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Will BP Spill Spawn Innovation, Or Just Logo Spoofs?

A week ago, reporters arrived at my office, looking for an opinion on a new Greenpeace contest to redesign BP’s ‘Beyond Petroleum’ logo to something “more suitable for their dirty business.”

The reporters pointed me to a Flickr site with hundreds of contest entries – some amateurish, others clearly done by professional art directors and graphic designers.

The only response I could summon was, what a profound waste of time and energy.

My dismay wasn’t rooted in the lack of originality – there were some nice designs. The problem lay in a flawed brief.

Demonizing BP today is as useful as criticizing Nero’s violin skills while Rome burned. It may make you feel superior and provide a self-righteous snicker. But at best, it’s a superficial, unproductive pleasure. At worst, it squanders creative energy that could be put to use creating positive action.

We are teetering at the edge of one of the most significant tipping points on the road to sustainability. Not only is BP’s spill a brutally public disaster, but it coincides with a movement to clean energy that is getting public attention, government stimulus funds and venture capital. Meanwhile, companies like Wal-Mart and Nike are demonstrating sustainability and profit do go hand in hand. And politicians – especially at the municipal level – are starting to come out openly in favor of green.

So will the BP disaster be a catalyst that tips us toward unprecedented green innovation? That depends on both the spill, and our reaction to it.

Will it be bad enough to do good?

It may sound like a cruel joke, but the longer the BP spill lasts, the more likely it will lead to real change.

Short, horrific accidents shock and stun us. But they don’t tend to prod us out of our complacency. All too often, they become yesterday’s news instead a force for change.

The BP spill, on the other hand, has unfolded over months. And every day, there are shocking new revelations that keep it in the headlines.

As a result, we’ve seen President Obama not only demand big penalties and reparations, but also tie the spill to the need for clean energy. If it takes several more months to bring the spill under control, the clean energy talk might actually manifest itself in real initiatives, and begin to create positive change – providing the sort of tangible evidence people need in order to believe a clean alternative to oil exists.

Where are the innovations?

Where could creative energy be directed to create positive action in the wake of the spill? I believe there is opportunity in two areas: innovation in the states hurt by the spill, and innovation at BP.

1. Greening the Gulf

According to Forbes, Mississippi, Louisiana and Alabama are 46th, 47th and 48th in ‘green state’ rankings – nearly dead last. As the article accompanying the rankings reports “All suffer from a mix of toxic waste, lots of pollution and consumption, and no clear plans to do anything about it.” Could the oil spill, and the reparations being paid, provide a catalyst to jump start sustainability in these states?

There is precedent for this sort of ‘phoenix from the ashes’ transformation. When the Berlin Wall came down, West Germany discovered the manufacturing and business infrastructure in the East was so decrepit that much of it couldn’t be saved. As a result, massive rebuilding projects were initiated. Today, East German production facilities rival those in the West.

If the Gulf states use stimulus money to engineer a green version of East Germany’s transformation, perhaps it would incentivize companies looking for green facilities and infrastructure to move in. Imagine locating a green energy research and development hub in Louisiana.

2. Creating a better BP

As Brandchannel noted, it’s not certain that the BP brand will survive the spill. If it does, perhaps the greatest apology to North America it could offer would be to honor it’s original promise of pushing ‘Beyond Petroleum’.

Currently, the vast majority of BP’s revenue is derived from fossil fuels, with only a token amount coming from clean energy. Could that imbalance be amended, with oil revenues being pumped into clean energy ventures?

Or could BP partner with clean energy tycoons like T.Boone Pickens, himself an ex-oilman who is now the most public supporter of wind power for the US?

There is clearly a need for a radical transformation if the oil giant is to survive. There is consumer demand for clean energy. Harness enough brains, and we may have a shot at filling an innovation pipeline with ideas that could transform the economy.

A better use for our creativity than designing spoof logos, to be certain.

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Discussion:    Add a Comment | Comments 1-6 of 6 | Latest Comment

June 26, 2010 7:33 PM

Wow - since I live smack in the middle of this crisis on a daily basis it's really hard to swallow the concept that if the spill lasts longer we'll have better change! In the meantime we will loose entire species of sealife as well as bring extreme illness to entire human populations. I understand your perspective about short term problems just temporarily shocking us...but....I don't want to hold out an image of hope for a LONGER time to resolve this. You remind me of a woman who owns a hurricane shutter company who announced at a networking meeting the other day that if we get a storm, the stronger it is the more the sprayed oil will be disolved, so she thought we should all hope for a CAT 5! hmm.. thanks for your perspective anyway.

June 27, 2010 3:57 PM

Libbie,

No disrespect was intended. I realize we can't put ourselves in your shoes, and any outside comments by people who aren't living the nightmare probably come across across as callous and uninformed.

My only point was, that a short, sudden disaster tends to create shock and horror, but all too often it is displaced as news before it can create positive, lasting change.

My hope is that this terrible tragedy will, by the time it is over, produce lasting change that moves us away from dependence on oil. We're making a real mess of our planet, but because we're doing it by degrees, we aren't ringing the alarm bells and creating innovation that will move us down a saner path. I hope the gulf oil disaster will move us to real action.

Cheers

M

June 28, 2010 9:35 PM

I am shocked at how little press - accurate telling of what is actually happening is being made readily available to the public. It seems as though for those who are not directly in the 'danger zone' that time only serves as it always does, to decrease interest and attention. So the logo campaign may serve to keep the ongoing events in the public eye. And refocusing on what is clearly a problem for everyone is a good thing.
I was listening to the CBC radio recently and the story related to the Alberta Oil Sands and the commentator brought in compared oil companies' efforts to produce fossil fuels in cleaner ways was akin to producing heroine in cleaner ways. Who cares, you still get heroine? And so it's true for fossil fuels. The spill should encourage actually clean energy production. Germany has shown enormous strides in not only the technology but the applications as well. Perhaps it's time we in North America started to expand on technologies that can be produced locally and free us from a product that is not only toxic to obtain but is also toxic to use. Sure it may shrink some historically wealthy companies' bottom lines but that's what capitalism is about - profit from products that people want, perish when producing products no one wants.

June 29, 2010 11:59 AM

Thanks for your great input, YGWS (or may I call you GW for short?)

I have been getting terrific input from lots of folks on this article. Some thoughts that may flow nicely from yours...

One person wrote in, talking about how he couldn't imagine living without a car, until he crashed his car and HAD to do without for a while. As he got in the groove of biking / zipcar use, he found he just couldn't be bothered getting a car. His friends thought he had a screw loose - like him a few months earlier, they couldn't envision a world without their car. It seems the biggest barrier (at least for folks in an urban setting) is the mental barrier.

As for damage, I just got this great link to a website documenting the as-yet-undocumented damage from the spill. Doesn't make you want to jump up and bake a cake, but it gives some grim perspective - http://www.time.com/time/health/article/0,8599,1999479,00.html

Thanks again for your great feedback.

M

August 16, 2010 4:23 AM

We know that most of the household insurances are sold AFTER a disaster has happened. Nobody really believes that he/she too can be a victim of a catastrophe. I tend to agree that such disasters create eyes wide open to the vulnerabilty of the humany race and the eco systems.

August 16, 2010 12:08 PM

Too true, Attila.

Cheers

M

Discussion:    Add a Comment | Back to Top | Comments 1-6 of 6 | Latest Comment

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