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- <text id=92TT1226>
- <title>
- June 01, 1992: The Big Green Payoff
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1992
- June 01, 1992 RIO:Coming Together to Save the Earth
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- COVER STORIES, Page 62
- RIO: SUMMIT TO SAVE THE EARTH
- The Big Green Payoff
- </hdr><body>
- <p>Who says what's good for the environment is bad for the economy?
- From electric cars to solar cells, products that protect the
- planet will earn hefty profits in the future.
- </p>
- <p>By MICHAEL D. LEMONICK -- Reported by Helen Gibson/London, Rhea
- Schoenthal/Bonn and Dick Thompson/Washington
- </p>
- <p> At the Frankfurt Auto Show last fall, BMW unveiled its
- vision of the future of driving. Called the E1, it is a
- four-seat car with a top speed of 120 km/h (75 m.p.h.) and a
- range of up to 250 km (155 miles). Not so swift, you say? But
- this car is a clean machine: it gives off no pollution that
- could foul the air in any way. The E1 runs on an electric motor
- powered by high-energy sodium-sulfur batteries. Although it
- takes electricity to charge the batteries, the power plants can
- be far from smoggy cities.
- </p>
- <p> BMW is not alone. Just about all the world's major
- automakers, from Citroen to Chrysler, are revving up to produce
- electric cars. They realize that in the 21st century, consumers
- will increasingly favor -- and governments will mandate --
- technology that preserves and protects the environment. The
- fortunes of companies and nations will rise and fall on how well
- they heed the call to save the planet.
- </p>
- <p> The global market for environmentally friendly products is
- worth an estimated $200 billion a year, and has just begun to
- take off. Every potential innovation, whether a new kind of
- windmill or biodegradable plastic made from plants, is
- attracting attention from companies in a host of industrial
- nations. The U.S.'s Du Pont is in a race with Germany's Hoechst
- and Britain's ICI, among others, to develop replacement
- chemicals for ozone-destroying chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs).
- Germany's Siemens is vying with such firms as Amoco in the U.S.
- and Sanyo in Japan to produce cheap, efficient solar electric
- cells.
- </p>
- <p> Who wins the races to perfect and sell green technologies
- will depend to a great extent on who has the edge in
- engineering and marketing skills. But equally important may be
- the encouragement companies get from their countries' political
- leaders. Governments can exert enormous influence over how
- aggressively businesses take the environment into account, using
- sticks and carrots -- sticks in the form of tough standards for
- products and manufacturing processes, carrots consisting of tax
- breaks and other incentives that reward innovation.
- </p>
- <p> The U.S. government has, for the most part, done a poor
- job of spurring business to come up with breakthroughs. In the
- past, federal agencies issued environmental compliance goals,
- like standards for the amount of pollutants coming out of
- smokestacks, and then mandated the acceptable methods for
- achieving the targets. There was no incentive to do better than
- the standards or to develop innovative tools for meeting the
- goals -- tools that U.S. companies might market around the
- world.
- </p>
- <p> The Clean Air Act of 1990 tries to change the old way of
- doing things; it allows companies to meet pollution goals by
- whatever means they can. With regard to emissions of noxious
- sulfur dioxide, the new law sets up a clever system in which
- companies and utilities will be issued permits to produce
- certain amounts of the gas. If a company finds ways to produce
- less SO2 than it is allowed to, it can make money by selling
- unused pollution permits to other firms. "This is the frontier
- of environmental policy," says Robert Stavins, an economist at
- Harvard's Kennedy School of Government. "It allows a firm to go
- out and choose the best technology it can. And it also provides
- an incentive to cut pollution below government requirements."
- </p>
- <p> Meanwhile, the U.S. is stepping up support for research
- into energy conservation and renewable power sources. Funding
- in these areas has risen from $324 million in 1989 to $540
- million this year. But the President and Congress have not shown
- much interest in politically tough measures such as sharply
- higher gasoline taxes or more stringent auto-fuel-economy
- standards, both of which would force Detroit to design more
- efficient cars.
- </p>
- <p> In Japan furious competition among companies is the main
- force behind innovation, but government policies, in the form
- of strict antipollution laws and encouragement of technological
- research, are a big help. One of the government's latest
- initiatives is the New Earth 21 project, which is aimed at
- meeting the threat of global warming. As envisioned by the
- Ministry of International Trade and Industry, it will promote
- two activities: the development of technologies designed to
- reduce production of carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases,
- and the sharing of those methods with developing countries. miti
- is financing an ambitious effort to generate clean-burning
- hydrogen, which would not contribute to global warming, by using
- genetically engineered bacteria. There are also tax breaks and
- low-interest loans available for environmentally sound
- industrial projects, and local governments can get tax relief
- when they purchase electric- rather than gasoline-powered
- vehicles.
- </p>
- <p> European nations are also moving to coax, and if necessary
- force, their industries to see the potential profits in
- environmental responsibility. In France the best example of a
- marketable, earth-saving technology is the TGV, a 300-km/h
- (186-m.p.h.) train that has won passengers away from polluting
- planes on the Paris-Lyons run and other routes. The train, whose
- operations are subsidized by the government, is now being
- considered for several routes in the U.S. -- a profitable
- triumph for French industry. In addition, the government is
- laying plans for a waste tax that will finance advanced
- waste-treatment plants, which could lead to an entire export
- industry.
- </p>
- <p> In Britain, where the total market for environmental
- products has been estimated at $50 billion a year by 1995, the
- government has set up a $20 million fund to support innovations
- in recycling, environmental monitoring and reduction of waste
- and pollution from manufacturing processes. It is giving farmers
- grants of up to 50% of the cost of building new slurry and
- silage storage facilities to cope with fertilizer-heavy farm
- waste.
- </p>
- <p> Britain's National Rivers Authority has been especially
- active. Its interest persuaded the electronics industry to come
- up with a briefcase-size monitor that can be used on a riverbank
- to measure the amount of dissolved oxygen and ammonia in the
- water, along with its acidity and turbidity. The authority also
- spurred the development of a remote-sensing water monitor, as
- well as an experimental technique that injects iron into stream
- beds to neutralize polluting phosphates. All three inventions
- are considered good export prospects.
- </p>
- <p> Perhaps the greenest of nations is Germany, where commercial
- banks will grant low-interest loans for pro-environment projects
- and hotels urge guests to forgo daily towel changes to save
- water and energy. Environment Minister Klaus Topfer has ordered
- the phaseout of cfcs by next year -- two years earlier than most
- other countries -- and called for a 25% to 30% reduction in
- carbon dioxide emissions by 2010. The government is investing
- heavily, having spent $90 million since 1974 on development of
- recyclable, high-efficiency batteries for electric cars and
- planning annual outlays of $182 million on solar-wind- and wave-
- energy research. Last year a government-supported, high-speed
- train called ice started whizzing between Hamburg and Munich.
- </p>
- <p> There is action as well at the level of the European
- Community as a whole. Last January, E.C. environment
- commissioner Carlo Ripa di Meana got initial approval for a tax
- to be levied on fuels that give off carbon dioxide. He figures
- this will eventually push the price of natural gas up about 30%
- and coal 60%, increases that will spur businesses and consumers
- to conserve energy. The E.C. has been helping finance
- development of clean technologies, such as 100%-recyclable cars
- and low-polluting power generators, since 1987.
- </p>
- <p> Many companies recognized long ago, without any nudge from
- governments, that respect for the environment can boost profits.
- In the U.S., 3M has drastically reduced pollution and waste at
- its manufacturing plants and, despite the conventional wisdom
- that says environmentalism is a luxury, has steadily increased
- its profits. Once industrialists think about it at all
- seriously, they almost inevitably see the financial advantages
- of investments in environmental technology, says Hugh Faulkner,
- executive director of the Business Council for Sustainable
- Development. The council was set up to advise the Earth Summit
- about industry's views on environmental issues. After a year's
- work, executives from such firms as Chevron, Mitsubishi, Royal
- Dutch/Shell and Volkswagen agreed on a set of business
- principles, including the need for sustainable management of
- resources, the charging of environmental costs against
- corporate profits, and the rule that polluters, not the public,
- must pay for cleanup.
- </p>
- <p> Yet even with greater industrial environmental
- consciousness, says Faulkner, "there could clearly be no
- prospect for sustainable development in either the developed or
- the developing world without government incentives." The nations
- that wield those carrots and sticks most skillfully will be the
- leaders of the new green revolution, and their industries will
- eventually be the ones to profit from it.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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