I'm ordinarily opposed to posting articles of a general nature on
a list devoted to local sustainability, but this one is too
interesting to pass up.

Jon

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Wall Street Journal
October 6, 2008
Six Products, Six Carbon Footprints
By JEFFREY BALL

A new concept is entering the consumer lexicon: the carbon
footprint.

First came organic. Then came fair trade. Now makers of everything
from milk to jackets to cars are starting to tally up the carbon
footprints of their products. That's the amount of carbon dioxide
and other greenhouse gases that get coughed into the air when the
goods are made, shipped and stored, and then used by consumers.

So far, these efforts raise as many questions as they
answer. Different companies are counting their products' carbon
footprints differently, making it all but impossible for shoppers
to compare goods. And even if consumers come to understand the
numbers, they might not like what they find out.

For instance, many products' global-warming impact depends less on
how they're made than on how they're used. That means the easiest
way to cut carbon emissions may be to buy less of a product or use
it in a way that's less convenient.

So, what are the carbon footprints of some of the common products
we use? How are they calculated? And what surprises do they hold?
What follows is a look at six everyday items -- cars, shoes,
laundry detergent, clothing, milk and beer -- and the numbers that
go with them.

But first, here's a number that will help you put all those carbon
footprints in perspective. The U.S. emits the equivalent of about
118 pounds of carbon dioxide per resident every day, a figure that
includes emissions from industry. Annually, that's nearly 20
metric tons per American -- about five times the number per
citizen of the world at large, according to the International
Energy Agency.

Now, let's take a closer look at those six products.

CARS

The simplest statistic in the carbon-footprinting game may be
this: For every mile it travels, the average car in the U.S. emits
about one pound of carbon dioxide. Given typical driving distances
and fuel-economy numbers, that translates into about five tons of
carbon dioxide per car per year.

A study by the University of Michigan's Center for Sustainable
Systems found that, over its expected 120,000-mile life, an
American-made midsize sedan emits the equivalent of about 63 tons
of carbon dioxide. That number includes all emissions, from the
making of the car's raw materials, such as steel and plastic,
through the shredding of the car once it's junked.

The vast majority of those emissions -- 86% -- came from the car's
fuel use, the study found. Just 4% of emissions came from making
and assembling the car. That means consumers can lower their
footprint by buying a car with better fuel economy.

Sometimes, the differences between models can be substantial. For
one overview of how cars stack up, consider a new computer model
paid for by Toyota Motor Corp. that computes the lifetime carbon
footprints of about 400 auto models from multiple manufacturers.

To narrow things down, consider a handful of Toyota's own
models. The Prius, a hybrid gasoline-and-electric car that
averages 42 miles per gallon, has a lifetime carbon footprint of
44 metric tons, according to the updated computer model done for
Toyota by Kreider & Associates, a consultant based in Boulder,
Colo. The Corolla, a small sedan with a conventional gasoline
engine rated at 29 miles per gallon, has a footprint of 64
tons. The Camry, a larger car rated at 23 miles per gallon, has a
footprint of 95 tons. And the 4Runner, an SUV rated at 16 miles
per gallon, has a footprint of 118 tons.

Gregory Keoleian, co-director of the Michigan center, says he used
to advise people that the best way to minimize the carbon
footprint of their driving was to keep their car as long as
possible, since junking a car and manufacturing a new one produces
pollution. But that was before hybrids hit the market and offered
markedly better fuel economy. Now, he says, scrapping an old car
in favor of a new model makes lots of sense.

The introduction of the hybrid "changes the whole dynamic,"
Mr. Keoleian says. "Then, you replace."

SHOES

You may think you're at one with nature going for a walk in the
woods in your sturdy hiking boots. But those boots pack a lot of
carbon. The big reason: the leather.

Timberland Co., a Stratham, N.H., shoe company with an outdoorsy
image, has assessed the carbon footprint of about 40 of the shoe
models it currently sells. The results range from about 22 pounds
to 220 pounds per pair. Each of the shoes that has been
carbon-footprinted comes with a label assessing its greenhouse-gas
score on a scale of zero, which is best, to 10, which is worst.

Flip-flops tend to have footprints of 22 pounds to 44 pounds, says
Pete Girard, senior analyst for environmental stewardship at
Timberland. Shoes typically range from 66 pounds to 132
pounds. Hiking boots typically pack between 154 and 198 pounds,
Mr. Girard says.

Though Timberland produces many of its shoes in Asia and sells
them in the U.S., it has found that transportation typically
accounts for less than 5% of the carbon footprint. By far the
biggest contributor is the shoe's raw material. "For most
Timberland shoes," says Betsy Blaisdell, Timberland's manager for
environmental stewardship, "leather really drives the score."

The average dairy cow produces, every year, an amount of
greenhouse gas equivalent to four tons of carbon dioxide,
according to U.S. government figures. Most of that comes not from
carbon dioxide, in fact, but from a more-potent greenhouse gas:
methane.

The cow's impact on the atmosphere is due largely to a process
known scientifically as "enteric fermentation" -- and colloquially
as burping. A cow's multiple stomachs make it particularly
efficient at transforming feed into bovine products: meat, milk
and hide. But all that churning also produces lots of methane -- a
greenhouse gas that, pound for pound, is 25 times as damaging to
the atmosphere as carbon dioxide, according to the United
Nations. Converting those methane emissions into a
carbon-dioxide-equivalent number is one step in calculating the
cow's carbon footprint.

Take Timberland's Winter Park Slip On Boot. They're casual boots
-- not as heavy as hiking boots -- but their uppers are all
leather. Their footprint sits in the middle of the Timberland
range, at 121 pounds per pair. Of that total, 8.5 pounds comes
from the electricity used to make the boots at Timberland's
factory in China's Guangdong Province. The remaining 112.5 pounds
comes from the raw materials used to make the shoe: rubber for the
outsole; ethyl vinyl acetate, or EVA, for the midsole; and, most
of all, leather for the upper.

To come up with these numbers, Timberland first gets data from the
factory on the amount of electricity the factory uses in a given
period. Dividing that by the number of shoes the factory produces
in that period yields a per-shoe energy-consumption figure.

Timberland then checks those figures against tables that list
average carbon-dioxide emissions per unit of energy produced. The
tables are tailored to the specific power-plant fuel mix in the
area where the factory sits. In China, which makes much of its
power by burning coal, the carbon hit is greater than in, say,
France, which makes most of its electricity with nuclear power.

The harder part for Timberland is figuring out the emissions that
come from the part of the process it doesn't control: the
production of the raw materials before they get to the Timberland
factory. Timberland gets that information from the databases of
"life-cycle analysis" consultants, who put together tables showing
the environmental impacts of producing given amounts of various
materials, from rubber to polyester to leather.

Timberland's carbon-footprint calculations have prompted spats
with some of Timberland's leather suppliers, Ms. Blaisdell
says. They argue the carbon hit from a cow should fall not on
their ledger, but on the ledger of beef producers. The leather
producers reason that cows are grown mainly for meat, with leather
as a byproduct, so that growing leather doesn't yield any
emissions beyond those that would have occurred anyway.

But Timberland has determined that 7% of the financial value of a
cow lies in its leather. And life-cycle-analysis guidelines used
by Timberland say the company should apply that percentage to
compute the share of a cow's total emissions attributable to the
leather. "We've had a lot of battles with our leather suppliers
over this," Ms. Blaisdell says. Timberland officials, she says,
"just follow the guidelines."

Timberland officials concede shortcomings with their method. By
using an average energy-consumption number for all pairs of shoes,
the calculations fail to recognize that some shoes require more
electricity to assemble in the factory than do others. And
Timberland's calculations omit the carbon impact of the leather
and other materials that fall to the cutting-room floor.

"No question, it's crude in some ways," Mr. Girard says. "But it's
a step more information than our designers were making a decision
on before."

LAUNDRY DETERGENT

The recipe for a low-carbon load of laundry: Use liquid detergent
instead of powder, wash your clothes in cool water and hang them
out to dry.

That's the message shoppers get when they walk down the detergent
aisles at Tesco PLC stores in the U.K. Starting this spring, the
retailer began slapping footprint-shaped carbon labels on
Tesco-brand laundry detergent. Along with the carbon-footprint
number, the label offers tips about lowering the score.

The carbon footprint of a load of laundry done with Tesco
detergent varies from 1.3 pounds to 1.9 pounds, depending on what
form of detergent is used, the labels report. According to Procter
& Gamble Co., the average American family does about 300 loads of
laundry per year, or about six loads per week. That suggests a
per-family carbon footprint from doing laundry of about 480 pounds
per year, or about 10 pounds per week. And that doesn't include
running the dryer.

Solid capsules of detergent have the highest carbon footprint,
according to Tesco. Powder has a slightly lower footprint; liquid
has a lower one still; and concentrated liquid has the lowest of
all. That's because making solid detergent uses more energy than
making the liquid variety.

But consumers who care about their carbon emissions should do more
than switch detergent forms, the labels advise. Doing the wash in
cooler water -- 86 degrees Fahrenheit instead of 104 degrees --
will shave the carbon footprint of each load by 0.3 pounds. That's
as much of a reduction as you get from switching to liquid from
powder.

The biggest way to cut the environmental impact of cleaning
clothes, however, is to stop using a clothes dryer. Drying laundry
outside on a line, Tesco says, will cut the carbon footprint of
every load by a whopping 4.4 pounds.

Along with detergent, Tesco labels store-brand orange juice, light
bulbs and potatoes. To trace the carbon footprints, Tesco uses
data from its suppliers and information from life-cycle-analysis
databases. The retailer is labeling products from its own brands
first because those were the ones it could most easily
control. But Tesco is considering labeling other brands, as well
as expanding the effort to its U.S. stores, which operate under
the Fresh & Easy name.

The suppliers that make the labeled products "don't see a risk" in
publicizing information about the environmental impacts of their
products, says Katherine Symonds, Tesco's sustainability
manager. For one thing, all forms of the detergent come from the
same suppliers, so those suppliers wouldn't necessarily be hurt if
consumers shifted from one form to another.

Ms. Symonds adds that Tesco carefully picked for its initial
labels products whose carbon footprints likely wouldn't shock
consumers. The retailer purposely avoided labeling the carbon
footprint of beef, for instance, because beef's carbon footprint
is significantly higher than that of many other foods.

If Tesco had presented consumers "with a message that was so
counterintuitive and difficult," Ms. Symonds says, "we might have
found it difficult to take carbon labeling forward."

JACKETS

Patagonia Inc.'s Talus jacket looks like a naturalist's dream. In
fact, its carbon footprint is 66 pounds. That, Patagonia notes on
its Web site, is 48 times the weight of the jacket itself.

Over the past year, the Ventura, Calif., outdoor-equipment maker
has computed and posted on its Web site the carbon footprints of
15 of its products. Because most of Patagonia's products are made
in Asia or Latin America and sold in the U.S., the company
expected that a big chunk of the carbon footprints came from
transportation. It was wrong.

The fabric for the Talus is made in China, the zippers come from
Japan, and the jacket is sewn in Vietnam. Yet all that
transportation adds up to less than 1% of the product's total
carbon footprint, Patagonia says. The majority of the footprint --
71%, or about 47 pounds -- comes in producing the polyester, which
originates with oil.

"If we had listened to the rhetoric out there at the time, which
was all around miles, we could have spent years rearranging our
supply chain to reduce transportation, when really that's not the
bulk of our concern," says Jill Dumain, Patagonia's director for
environmental analysis. "There's a lot of reasons to have a tight
supply chain, but environmentalism isn't one of them."

One way to slash the Talus jacket's carbon footprint would be to
make it with recycled, rather than virgin, polyester. But when the
jacket was being developed, the company that makes the fabric,
Polartec LLC, of Lawrence, Mass., couldn't find the right kind of
recycled yarn in Asia, says Nate Simmons, director of marketing
for the fabric maker.

Polyester yarn with recycled content is more widely available in
the U.S. than in Asia, he says, and Polartec uses it to make some
fabric for Patagonia. But the Talus is a particularly complicated
jacket, because its material fuses together a weather-resistent
outer layer with a warm inner layer.

At the time the Talus was being developed, using recycled material
would have required either making the fabric in the U.S. or
shipping U.S.-made recycled-content yarn to Asia to be made into
fabric. "It would have been extremely expensive," Mr. Simmons
says. "Probably very few people would have bought it. And it
wouldn't have had much of a positive impact because of that."

The bottom line: In making the Talus, Patagonia decided that cost
concerns outweighed environmental concerns. "Consumers are
starting to put environmental values into their purchasing
decisions, but it doesn't always translate into their being
willing to pay a higher price," Patagonia's Ms. Dumain says.

Some Patagonia products -- generally ones whose fabric isn't as
complex as the Talus's -- are made with recycled-content
fabric. Among them is the Eco Rain Shell, which has a carbon
footprint of just 15 pounds, Patagonia says. But the Eco Shell has
a different environmental problem: A byproduct of manufacturing
the material that makes the jacket water-repellent is
perfluorooctanic acid, a substance that Patagonia says has been
found accumulating in humans and animals and that scientists say
could pose health risks.

Patagonia lays out this conundrum on its Web site, saying it
"reflects the complexities involved" in balancing concern for the
environment with the need for performance.

MILK

Several studies of milk's carbon footprint are under way in the
U.S. Each has come up with a different number, largely because
each is counting things differently.

A recent study by National Dairy Holdings, a Dallas-based dairy,
found that the carbon footprint of a gallon of its milk in a
plastic jug is either 6.19 pounds or 7.59 pounds. The difference
rests in what kind of cases the jugs are placed in during
transport from the milk-processing plant to the distribution
center. Plastic cases, because they take more energy to produce,
yield more carbon-dioxide emissions than do cardboard ones.

But National Dairy Holdings' study doesn't count all the emissions
created by a gallon of milk. It includes those from the cows
themselves (more than half of the total), from the processing of
the milk and from the transport of the milk to a distribution
center. It doesn't count the emissions earlier in the process:
growing the cows' feed. Nor does it count the emissions later in
the process: transporting the milk from the distribution center to
the store and refrigerating it there.

That's because National Dairy Holdings did its study largely at
the request of Wal-Mart Stores Inc., a big customer, which is
trying to prod environmental improvements in its supply chain. So,
National Dairy Holdings measured only its piece in the supply
chain, explains Howard Depoy, the dairy's director of power,
refrigeration and sustainability. That's "the CO2 that we can
control and manage," Mr. Depoy says.

Aurora Dairy Corp.'s Aurora Organic Dairy, a small organic-milk
producer based in Boulder, Colo., is finishing a more-complete
study of the carbon footprint of its milk. Its study, done by
researchers at the University of Michigan's Center for Sustainable
Systems, attempts to include emissions all the way from growing
the cattle feed to refrigerating the processed milk in the
store. The preliminary findings are that producing a half-gallon
of Aurora's milk generates the equivalent of 7.2 pounds of carbon
dioxide. That's essentially the same amount as the National Dairy
Holdings study concluded is produced by an entire gallon of
National Dairy Holdings' milk. But the National Dairy Holdings
study left out much of the process that the Aurora study included.

Both studies found that the single biggest chunk of emissions from
milk production comes from all that action in the cow's gut. Now,
the U.S. dairy industry's main trade group, Dairy Management Inc.,
is launching yet another study of milk's carbon footprint. It
plans a complete measurement akin to Aurora Organic Dairy's.

The dairy industry doesn't plan to put carbon-footprint labels on
milk cartons, says Rick Naczi, an executive vice president for
Dairy Management. "It's something that would be very, very
difficult to make understandable to consumers," he says.

BEER

When New Belgium Brewing Co. set out last year to compute the
carbon footprint of a six-pack of its Fat Tire Amber Ale, it
figured it would find transportation was the biggest
problem. That's the emission source New Belgium thinks about most
often. The microbrewer, based in Fort Collins, Colo., has been
expanding into more states, necessitating more trucking of its
beer.

When the numbers came in this summer, they showed that a
six-pack's carbon footprint was about seven pounds. The real
surprise was where the bulk of that number came from: the
refrigeration of the beer at stores. Transportation came in
fourth, behind manufacturing the glass bottles and producing the
barley and malt. "It seems that in every [carbon-footprint study]
I've come across, people are surprised," says Jennifer Orgolini,
New Belgium's sustainability director.

Now, New Belgium is considering switching to bottles with more
recycled glass, because making them consumes less fuel. It's also
considering buying barley and malt produced organically, rather
than with chemical fertilizers, which are big emitters.

Refrigeration poses a tougher problem. Stores selling Fat Tire
aren't owned by New Belgium, so even if the brewer wanted them to
stop refrigerating the beer, they might not do so.

There are smaller potential fixes. Many stores could switch from
less-efficient, open-front beer chillers to more-efficient models
enclosed by clear doors. But that presents its own hurdle,
Ms. Orgolini notes: "People don't want to have to open the door."

-- Mr. Ball is The Wall Street Journal's environmental news
editor, based in Dallas.

_______________________________________________
For more information about sustainability in the Tompkins County area, please 
visit:  http://www.sustainabletompkins.org/ 

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