fight back against claims that print is a “dead medium” that “kills trees” and that somehow going paperless is “automatically” doing your part to save the planet. Printing industry professionals believe that sustainably harvested timber used for papermaking is not “killing trees” or contributing to deforestation, but they have done a terrible job of influencing public perception in their favor.

However, this isn’t a time to fight back with underfunded and ill-conceived campaigns based on zero-sum arguments. Trying to pick a “pixels vs. paper” fight is a no-win proposition. Business, government and society cannot afford to become dependent upon a digital media mono-culture any more than it can afford to be solely dependent on fossil fuel energy. However, this is not a time for the print media pot to call the digital media kettle black. This is a time to call for transparency and truth in advertising. We need media that IS greener, not media that just says it’s greener. The fact is that neither print NOR digital media supply chains are sustainable as currently configured.

If you want to level the playing field, next time you see an ad claiming that going paperless “saves trees,” ask the advertiser to provide you with the GPS coordinates for the trees they claim to have saved or planted (and be prepared to do the same should you make such a claim). If they can’t provide you with proof that their claim can be verified, you might like to write a letter to the FTC asking it to enforce the green marketing guidelines that require environmental marketing claims to be substantiated, and let us know about it here. That’s an augmented reality application I’d really like to see.

Over the next five to 10 years, we need to transition from making paper in outmoded paper mills built by our grandparents to producing paper—as well as renewable energy fuels, chemicals and pharmaceutical feedstocks—in a new generation of integrated bio-refineries. Likewise, we need to transition from printing methods that employ wasteful and inefficient mass production to those which employ leaner, greener digital printing and printed electronics manufacturing that support mass customization and dematerialization.

US printers should be demanding to see a new range of sustainable and “media agile” print solutions by the time drupa 2012 rolls around. Solutions that will help them transform the flows of information, energy, materials and labor required to meet changing customer requirements, increased competition and growing regulatory pressures.

The paper and printing industries need to think twice before embarking on negative campaigns based on “pithy petards” and self-righteous “we win-you lose” zingers. “Fighting Back” with zippy put-downs may feel good for a while, but as the Scandinavians say, so does “peeing in your pants to keep warm.” Well funded pro-coal organizations like the West Virginia Coal Association proudly state that a lump of coal is burned every time a book is ordered on-line!

A recent call to verbal arms was voiced by Kevin Kean, president & CEO of IAPHC, The Graphic Professionals Resource, who Patrick Henry reported in his A Printing Office blog as having said, “The best line of PRINT 09 was by Dr. Joe Webb at the first Xerox luncheon on September 11th where he said, ‘We have a coal-fired Internet.’ Meaning, we should not forget that all those who tout paperless billing via the Internet or downloading e-books to their Amazon Kindle reader via the Internet are still using one of millions of computer nodes on a worldwide network which is run off of electricity and which by definition leaves a carbon imprint of a considerably sulfurous sort. . .Everyone in the industry needs to do better in a fact-based manner with the occasional pithy petard like Dr. Joe’s coal-fired Internet observation.”

In fact, the “coal fired Internet meme” was first advanced in 1999 by Mark Mills in a report for The Greening Earth Society, titled “The Internet Begins with Coal,” which claimed that for every 2 Megabytes of data moving on the Internet, the energy from a pound of coal is needed to create the necessary kilowatt-hours. It briefly made headlines at the time, but was rapidly criticized and marginalized (http://enews.lbl.gov/Science-Articles/Archive/net-energy-studies.html). There is too much at stake to repeat the errors made by Mills and The Greening Earth Society in efforts to confront king coal head on.

The challenge that the printing industry faces is not “fighting back.” Rather, its challenge is to fight for a future for print AND digital media becoming radically cleaner, greener and more socially responsible within a decade. The printing industry needs to find common issues and synergies WITH the proponents of digital media AND coal-based energy that we can fight FOR together. Consumers are too much in love with digital media and too dependent on coal to cast them aside and kick them to the gutter.

The coal industry alone spends over $80 million per year on lobbying and receives an estimated $9 billion in subsidies annually.  Besides, print media supply chains are in not in a position to claim anything more than a marginal advantage in terms of their sustainability, and supporters of digital media and coal are more than capable of emitting a fog of competing claims about the billions being invested in green IT  and clean coal. Plus the printing and papermaking industries have neither the resources nor the collective will to go “tit for tat” in a war of words and images with the digital media, IT and coal industries. 

Lisa, Kathleen and I look forward to sharing our insights on how to forge “win-win” greener media solutions, and we look forward to hearing from you and seeing you at SustainCommWorld events. Also, in my role as Director of the Institute for Sustainable Communication (ISC) Sustainable Advertising Partnership, I am working with the Ad-ID joint venture of the American Association of Advertising Agencies and The Association of National Advertisers as well as with global brand leaders, companies in their media supply chains, academic research leaders and other stakeholders to identify, quantify and ultimately reduce the carbon footprint of ALL media.

Please contact us if you are interested in finding common ground upon which we can forge a sustainable future for print AND digital media supply chains.

Don Carli
http://www.twitter.com/dcarli

Industry Centers:

COMMENTS

Most Recent Comments:
Freddy Panes - Posted on November 12, 2009
Talk about going green. What ever happens to the toners that we toss into the trash? At the amount and volume of toner-based printing our industry is doing, ultimately, we will have more toners dumped than baby diapers! Traditionally we toss out empty ink cans. Today we toss out cannisters of these used toners that will ultimately "color" our dump sites. Probably we are dumping toners bigger than the size of the Titanic on a yearly basis in the Northeast alone every year! Any alternative for the future?
Ben Harper - Posted on November 04, 2009
Although I share your general conclusion, I would like to emphasize that our industry leaders/associations have done a dismal job of getting the message out that we are truly "green" solution providers. Lets not get caught up in the myopic vision of "can't we all just get along." There will be time enough for that later. Lets get the truth out now! I would urge everyone to read the Printing Impressions article 'Why Print Is Truly Green' - by Joanne Vinyard, Director, The Print Council.
George - Posted on October 28, 2009
Don,

Great piece. I look forward to reading more.

I heard an interview with Steven Levitt the other day and he's devoted a chapter in his new book SuperFrekonomics to global warming.

Would love your comments on his blog post below:

http://freakonomics.blogs.nytimes.com/2009/10/23/the-superfreakonomics-global-warming-fact-quiz/#more-20459

Lori Keenan - Posted on October 22, 2009
Excellent article, and sentiment. As far as the environment is concerned, this really comes down to Us against Us, and not Us against Them. We're all them. Working collaboratively to find solutions that will reduce carbon emissions for all industries is where we need to begin. In 20 years it won't matter who won the battle if we've all lost the war.