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Tag Archive: water pollution


Picture1The issue involving Great Bay, the Piscataqua River, and the City of Portsmouth, New Hampshire is a microcosm of what is going on around the country.  The Piscataqua River is my “home” river, forms the border between New Hampshire and Maine, and I wrote a article for Fly Fisherman Magazine (September 2009)  about fishing Great Bay and the Piscataqua River.  So both areas, are connected and are very special places for me.   The problem is that Great Bay, while a tremendous natural resource, is dying.  According to state and local officials, more stringent standards are needed to “reverse years of decline in eel grass populations and water quality.”  In a 2009 report, of the 12 indicators of environmental health used, like dissolved oxygen, clam concentrations, etc., 11 of the them are either classified as cautionary or negative, up from 7 of 12 in 2008.  Something needs to be done, however, according to an article in the Seacoast Sunday edition of the Portsmouth Herald, the city of Portsmouth is concerned their tax payers may have to shoulder the bulk of the burden to comply with those standards.  While the project of improving water quality in the Piscataqua, one of the major rivers contributing to Great Bay, may be necessary, the cost of the project of upgrading Portsmouth’s wastewater treatment plant in this economy may be prohibitive.  (Downstream, but caught in a dilemma.)

While most agree that the projects are necessary and inextricably tied together, with the budgetary shortfalls facing most cities, and Portsmouth, NH is no exception, paying for the $63-100 million dollar upgrade to the wastewater treatment plant seems like a pipe dream.  Rough estimates say that the sewer bills for local residents could jump from $600/year to $2000/year immediately.  For those who are just making it now, those who are unemployed or underemployed, that would be disastrous.  But no one said projects didn’t have trade-offs with quality, cost and time, did they?  After all, that’s what project managers are all about, managing those project constraints.  How these projects and the other similar, environment protecting projects, fair in this time economic uncertainly will go a long way to determine not only the persistence of environmental issues, but also the sustainability of the environment itself.  

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greenchinaHere at EarthPM we promised to provide you with resources for understanding the implications of sustainability and the environment, and “green” on projects, on project managers, and on project management as a discipline.

We found one today that happens to have a story about Chinese brands (and international brands doing business in China) and their environmental problems.

The resource is worth bookmarking (and, as it turns out, watching), because it covers much more than this story.  But we thought it was a good story to show you not only the connection between green and business and projects, but to show how such a resource could be helpful to PMs.

The resource is the Going Green TV show.  We also found a corresponding CNN web page that covers many of the same stories.  That link is here.

So bookmark those links, and set your DVR or TiVO to record the Going Green TV show.

But, as promised, here’s a digest of the lead story that brought you here.

The story opens with coverage of one of China’s well-loved beers, Tsingtao.  From the story:

What many do not know is that the Tsingtao Brewery Group was recently accused of violating environmental standards. It is just one of 20 companies named on a “polluters’ blacklist,” including major companies such as Hitachi, Philips and China’s most popular instant noodle maker, Master Kong.

The Green Choice Consumer Action list is backed by 34 different NGOs, including the Institute of Public and Environmental Affairs, Green Earth Volunteers, Friends of Nature and Wild China. They allege the companies either polluted or failed to disclose their emissions.

If you were to go to that list, you would indeed find Tsingtao, other major Chinese brands, and recognizable Western brands like Philips lighting, and Motorola on the list.  This is not a list you want to be on.  According to the article the Chinese population is increasingly interested in, and willing to spend more for, green products, and is increasingly eschewing brands that have a bad green image.

“I think in China issues of the environment are strong and topical at the moment,” says consumer analyst Ray Ally of Landor Associates.

Landor recently conducted a brand survey that shows consumers in China are actually more concerned about green issues than consumers in the United States or Europe. For example, 45 percent of those surveyed in China said they consider it very important that a company is green when thinking about which brands to purchase, compared to 23 percent in the United States.

So – what does this have to do with project management?

Well, take Tsingtao beer as an example.  Watch the video on the CNN page.  Another link here for your convenience.  Note that Tsingtao invested $18M in the last three years trying to reduce pollutants coming from their plant – and that wasn’t enough.  More money will be spent in projects like this – to clean up not only the actual pollutants, but the brand image for these companies.  That means projects being launched in terms of marketing communications.  In other words, this is part of the green wave we discuss in out upcoming book.  It helps to be aware of and riding this wave and not overcome by it and drowning.

The increasing awareness of the Chinese consumer is a piece of the green wave – a potentially huge contributor to it.

As for the resources, we also think that as a PM you’d enjoy this story about Nike.  Think about how many projects and project managers were involved in these efforts.  Think about the way the company successfully links its environmental management policy with those projects.

Be ready.

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