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Have You Riven a Ford Lately?Ford's green guru discusses cars, climate, and time-warp activism18 Oct 2005
Last month, Ford Motor Co. CEO Bill Ford laid out a new vision to turn his company into a leader in technological innovation and, just perhaps, an environmental performance champion as well. His announcement, including the promise to produce 250,000 hybrids annually by 2010, comes during a time of trouble for the industry, and we watched it with keen interest.
You say more hybrids, I say more hijinks.
Photo: Wieck Media.
Early on, for example, we advised Bill Ford (then the newly appointed chair of the board) to go public with his concerns about the sustainability of SUVs. He did -- and was pounced upon by, among others, The Wall Street Journal and The New York Times. Friedmanesque journalists sputtered that William Clay Ford Jr. was a "poor little rich kid" bleating about products crucial to his company's profitability. At one stage, Ford muttered that if we were his friends, God spare him from his enemies. At other times, even after media coverage turned positive, our company teetered on the edge of resigning its relationship with Ford, feeling that, far from making progress on issues like climate change, it was going into reverse. Many environmentalists seemed to agree. The automaker has been the target of several aggressive and well-orchestrated campaigns accusing it of, among other things, being recalcitrant (to put it mildly) on climate change. Greenpeace compares the new Land Rover's fuel economy to that of the Model T, and suggests Ford's environmental performance is worse today than it was eight decades ago. Meanwhile, the Rainforest Action Network and partners are running an entire campaign dedicated to "jumpstarting" the company. While environmentalists see the major U.S. automaker and its kin as dinosaurs flailing in a tar pit largely of their own making, financial pundits confirm that the company is reeling -- costs are high, market share is falling, critics love the new Mustang but not much else, and there is even talk of bankruptcy. Many business analysts paint all Detroit automakers with the same broad brush, citing high legacy costs related to pensions and health care as the primary reason these companies can't compete with the Asian automakers generally, and Toyota in particular. So are American automakers headed for extinction? To give Grist readers a glimpse of the Ford view of the universe, we turned to Niel Golightly, the company's optimistically titled director of sustainable business strategies, who spoke to us from his office at Ford's headquarters in Dearborn, Mich.
Niel Golightly.
Photo: Ford.
Those efforts put us in a better market position today than many appreciate. And this continues -- for example, we just announced an innovation partnership on nanotechnology with Boeing and Northwestern University that could provide new breakthroughs in fuel efficiency.
Old-style sticks-and-stones attack ads and PR stunts worked when corporate leaders needed to be whacked upside the head to get them to pay attention to the issues. Then, the relatively simple challenge was to get environmental issues on the agenda -- but the issues are anything but simple, and finding solutions requires more nuance. We got the message a long time ago. Now we're spending time, energy, and billions of dollars on real solutions. More attacks won't get us to move faster.
The groups that are having an influence on us are the ones who get the fact that we're a business, and that we can help solve environmental problems only if the solutions also meet our obligations to customers, shareholders, employees, retirees, regulators, communities, dealers, and suppliers. I believe there is a growing convergence between environmental interests and business, but it will take sophisticated cooperation to realize the potential here.
At Ford, we know that our future business depends on shifting from a fossil-fuel-intensive automotive business model to more sustainable mobility options, but we can't afford to arrive at that future before consumers are willing to make the leap with us.
Anyone expecting our climate report to deliver a "eureka" solution or unilaterally to assume the burden for rolling back 100 years of accumulated infrastructure, policy, economic interest, and consumer habit will be disappointed. But anyone looking for a proactive contribution to the policy debate, an understanding of the dynamics at work in our industry, and near-term actions we can all take will, I hope, see that we're intent on skirting the tar pit. And to achieve that, our footprints are going to have to get a whole lot smaller.
Disclosing time: Seen an example of the business and environmental worlds colliding? Noticed a new trend? Well, take a letter, Maria! Address it to
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