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The environmentally friendly green retail campaigns have been an embarrassing mix of pseudo-environmental policies that have little real benefit to those true policies that have real impact. Rather, these campaigns are akin to demanding that recycling be enforced. But Wal-Mart and a handful of others have been trying to do green the right way, with policies that will have a significant environmental impact and that also improve operations. Read more. |
June 27th, 2008 at 7:26 am
This is a good article…short and to the point. Your use of specific detail to support the major theme was very helpful. Hard to argue with the facts. JTA
July 14th, 2008 at 9:45 am
I doubt anyone at WalMart will see this, but it’s an idea that has been simmering for a while, with no place to express it. Thanks for the chance! The main idea — Use those empty trucks.
I’m presuming most of their trucks return to their distribution sites empty; if not, this is off-track.
Why not use their trucks — on the empty return trip — to transport recyclable electronic items which have been dropped-off at individual stores?
Here’s an example: A large company is obsoleting 1000s of distributed PCs. What to do with the old ones? Drop them off at the local WalMart, where they’d be picked up by an empty WalMart truck after a delivery, and returned to WalMart’s distribution center. There, 100s of them could be sold into the recycling stream.
Thanks again.