

OAKLAND, Calif. -- Despite being a centerpiece of celebrations the world over, fireworks displays often release toxic chemicals into the environment; researchers are developing a new generation of fireworks that shine as bright but leave less of an impact.

ELMSFORD, N.Y. -- Coca Cola signed a 10-year contract with UTC Power that will bring two fuel cells to a southern New York bottling plant, where they will produce enough heat and energy to satisfy nearly a third of the facility's needs. The state of New York also provided $2 million for the project.

GENEVA, -- Efforts by the world's leading cement companies knocked down carbon dioxide emissions from the industry’s manufacturing process by 35 percent even while production climbed by 53 percent, according to a new report by the World Business Council for Sustainable Development’s Cement Sustainability Initiative.

There's long been a fundamental problem with the green world — the myriad companies, activists, evangelists, politicians, clergy, thought leaders, and others who, each in their own way, have prodded us to address our planet's environmental ills. And it explains why, after four decades of the modern environmental movement, only a relative handful of companies and citizens have joined in, while many more have dragged their heels to slow, or even reverse, environmental progress.
The problem is this: No one has created a vision of what happens if we get things right.
That seems odd, when you think about it. We have a crystal clear picture of the consequences of getting things wrong (thank you very much, Al Gore). We know well the potential devastation of unmitigated environmental problems: the droughts, floods, hurricanes, tsunamis, resource wars, famine, and pestilence. We know about epidemics of childhood asthma in inner cities, toxic rivers in impoverished lands, and depleted fisheries that may never fully recover. We see for ourselves the rampant development in formerly verdant landscapes. There are vivid pictures of denuded forests, strip-mined mountains, and strip-malled farmland. We read about these things, hear Hollywood stars fret over them, and may even experience them firsthand.
Point is, we know what business as usual looks like.
But what about success? What happens if we get things right? What does that look like?
This, as much as anything, is a vision I'm hoping President Obama can portray to America and the world. Yes, there is a list of necessary policy prescriptions as long as my arm (and, fortunately, a corps of green policy geeks much savvier than I who know how to get them enacted). But without the vision thing, even the best policies can only go so far.
This is no small matter. For decades, environmental leaders in business, activism, and government have expressed frustration that the public isn't behind them, except in disappointingly small numbers, despite a litany of increasingly dire environmental problems. These same leaders express bewilderment at the painfully slow uptake of green products and personal habits, from buying organics to recycling to energy conservation. Even when people understand the issues and consequences of everyday actions — the direct relationship between inefficient light bulbs and the threat of global climate change, for example — they usually fail to act.
We've long known that fear is a limited motivator. Think of how persuasion has changed. A generation ago, we were told by advertisers to worry about ring around the collar, iron-poor blood, waxy yellow buildup, and the heartbreak of psoriasis. Madison Avenue believed that driving fear into the hearts and minds of the public would unleash a wealth of sales and profits. No longer. Today, profits come from imbuing visions of sexual appeal, personal freedom, and a life without worry. Those positive images are the ones that inspire people to take action and, for better or worse, make choices in the marketplace.
What is the positive image of "green" that will inspire a nation — indeed, the world — to transform itself in the way that Obama and others are hoping: that create jobs, build economic opportunities, engender energy independence, attack climate change, improve public health, reduce environmental degradation, and ensure national security?
Ask yourself: What does a world look like where former autoworkers and steelmakers are employed in well-paid jobs to manufacture turbines and solar panels, and where mechanics, electricians, truck drivers, and plumbers are working fervently to build the smarter, upgraded electricity grid needed to distribute all this home-grown energy? Where a new generation of smart buildings and electric vehicles are operating in concert on cheaper, less-polluting energy, and a new generation of technicians is needed to build and maintain them and infrastructure necessary to power them? Where every home, office, factory, and store is retrofitted or rebuilt to be as energy efficient as possible, made so by armies of newly trained workers from local communities? Where entrepreneurial companies are mining landfills in order to turn waste back into raw materials at a fraction of the cost and environmental impacts of mining or manufacturing new ones? Where food is grown and distributed regionally, reducing transportation emissions and ensuring food security, creating a wealth of jobs for local farmers, food processors, distributors, and others?
I could go on, but you get the point. It's a pretty compelling story. Who's telling it?
Van Jones is. The author of The Green-Collar Economy and one of my personal heroes, Jones may be the only one who has learned how to inspire people with the vision thing. And not just any people: Jones is providing hope to legions of the economic underclass who have largely been left out of the environmental movement to date. He's telling ghetto kids to "Put down a handgun and pick up a caulking gun," and that, "Somebody's going to make a million dollars figuring out a way to get solar panels made and deployed in our 'hoods. I think it should be you." (Elizabeth Kolbert has a terrific profile of Jones in the January 12 issue of New Yorker.) Another Jones classic line, about Obama: "It's not that we have a President who's black; it's that for the first time we have a President who's green."
Jones has the ear of Obama, Nancy Pelosi, and others, but beyond Jones, not many others have his vision or voice. Precious few others can spin a positive, exciting story about a world in which thinking and acting green becomes a pathway through the thicket of so many seemingly intractable economic, political, and social problems. And that lack of voices, itself, is a problem.
Can Obama incite and excite the populace by painting an enticing picture of a greener world? Of course: Yes, he can. But will he? Amid the many pressures he'll have — to cure an ailing economy, world strife, and, God knows, the common cold — will he be willing and able to place his political currency in the green vision thing? If he can, it could be one of the more profound exercises in the audacity of hope.
And what about the rest of us? What's the uplifting story each of us is willing and able to tell? How much of your own personal and professional currency are you willing to expend to help not merely portray this good, green vision but also to ensure it becomes reality?
Without that vision, the notion of a greener economy is destined to be seen as a "nice to do," not a "need to do." It will be easily countered by the incumbent interests who hope to continue to profit from the existing model, and who will warn that this is no time to tinker with radical, untested ideas about how our world works. And our political leaders will follow the money, and the votes, watering down the green ideal until it becomes yet another tepid policy soup.
We've seen vividly what happens when presidents squander opportunities. After 9/11, President Bush could have inspired Americans to demand energy independence as a means of avoiding future terrorist attacks, enacting a wealth of policy directives to promote more efficient buildings and vehicles and develop oil alternatives. He could have inspired us with a hopeful vision born of the tragedy we'd just endured. We would have swallowed hard to pay a dollar extra tax on gas, maybe more, knowing it was going to a worthy cause. But he told us to go shopping and left it at that. Eight long years later, we'll have another chance.
To quote Van Jones one more time: "Barack Obama helped us take America back. Now we have to help him take America forward."
Form a Sustainable Visions thinktank
Thanks for this Joel. I believe so strongly that it's crucial to focus much more mental and emotional energy on what we DO want, rather than complain about what we don't want/what hasn't worked.
If there aren't already some substantial thinktanks (in addition to Van and his inspiring efforts) at work creating a comprehensive sustainability vision(s) including includes how to achieve a significantly dematerialized sustained economic vitality - perhaps now is the time to start some. Such thinktanks would ideally comprise highly diverse crews of motivated and aware people.
Liz Stuart
MBA, Sustainability (May 2009)
estuart@presidiomba.org
Vision is key to a shared journey..
Joel, two thumbs up for your article. I'd also throw in a recommendation for Paul Hawkens, author of Natural Capitalism, as another voice of reason and vision-provoking storyteller. Having seen the guy speak at Enviro2002, the power of being able to paint a word-picture that can inspire others to action, and give them both a sense of purpose and a destination to be working towards, is powerful, and rare. Looking forward to seeing the myriad visions this article might spawn, hoping that we can see a set of aggregate themes that transcend product pitches and me-too-ers, and give people a picture that can inspire their own personal action agendas..
Vision is key to a shared journey..
Joel, two thumbs up for your article. I'd also throw in a recommendation for Paul Hawkens, author of Natural Capitalism, as another voice of reason and vision-provoking storyteller. Having seen the guy speak at Enviro2002, the power of being able to paint a word-picture that can inspire others to action, and give them both a sense of purpose and a destination to be working towards, is powerful, and rare. Looking forward to seeing the myriad visions this article might spawn, hoping that we can see a set of aggregate themes that transcend product pitches and me-too-ers, and give people a picture that can inspire their own personal action agendas..
Brian Hill
http://www.laughingmind.com
Deep Green: Energy
Matt Brigg's forthcoming film looks inspiring!
http://www.deepgreeninc.org/samples/index.php?video=sample_china_glassfa...
Solutions Visionaries: Rocky Mountain Institute
Great message and timing! In addition to Van Jones, I'd like to highlight the Rocky Mountain Institute. In RMI's solutions-oriented research and consulting work, they've imagined and created a more secure, just, prosperous, and life-sustaining world. The vision they put forth is one we can all support and get excited about. As a result, they made success strides with a variety of partners across the industries and the political spectrum.
http://www.rmi.org
Terreform does exactly this for a living!
What happens if we get things right? What does that look like?
Many architects and urban design studios are authorities on visioning the future of green.
Terreform ONE [Open Network Ecology] is a nonprofit organization and philanthropic design collaborative that integrates ecological principles in the urban realm. It was formed for the advancement of socio-ecological science and the dissemination of this knowledge through diverse programs.
Please see our work on: Mobility, Habitat, and Urbanity.
+Dr. Mitchell Joachim
http://www.terreform.org
The Vision Thing
Unfortunately President Obama fails my criteria as having "the vision thing".
Prior to leaving office, George Bush authorized over one trillion dollars in bailouts and stimulus.
Secretary Paulson held an early Christmas party - handing out bailout money to all the greedy companies and executives that got us into this mess in the first place.
Now, President Obama continues this theme by borrowing billions of dollars (it will be trillions before he's through) to handing it out money to all these dependent people and corporations.
I have a vision of a country that doesn't need bailouts and handouts from the government to succeed. Green / sustainable issues are forwarded by well meaning executives and self-employed entrepreneurs.
Scientists are experimenting to find more sustainable and safe answers to life's problems. Individuals and families are rewarded with a safe, healthy environment and savings to retire with.
We can do all this on our own. We only disempower ourselves to think that Obama is going to fix all our problems - or that there are other great people out there who will save us.
Sure, there are people who can show the way, but if the people showing the way do so at the expense of disempowering the people they lead - then they are leading people to dependence and despair.
So say "NO" to the bailouts and the handouts. If your in trouble with your house - go out and rent. If your up to your eyeballs in debt - go out and get a second job and pay down your debts honorably.
We Americans must stop looking to Washington but instead look inside ourselves for the answer. We have all the resources we need to solve the problem ourselves.
So Does Obama have vision?
So Does Obama have vision?
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