| In Recession, Green is the New Black
Aug 05 - The Philadelphia Inquirer
Rooftops still predominantly sprout shingles, not solar panels. On
highways, hybrids remain the rolling minority.
But overall, the recession seems to be the motivator proponents of more
sustainable, energy-conserving ways of life have long hoped for.
There is nothing like the loss of a job - or even the threat of it - to
inspire a less-wasteful attitude about consuming. That is assuming the
change also will be wallet-friendly - if not on the front end
(residential photovoltaic systems generally cost at least $25,000), at
least in the foreseeable future.
"We're actually in a hiring spree right now," said an elated Gerry
DeSeve, president of Greener Applications, a software developer in
Chestnut Hill, Pa., that helps governments and schools achieve energy
savings and emissions reductions. Largely because of stimulus funds,
"we're in 20 different proposals for state, local, and higher-education
opportunities."
At Northern Barriers in Pottstown, installers of energy-efficient
soy-based foam insulation, orders from homeowners, schools, and office
buildings have increased about 50 percent since January, said Bari
Harvey, manager of business development.
Still, whatever green buying is the direct result of recessionary pain
could be short-lived, cautioned Leanne Krueger-Braneky of the Greater
Philadelphia Sustainable Business Network.
The average U.S. consumer has "a pretty short memory," she said, so
"there's a pretty short window to change behavior."
Tote-bag distributor Reusablebags.com is trying to keep the window open.
Its Web site is packed with recession-era tips.
For instance, Reusablebags.com calculates that a year of disposable
lunches will cost $371 (in brown paper bags, snack bags, and bottled
water or juice), vs. $36 for a year's worth of lunches in a cloth lunch
bag, with a reusable water bottle, recyclable wrap, and a hemp napkin.
The pitch has resonated. Sales have grown 300 percent each year since
2004, said spokeswoman Sarah Hubbard. "We've empowered 201,276 customers
to save 762,232,212 use-and-toss items."
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