Title: ENV 188A Business and the Natural Environment
1ENV 188ABusiness and the Natural Environment
2Eco Labels
- Goal to provide consumers with accurate
information regarding the environmental qualities
of products and, by doing so, introduce a
competitive dynamic in the market place (Salzman)
3Why the need for eco labels in the case of energy
efficient product?
- Neoclassical view of the firm
- Firms enjoy informational advantages over govt
regulators concerning technological and economic
aspect of energy use and pollution abatement - Profit maximazing objective if there are
efficiency gains, the market will help firm
realize them - However, consumers, manufacturers under-invest in
efficient products.
4Organizational failure (transaction costs)
- Organizational failure generate departure from
cost-minimizing behavior - Firm is a network of individuals tides together
by flow of information, material and incentives - Even if firm is profit oriented it may be unable
to achieve the ideal of profit maximization given
information asymmetries and people bounded
rationality - Transaction costs impede the adoption of
cost-effective technologies that would generate
significant environmental benefits - Energy Star
- Technological information on potential
substitutes - Who can supply these substitutes
- Potential financial impact
5Organizational failure (split-incentives problem)
- Accounting practices within multidivision firms
- A division may incur the costs while another one
the benefits - Example maybe a facilities budget would incur
the relevant expenses while the production
division realize the cost savings - Facilities office no incentive to invest in
energy efficient equipment even though it would
benefit the firm as a whole - Energy Star program addresses the appropriate
decision making level within the firm
6Market-related barriers
- Inability of a company to capture all the
benefits of their own RD because competitors can
copy their designs - Energy star
- Provides firms with existing designs
- Intervention directly into corporate product
design decisions through entire industry
negotiation. Creation of bandwagon effects
7Individual Consumer issues
- Tendency of consumers to overemphasize initial
appliance cost at the expense of future benefits.
Uncertainty regarding future benefits from
efficiency investments. - Lack of importance, for certain consumers, of the
relatively small dollar savings achieved through
energy-efficient investments, and - Confusion over definition, testing of efficiency.
Lack of objective information about energy use - Energy Star
- Provide credible information to influence
consumers purchasing decision simplify
cognitive process - Strengthening the buying power of energy
conscious consumers (Executive order 12845)
8- 18,000 labeled products in 33 product categories
- 1,300 manufacturers participating in the program
- 120 million ENERGY STAR-labeled products
purchased in 2000 - 40 of the adult US population recognizes the
label today
9ENERGY STARFamily of Products
Label covers 33 product areas
- Office Equipment
- Consumer Electronics
- Appliances
- Insulation
- HVAC
- Residential Lighting
- Commercial Buildings
- Windows
- Exit Signs
- ENERGY STAR Home
10How EPA and DOE Select Products for ENERGY STAR
- Criteria
- Demonstrate significant energy savings potential
- Efficiency is cost-effective and non-proprietary
- Performance is maintained or enhanced
- Differentiation and testing are feasible
- Labeling would be effective in the market
11ENERGY STAR Purchasing Initiative
- Target corporate and government buyers demand
is sufficient to influence manufacturers - Provide assistance with finding products,
calculating life-cycle cost savings, sample
procurement language
12Promoting ENERGY STAR Products
- Main messages
- Smart, simple consumer choice.
- High-performing products save money and help
protect the environment, w/ no sacrifice in
features, convenience. - Link between energy use and air pollution.
- Government-backed, national program
- Media outreach
- Trade press outreach,
- Public Service Announcements,
- Special product promotions,
- Partnering activities with manufacturers,
contractors and dealers, utilities, retailers,
consumer environmental groups - 40 of American public recognize label
13ENERGY STAR Promotion (continued)
14ENERGY STARProgram results
In 2002, using Energy Star products Saved 100
billion kWh and 15,000 MW of peak power,
Prevented greenhouse gas emissions equivalent to
15 million automobiles , Saved consumers 4.4
billion on their energy bills
15- Why do firms join ENERGY STAR ?
- 11,000 labeled products in 33 product categories
- survey to 600 partners in 17 product categories
160 usable surveys, overall response rate 29.3
16International Expansion Coordination
17European Eco-label
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19The European Union
- Process of cooperation and integration which
began in 1951 between six countries (Belgium,
Germany, France, Italy, Luxembourg and the
Netherlands). - 1973 Denmark, Ireland and the United Kingdom
- 1981 Greece
- 1986 Spain and Portugal
- 1995 Austria, Finland and Sweden
- 2004 Cyprus, the Czech Republic, Estonia,
Hungary, Latvia, Lithuania, Malta, Poland, the
Slovak Republic and Slovenia - The EU today has 25 Member States
- Euro zone 12 Denmark, Sweden, United Kingdom
out - Population 2004 456.4 Millions (Euro zone 308.4
M)
20Regulation (EC) No 1980/2000 on a revised
Community Eco-label award scheme
- The Community Eco-label award scheme is designed
to - promote products which have a reduced
environmental impact compared with other products
in the same product group - provide consumers with accurate and
scientifically based information and guidance on
products. - Eco-label criteria must be established by product
group and be based on - the product's prospects of market penetration
- the technical and economic feasibility of the
necessary adaptations - the potential for environmental improvement.
21Environmental criteria
- Life cycle analysis
- Various environmental impacts included
- air, water, soil, waste, energy, natural resource
management, global warming, ozone layer
protection, environmental safety, noise,
biodiversity
22Numbers
- More than 161 manufacturers
- 2005 225 products in 21 product groups
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24CO2 emissions
- The ecolabel has potential to be highly
cost-effective. Considering the Direct benefits
and the 5 market penetration scenario, the
amount of CO2 emissions saved is 9Mt. - Ecolabel scheme costs 3.4M per year to operate.
Hence the ecolabel could potentially achieve CO2
abatement at a cost less than 1 per tonne. - The cost of abating a tonne of CO2 has been
estimated elsewhere by the ECCP9. ECCPs data
suggests that, considering a basket of policy
measures and instruments, the cost is 12 per
tonne.
25Goals of Eco-labels
- Provide consumers with accurate information
regarding the environmental qualities of products
- and, by doing so, introduce a competitive dynamic
in the marketplace - Theory is the same for all ecolabel schemes but
some are thriving while other are not - Success is in the details
26Effectiveness of eco-labels?
- They need to reduce search and information costs
for consumers - Information needs to be simple.
- Information needs to be easily accessible.
- Products need to be easily found (critical mass)
- Cost of purchase needs to be perceived as similar
to competitive products or consumers need to reap
the benefits of adoption ASAP - If additional cost, environmental benefit needs
to be bundled with private benefit
27Next week
- Tuesday analysis of survey on SurveyMonkey
- Each group sends comments related to survey
- Thursday
- Hayward Lumber company
- Each group 5 slides responding to questions
- Suggestion individual write-up
- How to adopt a successful environmental
differentiation strategy based on a standard
certification scheme or an eco-label?