3rd Annual Catalog Environmental Scorecard Released
Nation’s Largest Financial Junk Mailers Now Included in Naughty, Nice ListInternational environmental group ForestEthics today released its
3rd annual ‘Naughty and Nice’ scorecard ranking the catalog
industry—and for the first time, financial junk mailers—on the
eco-friendliness of their paper.
Download the two-page ‘Naughty and Nice’ scorecard here.
Receiving
holiday-themed scores of Naughty, Nice, or Checking Twice, 21 companies
were evaluated according to four criteria: whether or not Endangered
Forests are cut to produce the company’s catalogs; whether the company
uses Forest Stewardship Council (FSC) certified paper; the amount of
post-consumer recycled content in the company’s direct mailings; and
the company’s efforts to reduce overall paper consumption.
Among the highlights:
•
Naughty. Financial services corporation Capitol One earned a big lump
of coal for its eagerness to fill American mailboxes with an endless
deluge of credit cards, while apparently not caring enough about their
impact on Endangered Forests to engage in dialogue with ForestEthics
for this scorecard.
• Nice! Houseware retail giant Crate &
Barrel unveiled a sterling new policy this year, with commitments to
stay out of Endangered Forests. Timberland and Bloomingdales’ catalogs
are currently being phased out entirely, providing new evidence that
the industry is more deeply integrating online commerce into their
marketing strategies. Both of these companies received across-the-board
caribou for their score.
"At Crate and Barrel, being
environmentally responsible is an ongoing mission,” said Crate &
Barrel Manager of Public Relations Vicki Lang. “We are proud of our
work with ForestEthics and hope it raises awareness that good business
practices and good environmental practices need not be mutually
exclusive".
ForestEthics spokesperson Ginger Cassady added:
“Bloomingdales and Crate & Barrel have joined the ranks of
companies improving their environmental performance, and in doing so
have helped raise the standards of the catalog industry. Public concern
for the environment has never been stronger, and consumers expect
brands they trust to meet new standards for environmental, social, and
economic responsibility.”
The ‘Naughty and Nice’ list finds a
direct mail industry in transition, with some companies quickly
adopting ‘green’ practices while many others stubbornly clinging to
outdated standards. However, the overall trend is one of progress, as
10 companies made Santa’s ‘Nice’ list this year, one more than a year
ago and more than three times the number in 2005 (3).
This
year’s ‘Naughty and Nice’ list includes junk mailers from the financial
sector, which Americans cite as a prime example of junk mail and find
annoying and wasteful. ForestEthics is sponsoring a campaign to
establish a national Do Not Mail Registry, and the petition at
donotmail.org last week surpassed 75,000 signatures. A national
registry would allow people a fast, free, and enforceable way to get
rid of unwanted junk mail.
100 million trees are logged each
year to produce the more then 100 billion pieces of junk mail Americans
receive each year, while 89% of Americans support the creation of a Do
Not Mail Registry. ForestEthics launched their Do Not Mail campaign on
March 12 of this year.












