Copyright PR Newswire Association LLC
Mar 31, 2008
Consumers Care About Low Prices for Quality Products,
Not Costly and Impractical 'Green' Products
FALLS CHURCH, Va., March 31 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/
-- The National Legal and Policy Center (NLPC) today called Wal-Mart's Earth
Month sustainability campaign, touting its new lines of alleged
environmentally-friendly products, a waste of time and resources.
Wal-Mart believes that aggressively pushing
eco-friendly products makes good business sense because of the growing influence
of environmental concerns in consumers' shopping decisions. However, surveys
show that the large majority of consumers do not consider environmental factors
in their purchasing decisions. America's Research Group found that only
one-third of consumers care about environmentally-friendly products and only 16
percent are willing to pay extra for them. Leo J. Shapiro & Associates
recently conducted a telephone survey of more than 800 consumers across the
nation and found that consumers may say they want more environmentally friendly
products but they don't want to spend more.
"These findings do not bode well for the future of
Wal-Mart's sustainability campaign because, in many cases, its 'green' products
are too costly and impractical," says John Carlisle, the director of policy at
NLPC.
For instance, Wal-Mart is pushing sales of compact
fluorescent light bulbs (CFLs) because they use one-third the energy of
traditional incandescent bulbs and last longer. But there are serious economic
drawbacks to CFL bulbs. Consumers are put off by the fact that a single CFL bulb
at Wal-Mart costs $1.65 compared to just 24 cents for the incandescent bulb.
Other CFLs can cost as much as $5 per bulb. CFLs are also inferior in quality
and practicality to the incandescent light bulb. Even though one in five light
bulbs sold are CFLs, a lower percentage of American homes - about 11 percent -
have at least one bulb. The more people use CFLs, the more they see their
shortcomings. For one thing, consumers do not like the dingy color of light
emitted by CFL bulbs. The Color Rendering Index (CRI) measures the quality of
light. A CRI of 100 is sunlight or an incandescent bulb. A CFL bulb, on the
other hand, has a CRI rating in the 80s.
People are also frustrated by the fact that some CFL
bulbs, like the 120-watt version, won't fit in many lamps and fixtures.
Likewise, CFL bulbs do not work well in dimmers or in three-way light
fixtures.
"With so many practical problems to CFL bulbs,
Wal-Mart is not making a good decision in building a major marketing campaign
around them," says Carlisle.
In addition, CFLs raise safety concerns because they
contain mercury which can potentially pose health risks. A broken CFL may
release mercury vapors that can affect a person's brain, spinal chord, kidneys
and liver. The Environmental Protection Agency recommends that if a CFL bulb
breaks, an individual should immediately open a window to disperse vapors, not
touch the area where the bulb was broken, carefully clean the area, and remove
all glass fragments.
"Wal-Mart should not push products like CFL bulbs
just because environmentalists deem them ecologically safe," says Carlisle.
"Environmentalists are notorious for pushing 'Green-friendly' products that turn
out to have their own ecological baggage."
And environmentalists are critical of Wal-Mart's CFL
campaign because the company does not a have a recycling program in place that
would allow consumers to conveniently dispose of the bulbs.
"Wal-Mart got to where it is today by adhering to a
business model that took into account the consumer's priority to get quality
products at the lowest possible price," concludes Carlisle. "This foolish
'Green' campaign is completely contrary to that model. The more Wal-Mart
emphasizes so-called sustainability factors in marketing products, the more it
risks undermining its competitiveness."
In December 2006, NLPC released a special report
titled Wal-Mart Embraces Controversial Causes: Bid to Appease Liberal Interest
Groups Will Likely Fail, Hurt Business. The 11,000-word report is authored by
Carlisle and may be downloaded in PDF format at
http://www.nlpc.org/pdfs/Wal-MartSpecial%20Report.pdf. An updated version of
that report will soon be released.
NLPC promotes ethics in public life, and sponsors the
Corporate Integrity Project.
SOURCE National Legal and Policy Center
Credit: National Legal and Policy
Center