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Thank you for joining the Green Power Network webinar, Made with Renewable Energy: How and Why Companies are Labeling Consumer Products The webinar will begin shortly. Housekeeping. Audio Details: Dial: +1 (646) 307-1720 Passcode : 685-295-452 - PowerPoint PPT PresentationTRANSCRIPT
NREL is a national laboratory of the U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy, operated by the Alliance for Sustainable Energy, LLC.
Thank you for joining the Green Power Network webinar,
Made with Renewable Energy: How and Why Companies are Labeling Consumer Products
The webinar will begin shortly.
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Housekeeping
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• Audio Details:Dial: +1 (646) 307-1720 Passcode: 685-295-452Audio PIN: Shown after joining the Webinar
• Participants are joined in listen-only mode.
• Use the Q&A panel to ask questions during the webinar.
• This webinar is being recorded. The slides and recording will be posted to http://greenpower.energy.gov.
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Presenters
• Jenny Heeter, National Renewable Energy Laboratory
• Orrin Cook, Center for Resource Solutions• Laura Thompson, SAPPI Paper• Angelika Pullen, WindMade
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Background
• Presenting findings from NREL’s report, Made with Renewable Energy: How and Why Companies are Labeling Consumer Productso Authors: Deborah Baker-Brannan, Jenny Heeter,
and Lori Birdhttp://apps3.eere.energy.gov/greenpower/pdfs/53764.pdf
• Interviewed 20 companies involved with renewable energy product labeling
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Nearly 50 Companies Involved
• Scope varieso Single product (e.g. Ziploc
Evolve)o Product line (e.g. Cascades
Tissue Group’s North River Brand)
o All products (e.g. Intelligent Nutrients)
• Business-to-business and business-to-consumer
• Focus on products designed for the environmentally conscious consumer
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Communicating the Use of RE
• On-product messagingo Imagery and statementso Logos
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Motivations for Promoting Products as Made with RE
• Communicate to the consumer and enhance the image of the brando Chuck Bennett of Aveda stated that the intention
is “not to enhance sales specifically but rather to reinforce the overall environmental commitment of the brand.”
• Product differentiationo Important for business-to-consumer sector, but
some business-to-business labeling as well (e.g. Cascades Tissue Group)
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Motivations (continued)
• Targeting environmentally conscious consumerso Companies may already be targeting “green”
consumers• Following an existing industry trend
o Companies interviews stated they were trendsetters, not followers
• Price premiumo Products did not earn a price premium
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Challenges with Product Labeling and Claims
• Limited and competing uses of product real estateo Including too many competing messages can inundate
and confuse the consumer, potentially diluting the brand and affecting sales.
• Language and contento Imagery is an important component o Language can be difficult to keep up with (e.g. New
Belgium Brewing)• Consumer recognition and understanding
o Difficult to assess; some companies less concerned with consumer understanding
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Challenges (continued)
• Product packaging costso Relatively minor challenge; changes typically made in
conjunction with other product/packaging changes• Cost of certification and program requirements
o Minor challenge for most companies, though depends on how fees are structured
• Products marketed internationallyo Reduction in product real estate if text is in multiple
languages
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Jenny Heeter
National Renewable Energy Laboratory15013 Denver West Parkway, MS RSF031
Golden, CO 80401(303) 275-4366
http://greenpower.energy.gov