US manufacturing executives have had a road to Damascus-style conversion when it comes to their environmental strategies, according to a recent report from Eye For Transport (EFT).
EFT Research surveyed more than 300 North American manufacturing, operations and supply chain managers to establish where their green efforts are focused, how they are managed and financed, and to predict the outlook for eco-products.
The resulting report, Green Manufacturing: Adoption & Implementation, revealed that the corporate mindset around environmental initiatives is changing, and the need to invest in innovative products and new technologies is growing.
"When asked how they view green manufacturing initiatives, 84 per cent told us that they see them as part of an overall optimisation strategy,” said Katharine O'Reilly, EFT's senior vice president of environmental research. “This marks a major sea change, and implies that environmental programmes are becoming part of the standard arsenal of strategies employed to boost innovation and optimise operations."
Nearly all – 95 per cent – of respondents agree that green manufacturing will continue to expand. Furthermore, 66 per cent believe there to be a market for more expensive greener products in their industry.
But increased profits are not the only motive: 43 per cent report that improved efficiency and product quality for their operation are behind the green drive. Initiatives include recycling and re-use programmes; water reduction; energy and materials management and supplier management.
What is pushing US manufacturers to adopt green initiatives where once there was such reluctance to invest? According to the survey, 64 per cent of executives expect green initiatives to further their overall corporate sustainability strategy and vision, 62 per cent see green initiatives as a good response to customer interest in environmentally friendly products and services, and 51 per cent feel they are improving their public reputation.
On the operations side, 52 per cent noted cost reduction as a key benefit, and 47 per cent saw improved efficiency.
With 77 per cent of manufacturing executives in agreement that energy prices will rise significantly next year, the focus of operations budgets is turning sharply towards how to cut dependence on oil.
Public and private initiatives fund development of carbon-neutral construction materials, renewable energy telemetry and more 15 Aug 2008
Corporate policies demanding return on investment periods of no longer than three years are counting against many new energy-efficient systems 05 Aug 2008
French-led group awarded $2.9bn tender, as critics question facility's expense and necessity 05 Aug 2009
Chinese researchers say shrimp shells hold promise as environmentally-friendly catalyst for biodiesel production 05 Aug 2009
Cameron presents pre-election energy policy, promising greater investment certainty for low-carbon projects, green loans for households, and streamlining of planning system 19 Mar 2010
Joint statement from carbon exchange and Hungarian government aims to restore confidence in CER market 19 Mar 2010
From climate change contrarians to the "KitKatastrophe" of Nestle's palm oil policy, we look at the best the green web has to offer this week 19 Mar 2010
From the government's plans for a marine energy revolution to John Lewis' proposals for an off-grid supermarket 19 Mar 2010








