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Taking Care of BusinessThe idea of greening your supply chain goes back more than a decade, when companies began to realize they could reduce their environmental impacts by pushing waste- and toxics-reduction efforts upstream to their suppliers. That resulted in fewer environmental problems being shipped to their loading dock. Over the years, supply-chain environmental management has become mainstream, with a hefty push by Wal-Mart and some other behemoth buyers. But what if suppliers won't comply? Should you fire them? As a rule, companies have been reluctant to do that, at least for critical goods and services. But that may be changing. This week, for example, we report that Staples has dumped a major paper supplier because of its poor forestry practices. This is by no means the first company to switch suppliers, but it is a rare instance of publicly doing so. Is that because Staples was pressed to do this by activists, or because it wanted to send a message? It doesn't really matter: the result is the same. Companies have long been setting environmental procurement policies, or banding together to change market practices (witness this week's story about Tiffany & Co. joining with other jewelers to fight "dirty gold"). But the public "firing" of a supplier hasn't, to date, been business as usual. Should it be? Should companies push suppliers harder to transform their products and processes, perhaps "naming and shaming" those who don't make the grade? Given the inadequate regulatory scrutiny of some industries, especially those across oceans, supply-chain environmental management could be the ideal means of regulating the cheater and laggards of the corporate world. -- Joel Makower, Executive Editor New on GreenBiz Radio:Since the company's inception nearly 30 years ago, Sierra Nevada Brewing Co. has tried to soften its environmental impact in an industry that is extremely resource and energy intensive. Cheri Chastain joined GreenBiz Radio to talk about some the company's latest environmental efforts, including getting off the grid. You can listen to GreenBiz Radio online, download programs to your desktop, or subscribe to the GreenBiz Radio RSS feed. THIS ISSUE'S SPONSOR HeadlinesThe Latest News on Business and the Environment Staples Fires Paper Supplier with Questionable Green Track Record DHL Completes More Eco-Friendly Ship Voyage as Industry Comes Under Fire Nike Makes Shoes From Trash, Nokia Envisions Remade Cell Phones CSR Practices Can Lead to Increased Profits, Two New Reports Find Health Insurance Company Highmark Tops List of Green IT Users Xcel Energy, PG&E Among Utilities with Leading Energy Efficiency Programs Green Paper Mills See Sales Boost Jewelers Join to Oppose New Alaskan Gold Mine Michelin to Spend Millions Developing Fuel Efficient Tires Exelon Plans to Cut, Offset all CO2 Emissions by 2020 Most Global FT500 Companies Address Climate Change in Non-Financial Reports Lawyers Focus on Climate Change Implications, Greening Operations New Campus Sustainability Program Launches Comprehensive Push to Green Campuses Put GreenBiz news on your site for free! Learn more... Featured ResourceA Wealth of Hands-On Help WebEx's Green Guide to the Office Strategies for Ensuring Environmental Compliance Columns and FeaturesInsight and Inspiration from the Experts The Big Impact from Greening Small Businesses CSR Watch: TV Makers Facing a Toxic Digital Deadline GreenBiz BlogsMarc Gunther on Corporate America: David Wigder's Green Marketing Strategies: Wanna write for GreenBiz? GreenBiz is looking for guest and regular columnists and feature writers. We're seeking contributions from business leaders as well as the journalists who write about them. If you're interested, send a brief query to managing editor Matthew Wheeland, at editor@greenbiz.com | Read our editorial guidelines |
A personal quest to promote the use of wind energy and hydrogen technology in the Great Lakes area of the United States. The Great Lakes area is in a unique position to become an energy exporting region through these and other renewable energy technologies. *Update 2014: Just do it everywhere - Dan*
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