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Design for Sustainability

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Title: Design for Sustainability


1
Design for Sustainability
Unit 2 The Greening Marketplace
Mike Robinson CMfgE, CQE Natural Science
Technology Manufacturing Technology
2
Introduction
  • Companies around the world are making dramatic
    improvements in their operations.
  • Partially driven by increased consumer demand for
    environmentally-friendly products
  • Bolstered by the business value that can be
    derived from reducing waste and maximizing
    resource efficiency.
  • The marketplace is greener now than ever before
    and will become even more responsive to products
    and services promising environmental
    responsibility.

http//www.greeneconomics.net/
3
History of the Green Movement
  • In the late 1970s and 1980s, environmental
    calamities dominated the news
  • Oil spills in Alaskas Prince William Sound
  • Toxic waste dumps in Love Canal near Niagara
    Falls
  • Nuclear accident at Three Mile Island in
    Pennsylvania
  • The issues were no longer in someone elses
    faraway backyard, but right in our own.

http//www.washingtonpost.com/
http//www.pacificenvironment.org/
4
History of the Green Movement
  • The environment rose to the top of the publics
    worry list.
  • The twentieth anniversary celebration of Earth
    Day in 1990 attracted 100 million participants
    around the world - ten times the number involved
    in the first Earth Day in 1970.

1990 Earth Day rally In Washington, DC.
http//www.nytimes.com/
5
History of the Green Movement
  • On January 2, 1989 Time magazine named spaceship
    Earth, "Planet of the Year - 1988.
  • Ominous subtitle Endangered Earth.
  • Nearly the entire issue was devoted to the many
    environmental issues facing the world at that
    time, including global warming, reduced
    biodiversity, ozone-depleting CFCs, trash, and
    overpopulation.

http//www.time.com/time/covers/0,16641,19890102,0
0.html
6
History of the Green Movement
  • Fueled by voters concerns, municipalities banned
    fast-food cartons from landfills and tried to tax
    disposable diapers.
  • In 1971 Oregon passed the first bottle bill
    requiring deposits on beverage containers to
    encourage recycling by consumers. Another 10
    states have ultimately followed suit.

http//gliving.tv/news/san-francisco-bans-styrofoa
m-containers/
http//rafi.ki/projects.php
7
History of the Green Movement
  • To preserve its markets and safeguard its
    reputation, industry quickly greened up their
    products and issued environmental ads asserting
    their commitment to a cleaner Earth.
  • Consumers felt listened to. They began to recycle
    their soft drink cans and aluminum foil. They cut
    down on disposable diapers, and took other
    environmental steps that gave them a sense of
    control over their day-to-day lives.

http//paulbuckley14059.wordpress.com/
8
History of the Green Movement
  • Since the 1980s, the headlines have shifted away
    from wandering garbage barges and medical waste
    washing up on the New Jersey shore.
  • Stories of terrorism, illegal immigration,
    healthcare and outsourcing lead the news.
  • However, people still worry about any number of
    such specific environmental issues as
  • Industrial air and water pollution,
  • ozone layer depletion, radiation from
  • nuclear power plants, destruction
  • of rainforests,

http//www.answers.com/topic/cooling-tower-1
9
Green Movement Goes Worldwide
  • Pessimism over the state of the environment
    reigns in virtually every corner of the world.
  • No corner of the globe escapes the by-products of
    the one-two punch of rapid global
    industrialization and burgeoning population
    growth
  • Contaminated water, filthy air, and a decrease in
    the biological diversity are more prominent in
    areas without a history of environmental
    protection.

http//www.blog.thesietch.org/
10
Green Movement Goes Worldwide
  • Environmental emergencies gain global
    attention
  • Climate change,
  • Ozone layer depletion
  • Melting glaciers and polar ice
  • Around the world, 64 percent believe "protecting
    the environment is the most important concern,
    even at the expense of economic growth.

http//www.ehponline.org/
11
The Marketplace Goes Green
  • The goods being purchased today are a lot
    "greener" than they were even a decade ago.
  • In many cases, these environmentally improved
    products make no green marketing claims at all.
  • Companies in nearly every business sector have
    significantly improved their efficiency
  • Eliminated nearly every ounce of waste from their
    manufacturing processes.
  • Learned how to deliver products and services
    using significantly fewer resources.

12
The Marketplace Goes Green
  • Some have set their goals on nothing less than
    creating zero waste -- operating factories in
    which every bit of unused material is eliminated,
    reused, or recycled.
  • For example, in July 2008, Subaru celebrated its
    three-year anniversary of zero landfill
    designation at its manufacturing plant
  • in Lafayette, Indiana. This
  • designation was the first in
  • the U.S. The Subaru plant
  • is also a designated back-
  • yard wildlife habitat.

http//www.greentechnolog.com/
13
The Future
  • Newly opened markets of India, China, Africa,
    Eastern Europe, and Latin America will create
    perhaps a billion more middle-class individuals
    in the coming decades.
  • How do you supply the demands of these billions
    without necessarily raising pollution and
    resource use proportionately?
  • Consumers will demand greener products and
    processes to manufacture them with.
  • Design for the Environment practices will need to
    be increasingly adopted.

14
Summary
  • In the late 1970s, 1980s and 1990s, environmental
    calamities dominated the headlines and sparked a
    new wave of environmental activism in the U.S.
  • Both public and private concerns were pressured
    to respond by greening up products and enacting
    new environmental regulations.
  • For example, consumers began to recycle, bottle
    bills were enacted, and the use of
    ozone-depleting CFCs were begun to be phased out.

15
Summary
  • In the new millennium, two trends have begun to
    merge into a new environmental direction
  • Citizens who have become increasingly concerned
    about the long-term environmental impacts of our
    society have begun to seek more eco-friendly
    products.
  • Business entities have begun to recognize the
    economic benefit of producing products with fewer
    resources and less waste.
  • These have formed the basis for the greening of
    the marketplace.

16
References
Special Section Planet of the Year, Time
Magazine, Volume 133, No. 1, January 2, 1989
Retrieved in December 2007 from
lthttp//www.time.com/time/magazine/0,9263,76018901
02,00.htmlgt The Bottle Bill Resource Guide, The
Container Recycling Institute (CRI). Retrieved
in December 2007 from lthttp//www.bottlebill.org/
about_bb/whatis.htmgt Subaru Celebrates
Environmental Milestone Zero Landfill. Retrieved
in December 2007 from lthttp//www.autospectator.c
om/cars/subaru/0018552-subaru-celebrates-environme
ntal- milestones-zero-landfill-selling-100-000th-p
zev-vehicgt Subaru of Americas Indiana Plant
Achieves Zero Landfill Status. Retrieved in
December 2007 from lthttp//www.greentechnolog.co
m/2007/07/suburu_of_americas_indiana_plant_achieve
s_zero_ lan.htmlgt Roper Starch Worldwide, Green
Gauge Report, 1996. Retrieved in December 2007
from Sustainable Transport, Wikipedia.
Retrieved in December 2007 from
lthttp//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sustainable_transpo
rtgt. Automakers Corporate Carbon Burdens
Reframing Public Policy on Automobiles, Oil and
Climate. Environmental Defense. Retrieved in
December 2007 from lthttp//www.environmentaldefen
se.org/documents/2220_AutomakersCorporateCarbonBur
dens. pdfgt.
17
Acknowledgments
The author wishes to acknowledge the support from
the National Science Foundation Advanced
Technology Education Program, NSF Grant 0603362
for Midwest Coalition for Comprehensive Design
Education.
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