Surprise, surprise! At this week's ECO:nomics conference in California, Wal-Mart CEO Lee Scott declared, "We are not green." This after the world's largest (and worst) retailer spent the last three years touting its environmental stewardship. Though Scott was unusually candid about Wal-Mart's inability to "green" themselves up, his admission only validates what many environmentalists already knew: there's no way Wal-Mart can fix the irreparable harm they've caused to our planet in such a short span of time, if ever.
Not too long ago, Scott pledged that Wal-Mart's massive "greenup on aisle five" would include investing $500 million in reducing greenhouse gas emissions, increasing truck-fuel efficiency, reducing packaging, and creating more energy-efficient stores. What's more, Scott vowed to pressure Wal-Mart's global suppliers to follow their new responsible lead. But could they really have zero waste? Or use 100 percent renewable energy?
These goals seemed so lofty that it didn't shock me when I read that Wal-Mart isn't green, or that Scott answered a question about when a complete green overhaul might happen by saying, "I have no idea when that will be." What I found particularly troubling though was when Scott started talking about what waste meant to him and the company.
He was talking about bottled water. After pointing out the tragic irony that there was bottled water right there at the conference on environmental capital, Scott explained why Wal-Mart continues to sell bottled water, "We have to stay in business... If the customer wants bottled water, we're going to sell bottled water." While Wal-Mart may be working to reduce their carbon footprint, it became clear that to Scott, reducing waste means making money, not fulfilling an environmental promise. "It really is about how you take cost out, which is waste," Scott concluded.
Let's face it, Wal-Mart has engaged in greenwashing here and we've fallen for it, hoping that the world's largest retailer would miraculously grow a conscience. Instead, Wal-Mart has only distracted environmentalists from the company's woeful record while they pursue their bottom line -- cutting costs and making profits. We should've known something was up when the NGOs that Wal-Mart looked to for advice on sustainability made the company guarantee anonymity so that these groups wouldn't jeopardize their enviro-credibility when things went south.
I wonder what groups like Environmental Defense -- organizations that claimed to be working with Wal-Mart to fix their problems from the inside -- will do now that Scott's greedy intentions are out in the open. I wonder how Adam Werbach, the former Sierra Club sell-out, will try to spin this one. Wal-Mart isn't just "a new breed of toxin," as Werbach once said (before hypocritically taking on Wal-Mart, and a huge salary from them, as a client through Act Now Productions); they just brought their toxic breed to a whole new insidious level.
And as for you, Mr. Scott, it's certainly not easy being green, particularly when you had disingenuous intentions about going green in the first place. Check out a more complete picture
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Yo ZP
Sounds like a project for the Pig Report. You didn't buy into Adam Werbach's environmental story of how as a 5 year old he changed the world. Listening to him tell the story it's hard to not roll on the floor laughing especially when he can't get the facts to line up chronologically.
We shouldn't expect them to green themselves out of business.
Its taken them years to grow so large, its going to take years to clean up.
Hopefully they will move in the right direction.
There's many advantages in businesses going green ya know. Investing in green may cost a lot initially, but in the long run it decreases expenses.
The thing about wal-mart is that its not even a business anymore. Its a distribution model. There is nothing even remotely resembling a free economy in wal-mart megalithic presence. If wal-mart sells the cheapest food in town I have to shop there. I say we take it over and split it apart.
Lee Scott's "green-ness" is but a thin veneer to hide the red of blood from exploited workers in third world slave factories to the million of underpaid and overworked here in America.
The ugly legacy of Wal-Mart is as the most anti-American corporation in the nation's history.
We will have matured as a nation when a rat trap like Wal-Mart is dead.
Wal-mart is an environmental disaster, but let's not focus too much on one chain. As Stacy Mitchell has articulated clearly (for example: http://reclaimdemocracy.org/walmart/2007/stacy_mitchell_environment.php ) big box retail is inherently unsustainable.
We need thousands of communities promoting human-scale independent businesses through microenterprise, Independent Business Alliances, buy local campaigns and more.
Posted March 20, 2008 | 10:21 PM (EST)