More

    Latest Posts

    Is the UK a world apart?

    Is the UK large-format print sector lagging behind when it comes to environmental responsibility? Market data suggests that’s the case as Walter Hale explains.

    The average concentration of carbon dioxide in Earth’s
    atmosphere topped 410 parts per million in April 2018.
    Measurements from Hawaii’s Mauna Loa Observatory
    show that the CO2 level is now higher than at anytime
    in the past 800,000 years. For the record, homo sapiens
    have lived on this planet for 200,000 years.

    You don’t need to be a climatologist to instinctively feel
    that is not good news. Tech futurist Michael K. Spencer
    explains just how grim the rise in CO2 could become: “The
    last time this occurred was likely in the Pliocene era, 2
    million – 4.6 million years ago, when sea levels were 60 – 80
    feet higher than they are today. It could also have occurred
    in the Miocene era, 10 million – 14 million years ago, when
    seas were 100 feet higher than now.” No wonder Spencer
    concludes: “As humans, we are pioneers, we’re also
    destroyers. The destroyer of worlds? We’ll find out one day –
    if we’re not extinct before that happens.”

    This is the kind of doomsday scenario that brought the
    environmental issue to the fore a decade ago and prompted
    businesses as diverse as Unilever, McDonalds, Marks &
    Spencer and Pepsi to publish ambitious plans to reduce
    their carbon footprint. Public concern has waxed and waned
    since, in part, because our brains cannot easily compute
    what climatologists are telling us. Only when the threat
    becomes specific and vivid – as it did with the revelation that
    plastic waste has been found in the Mariana trench, the
    deepest part of the oceans – is public interest reignited.

    The inconsistency in attitude is reflected in two recent
    surveys: the Image Reports Widthwise Report (which
    accompanies this issue) and Fespa’s latest Print Census.
    Seven out of ten British print service providers told
    Widthwise that clients had never asked them about their
    environmental accreditation – although 39.1% said they
    had some. The picture is muddied further because 45.0%
    of respondents said offering greener print options is more
    important now than it was two years ago.

    Those findings suggest that many British print buyers –
    and by extension their print suppliers – are not that worried
    about the environment. This is exactly the opposite of
    what Fespa found with its global Print Census. Collecting
    data from 102 countries, the census revealed that 76% of
    print service providers said customer specifications on the
    sustainability of manufacturing and materials was shaping their business strategy, with more than one in five saying it is
    was a major influence.

    Prompted by customer demand, just under one in three
    have invested in energy-efficient or environmentally certified
    equipment, while others have trained staff on sustainability,
    switched to VOC-free inks and recyclable media or instituted
    end-to-life recycling programmes.

    So is the UK lagging behind the rest of the world? Distracted
    by withdrawal from the European Union was widely expected
    to lead to a loosening – or abolition – of many environmental
    regulations. Yet as the day of departure nears, that – like
    almost everything else about Brexit – looks far from certain.

    PSPs that work for publicly quoted – or multinational –
    businesses may well find that not much changes. These
    clients are acutely aware of the damage to their reputation an
    environmental scandal can cause – which is one reason so
    many of them pledged to reduce plastic waste so swiftly after
    the recent newspaper headlines.

    If anything, sustainability is becoming more of a priority
    for big consumer-facing companies partly out of enlightened
    self-interest but also because they know it is expected
    by Millennials, who already account for £2trillion in global
    consumer spending. In a recent survey, 87% of US Millennials
    said they would be more loyal to a company that helped them
    contribute to social and environmental issues.

    This is a powerful argument for the wide-format sector,
    as a consumer of plastic-based media, to think much more
    ambitiously – and strategically – about its carbon footprint. New
    substrates, new consumables, new renewable sources of
    energy, new ways of providing end-to-life recycling – in the not
    too distant future, these will all be just table stakes for PSPs
    who want to work with large companies.

    Let’s face facts, the wide-format sector does not want to get
    on the wrong side of Sir David Attenborough, whose recent TV
    series ‘The Blue Planet II’ exposed the damage plastic waste
    is doing to our oceans. That is one PR battle the industry could
    never win.

    Latest Posts

    spot_imgspot_img

    Don't Miss

    Stay in touch

    To be updated with all the latest news, offers and special announcements.