World Environment Day June 6
Industries Cashing In On Americans' Poor Environmental Habits
June 3, 2008
Los Angeles, CA - While households
are slow to turn out the lights and separate perishables
from plastics, some industry sectors are posting impressive
profits from America's poor environmental progress, including
waste collection and management companies, recycling facilities,
and environmental consultants, according to industry analysts
IBISWorld,Inc., (www.ibisworld.com), recognized as one of
the nation's most respected independent publishers of business
intelligence research.
Municipal Solid Waste
"On the backdrop of World Environment Day on June
5, environmental habits and recycling efforts in the U.S.
lag far behind European nations," said Mr. George Van
Horn, a senior analyst with IBISWorld. "Our latest
reports reveal that as a nation, Americans generate more
waste than any other nation in the world – an astounding
4.5 pounds of municipal solid waste (MSW) per person per
day, 55 percent of which is contributed as residential garbage."
He added, "The remaining 45 percent of waste in the
U.S.'s ‘waste stream' comes from manufacturing, retailing,
and commercial trade in the U.S. economy."
And of the 245,700M tons (up from 88M tons in 1960) of
the MSW that Americans produce each year, only 32 percent
is recycled or composted. By comparison, around 70 percent
of the MSW in Germany and Norway is recycled or composted
– world-leaders in the "Green Movement."
Carbon Dioxide Emissions Add To Global Warming
Concerns
The U.S. accounts for only 4.6 percent of the world's population,
yet the U.S. produces nearly a quarter of all carbon dioxide
emissions, compared with China, a nation with approximately
oneB people, or 21 percent of the global population but
only 13 percent of the world's carbon dioxide emissions.
This will soon change as carbon dioxide emissions in China
and India are expected to soar in the next few years as
both nations' economies grow, producing a larger middle
class, rapid increases in consumption, and more carbon dioxide
emissions. European Union countries, which make up 6.3 percent
of the world's population, produces 14 percent of global
carbon dioxide emissions, still a far better record than
the U.S.
Power Consumption Continues Upward Trend
Despite headlines about global warming and campaigns urging
consumers to consider conservation, Americans continue to
devour resources at an alarming rate. For example, over
the past four years, electricity consumption in the U.S.
has risen 1.46 percent between 2004 and 2008 (figures inMs
of kilowatt hours a year). IBISWorld estimates that regardless
of current "go green" talk, power consumption
will hit 4,333,631M kilowatt hours by 2013 resulting in
a growth rate of 1.93 percent over the next five years:
- 2004 – 3,715,949
- 2005 – 3,815,668
- 2006 – 3,816,846
- 2007 – 3,904,362
- 2008 – 3,937,879
- 2009 – 4,012,900
- 2010 – 4,090,093
- 2011 – 4,171,770
- 2012 – 4,250,949
- 2013 – 4,333,631
Water Supply And Consumption Concerns
We are a thirsty nation too. IBISWorld estimates that the
typical single family home consumes 69.3 gallons of water
per day. These figures are alarming in some parts of the
country where water supplies are dangerously low due to
drought, particularly in the West and the South East region
of the U.S. Consumption of residential water breaks down
into five areas according to the American Water Works Association
(www.awwa.org) and (www.DrinkTap.org):
- Toilet use – 26.7 percent
- Washing machines – 21.7 percent
- Showers and baths –16.8 percent
- Faucet use –15.7 percent; and,
- Leaks –13.7 percent
If consumers install efficient water fixtures and check
for leaks regularly, daily per capita water use would reduce
by 35 percent, or 45.2 gallons per day. If every U.S. household
installed water-saving technology, about 5.4B gallons of
water would be saved each day, which translates into dollar-volume
savings of $11.3M per day, or more than $4B per year.
Good News For Garbage Collection, Recycling And
Disposal Services And while copious consumption
in the U.S. points to our poor performance on the environmental
frontline, the country's excessive waste production is good
news for the business of garbage collection – with
many communities demanding expanded collection, recycling
and disposal services, and large companies jumping at the
chance to boost revenues.
"This year, the waste collection industry's revenue
rose 4.5 percent to $39.87B, following several strong years
in terms of increased demand for waste management services,"
said Mr. Van Horn. "Opportunities have arisen for industrial
waste specialists as a result local government agencies
outsourcing waste collection and management to private operators,
heightened public environmental concern, enhanced demand
for the collection, and processing of recyclable materials."
"Major players making the most out of our wasteful
ways include larger companies that are vertically integrating
their waste management services to include collection, recycling,
transfer, and disposal services, which boost their advantage
when tendering for collection contracts," said Mr.
Van Horn. "Waste Management is on example. We predict
the trend toward privatizing collection services will continue,
as they are on the whole 'more efficient', use more effective
pickup crews, have lower absenteeism, and higher productivity,
because they serve more households per hour and often acquire
standardized trucks with increased capacity."
And while the past few decades have seen rubbish production
rise rapidly in the U.S., there has been somewhat of a turnaround
in recent years with the amount of MSW produced decreasing
marginally as the "go green" message has started
to get through. Unfortunately, IBISWorld believes the U.S.
will return to rising waste volumes over the next five years,
albeit at a slow rate of around 0.5 percent a year. At the
same time, revenues for waste collectors will grow by 3.48
percent per year.
New Initiatives On The Horizon
Although it may seem that community and government pressure
to reduce waste at its source would be bad news for the
wider waste industry, new initiatives, such as those in
California, and New York move to raise their requirements
for a set amount of waste to be diverted from the waste
stream from 50 percent to 75 percent – a change that
can produce a healthy profits for companies that collect
and process recyclables. Recycling facilities currently
generate estimated revenues of $2,981M a year, and times
have been good. Growth has exceeded 7 percent per year for
the past five years due to rising waste volumes and increasing
recyclable commodity prices.
Mr. Van Horn warns of the danger of pushing recycling rates
to unprecedented levels in the face of weak recycled material
markets, saying operators may experience diminishing returns
and extremely high marginal costs. He added, "Revenue
growth for the next few years would be at a more modest
rate of around 2.1 percent per year as a result of rising
household waste volumes stemming from higher per capita
consumption of take-away and highly-processed, and packaged,
foods; together with strong community and government pressure
to boost recycling rates.
"Firms engaged in environmental consulting have done
particularly well in recent years," said Mr. Van Horn.
In fact, industry revenue is expected to hit $12.6B in 2008
– up 9.7 percent from 2007. Next year will be even
better with industry revenue forecast to rise another 11.3
percent to $14.07B. And with 2008 being an election year,
Mr. Van Horn said the push, and press, toward environmentally
friendly practices is stronger, and more highly publicised
than ever before as businesses and politicians, strive to
appear "green" in a bid to gain favor, and eventually
political office."
"Developing these policies, and then later implementing
them, all require the services of environmental consultants,
and as firms become increasingly aware of their environmental
impact – and as a marketing tool – environmental
consultants can look forward to not just a bumper year,
but a bumper decade," said Mr. Van Horn.
"Advisory services will also do well by servicing
private businesses keen to change their policies and practices
to promote the ‘go green' message, either for the
benefit of the environment, for positive publicity, or to
attract or placate staff," said Mr. Van Horn. "Other
industries set to do well out of the focus on global warming
and climate change include construction companies focusing
on building "green" buildings, and environmental
engineers.
New Innovation On The Way
And interestingly, IBISWorld reports that while the energy
industry is central to the problem of climate change, with
fossil fuel burning lying at the heart of the issue, it
may also end up a major financial winner from the environmental
debate, by focusing on producing energy through geothermal
sources, windmill farms, solar energy, and other developing
technologies.
"Ethanol production will continue to expand as biofuels
attract increasing attention as an alternative energy source,
and we may see investment tax credits for the construction
of bio-refineries to convert cellulose to transportation
and other bio-based products," said Mr. Van Horn.
"While nations around the world are investing in boosting
the production of bio-based fuels at competitive prices
to replace petroleum-based products," Mr. Van Horn
added, "biotechnology corporations are rubbing their
hands at the prospect of big breakthroughs and the funds
that will pour through in future years if they are able
to develop cost-effective, environmentally-friendly alternatives
to petroleum."
"Across the board, entrepreneurial companies are working
frantically to drive innovations which may result in new
product development, products with higher profit margins,
or competitive advantage, as the climate change issue is
only going to gather momentum," said Mr. Van Horn.
"These problems are certainly not going away, and any
industry which can ‘go green' cost-effectively will
benefit from an improved public image and the perception
at least of being well ahead competitors."
SOURCE: IBISWorld