Rotten Fruit

VP, Sustainability, Aspen Skiing Company and RMI Alumnus
November 27, 2012

Originally published on edcmag.com

Low Hanging FruitSometimes a failure can arrive disguised as a success. For example, DDT. The A-bomb. “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell.” The Industrial Revolution (if it ends up destroying civilization with runaway climate change). Highly profitable energy efficiency.

Wait—energy efficiency? Isn’t that what’s going to help save humanity?

Well, yes. Efficiency is one of the key climate solutions, according to virtually anyone thinking about the problem. Joe Romm, of the blog “Climate Progress,” points out that it’s cheap, easily and rapidly deployable, abundant, and therefore arguably the biggest carbon-free resource we have. Studies confirming this abound, whether from Mckinsey or PricewaterhouseCoopers.

So how can energy efficiency, especially the really profitable kind, be a failure dressed as success?

Here’s how: Successful energy efficiency programs almost always mean “picking the low-hanging fruit” or “cream skimming.” This means implementing the most cost-effective retrofits—upgrades that offer the largest and quickest return on investment (ROI). This sort of action is praised as “win-win” by consultants. You save tons of energy and money, and do good for the environment. What’s not to like?

Read Schendler's full post—find out what's not to like, how "picking low-hanging fruit" hurts energy efficiency efforts, and how to fix the problem.

Blog Banner

Highlighted Resources


Industry


Gathering Low-Hanging Fruit is Not Enough to Green Industry


Ski
Building a Business (and a Culture) Around Sustainability is an Evolving Process



Drought

Another Year Goes By and We Are No Closer to Solving Climate Change



Some images courtesy of Shutterstock.
 

Join the Discussion

We want to hear from you. To comment, sign in using your Google, Facebook, or RMI account. Or join to set up your RMI account.

Please Log In.

Stay informed

Subscribe
Donate Now to RMI

Most Recent Blog Posts

Energy News: The Week in Review (May 6, 2013)

READ MORE >>

Google Hangout: Oil-Free Transportation System

READ MORE >>

Finding Corporate Opportunities "en Charrette"

READ MORE >>

Top Topics