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Companies Try to Cash in on Green Trend, But Should Consumers Buy It?

Corporate America has discovered that going green is the way to sell products these days. Sales of organic products have gone from $10 billion in 2003 to more than $16 billion in 2006. Products advertised as being sustainable or healthy accounted for more than $200 billion in U.S. sales in 2005.

But as legions of marketers make “green” pitches ranging from earnest to ridiculous, customers are growing warier.

Environmentalists welcome genuine corporate efforts to make products more benign, but there’s a fine line between real environmental efforts and "greenwashing." Last year, a Philadelphia marketing firm called TerraChoice investigated more than 1,000 products claiming to have some environmental benefit. All but one of them committed one of what the company dubbed the "Six Sins of Greenwashing", such as hidden problems or vague claims.



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Article's Comment     ( 24 Comments )
 
 
 +6 Points           
 
Author of the Article
BY Patty D   
  
[ Joined on 06/07 ]
[ Posted on July 04, 2008 ]
Post Reply
Ok here's a few ways to be really "green" and save a lot of money:
1.  Soapnuts, make liquid from them and you can use if for anything from shampoo to toilet bowl cleaner.
2.  Use vinegar and baking soda for cleaning and clearing sluggish drains.
3.  Dr. Bronner's soap: again, amazingly versatile and goes a very long way.
I have virtually eliminated store bought cleaning supplies, laundry products etc and am mostly satisfied with the results.  I use ECover in my dishwasher.  Does anyone know a good substitute for dishwashers?
 

 +3 Points           
 
Author of the Article
BY CSR   
  
[ Joined on 08/07 ]
Author of the Article [ Posted on July 04, 2008 ]
 
Yes, and you save electricity and I *think* water too!

 +1 Points           
 
Author of the Article
BY Aaltrude   
  
[ Joined on 04/07 ]
Author of the Article [ Posted on July 04, 2008 ]
 
Our solution was to take the dishwasher out and was our dishes by hand. As a bonus we also increased our kitchen cupboard space.

            
 
Author of the Article
BY seg   
  
[ Joined on 11/06 ]
Author of the Article [ Posted on July 07, 2008 ]
 
Nice suggestions Patty...Regarding the dishwasher try to save up and do a complete load everytime, you'll be saving on water, electricity and most of all your time. When you check how much water you use to do each piece by hand, you use a whole lot more comparing to doing them in the dishwasher..... The trick is do a FULL LOAD everytime, we just save them up and maybe once, or twice a week and then let her run, also the big stuff like pots and pans we do by hand so we save space for the smaller dishes, like plates, saucers, glasses, knives forks etc...

 
 +5 Points           
 
Author of the Article
BY BeeGirl   
  
[ Joined on 04/08 ]
[ Posted on July 07, 2008 ]
Post Reply
One of the most misrepresented 'green' practices is recycling. Do you know where your e-waste goes?

http://ngm.nationalgeographic.com/2008/01/high-tech-trash/carroll-text

 
 +3 Points           
 
Author of the Article
BY BeeGirl