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but it doesn't hurt to re-emphasize. Great links at the end of the

article.

 

Green Marketers Run Into Eco-Skeptics

 

By Besa Luci

WeNews correspondent

 

(WOMENSENEWS)--U.S. companies' intensifying efforts to portray

themselves and their products as environmentally sensitive are often

aimed at women, who account for more than 80 percent of all retail

purchases, according to government statistics.

 

" Women believe in the power of their purse, " says Jennifer Ganshirt,

co-managing partner at Frank About Women, a marketing-to-women

communications company based in Winston-Salem, N.C.

 

Women are more likely than men to move the green movement forward,

Ganshirt says. " The option of buying green is up on the list in the

way women support the movement through their behavior. "

 

In March, Frank About Women produced a study of 1,084 female consumers

that found 32 percent willing to pay more for green products.

Twenty-five percent said all the products they purchase are green, and

52 percent said they will buy green products if they benefit their

family's health.

 

The corporate pursuit of a green profile has been fast and intense.

 

As recently as three years ago, it was rare for companies to advertise

their environmental attributes.

 

But a 2008 survey of more than 600 executives found that 71 percent of

the roughly 30 companies they represent have adopted a green design

approach and 83 percent took environmental issues into account in

their strategic decisions. The study was conducted by BearingPoint, a

global management and technology consulting firm with headquarters in

Mclean, Va.

 

Frank About Women's survey--conducted for clients, which include

Bissell, a vacuum cleaner company; Abbott Laboratories, a

pharmaceutical developer and manufacturer; and TJ Maxx, a women's

clothing retailer--boiled respondents down to four types of green

shoppers.

 

Green Shopping Groups

 

The " eco-evangelist " embraces the movement as a way of life. The

" convenience first customer " wants information presented as simply as

possible. And the " home health administrator " links a healthy family

to a healthy home and a healthy planet.

 

Then, for the sales team, there's a problem category. She's the

" eco-cynic " who is skeptical of green marketing claims and might just

be drawn toward a group such as Women's Voices for the Earth, a

women-centered group concerned about the health impacts of

environmental toxins.

 

" One of the main problems--something we are concerned about--is that

there is no standard for what constitutes green or natural or

environmentally friendly; there is no government standard at all, "

said Erin Thompson, senior campaigns organizer at Women's Voices for

the Earth.

 

Since companies use their own definition of " green, " particularly when

it comes to cleaning products, Thompson said there is room for

wariness about " green washing. "

 

Women's Voices for the Earth, which formed in 1995 and is based in

Missoula, Mont., is currently pushing five leading cleaning product

companies to disclose all ingredients used in their products. The

companies include Clorox, of Oakland, Calif.; SC Johnson, Racine,

Wisc.; Proctor and Gamble, Cincinnati; Reckitt Benckiser, Slough,

U.K.; and Simple Green, Huntington Harbour, Calif.

 

Focus on Fertility

 

The organization is particularly concerned about 2-Butoxyethanol, an

ethanol solvent found in glass cleaners that has been linked to

reduced fertility rates, Thompson said.

 

Another group that scrutinizes the environmental claims of " green "

products is Big Green Purse, a Web site that offers eco-lifestyle tips

and shopping suggestions to women.

 

" A lot I'm hearing is that consumers are extremely confused about what

is green and what isn't because looking at cleaning products, it says

environmental friendly, but you look at the back and it says

warning-caution, " says Diane MacEachern, an international

environmental lifestyle consultant who lives outside of Washington,

D.C., and created Big Green Purse.

 

MacEachern says consumers who really want to be sure they are buying

environmentally sensitive produces should look for a certification by

an independent product analyst.

 

Consumers Union, a Yonkers, N.Y., nonprofit, launched

GreenerChoices.org on Earth Day, April 22, 2005. The Web site monitors

and often challenges the claims of green products.

 

Clorox, for example, introduced a line of Green Works products this

year, which includes all-purpose bathroom, glass-and-surface and

toilet-bowl cleaners. The company says the products are at least 99

percent " natural, " which it defines as having ingredients mainly from

plant and mineral materials and containing less than 1 percent

petrochemicals.

 

GreenerChoices points out that while Clorox goes beyond federal

requirements by disclosing all of the product ingredients, a " natural "

ingredient does not necessarily mean nontoxic or nonirritating. For

example, they point out that even cleaners like lemon juice, which are

safe enough to eat, can be irritating to the eyes or skin.

 

TerraChoice, a 13-year-old environmental marketing company with

offices in Philadelphia and Ottawa, in 2007 deployed research teams to

check the environmental claims of six leading chain stores that sold

products ranging from household cleaners to electronics. Its report

doesn't name the companies.

 

Common Greenwashing Sins

 

After looking at 1,753 environmental claims on 1,018 products, the

company identified " six sins of greenwashing. "

 

The most common--associated with 57 percent of all the products they

surveyed--was the " sin of the hidden trade-off. " Perpetrators peddle

one particular attribute of the product--such as recycled paper--but

ignore more basic environmental concerns, such as the amount of energy

required by the manufacturing process or the distance it had to travel

to reach the consumer.

 

Another common sin is that of vagueness. Placing the recycling-loop

graphic on a package, for instance, might indicate the entire product

is made from recycled material. But it could just pertain to just the

wrapping.

 

Uncertainty about products' real environmental costs and effects

prompted Women's Voices for the Earth to launch a nationwide " Green

Cleaning Parties " effort this March to teach people how to make their

own " green cleaners " from ingredients they know are safe and

non-toxic. Around 400 people from across the country--New York,

California, Texas and Nevada--and even Canada and Singapore--have so

far signed up to host a party, Thompson said. Most are women.

 

" The party kit comes with recipe cards, which women choose to make

all-purpose cleaners, " Thompson said. " And they mix up some of their

own recipes made with vinegar, baking soda, olive oil; ingredients

that we know are not harmful to your health. "

 

MacEachern, meanwhile, provides readers of her Big Green Purse Web

site with advice about how to shift $1,000 of their budgets to

products that she considers truly green.

 

" We are at the beginning of this whole process of verification, " she

said. " But I'm trying to encourage women to use their consumer clout

to make manufacturing more environmentally responsible by shifting

their budget to those (products) that have already been certified. "

 

Besa Luci, a native of Kosovo, is a recent graduate of the University

of Missouri's Graduate School of Journalism.

 

Women's eNews welcomes your comments. E-mail us at

editors.

 

Read More

Business and Economy

Related stories:

 

Environmental Health Risks Gain Research Ground

http://womensenews.org/article.cfm/dyn/aid/3579/

 

Pioneers Push Prenatal Environmental Health Care

http://womensenews.org/article.cfm/dyn/aid/3137/

 

Hereditary Toxins Spur Scientific Concerns

http://womensenews.org/article.cfm/dyn/aid/3000/

 

Women at Center of Consumer Eco-Push

http://womensenews.org/article.cfm/dyn/aid/2784/

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