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David Betke’s perspective on saving our environment
The bullfrogpowered community is made up of a diverse group of organizations that care about the environment. We’re highlighting one organization that’s making a difference in the events world: Do Better Marketing. A Bullfrog customer since 2008, Do Better Marketing and its founder David Betke have a long history of environmental innovation. Below is a guest post from David, highlighting why he’s passionate about the environment.
You may have noticed the word “our” instead of “the” environment in the title. Why? Because one word can change everything, but more on that later.
My career serving the events industry began 30 years ago, kind of by accident. I had recently graduated from university and was living outside Nelson, BC. The government had just announced that a large area on the West Arm of Kootenay Lake was slated to be clear-cut logged. A community roadblock ensued. I decided, however, to take a different path and created several thought-provoking t-shirt designs, called Ecotoons™, then set off across the country to colleges and universities to tell our story.
Engaging students was easy, but I had to engage the broader communities, so during the day, I would sell at the schools, and in the evenings, I would visit health food stores, asking them to sell the shirts and carry the petition.
The challenge was that most health food stores didn’t carry clothing, so I had to make the business case. So, I offered to unabashedly promote them for the week I was selling at the school and drive a new demographic to their stores. If they weren’t on board for the cause alone, they certainly were once I made the business case.
In all, 180 stores nationwide joined the campaign, sending thousands of petition signatures and letters to the BC government and tipping the scales to reverse the logging decision and establish the West Arm Provincial Park. The 65000-acre forest is now protected forever.
Soon after, several businesses and festivals asked me to start printing their t-shirts and producing their event swag. Instead of just saying yes, I asked what they wanted the swag to do for them and if we could help them make the business case to their audiences. Many said yes.
Since then, my campaigns have successfully raised awareness of the global amphibian extinction crisis and the role marketing waste has in it, helped reduce carbon emissions in a pilot project for the City of Edmonton, reduced municipal water consumption, and recently helped mold public opinion to create another Regional Park in Southern BC.
In 2018, I began a mission to reduce waste in the events industry. It began with my frustration watching my clients exhibit at trade shows and wasting money, opportunities, and trees.
There were two glaring problems: The first was catalogue and brochure waste. Often it was less expensive to leave undistributed catalogues behind than it was to ship them home. That leads to a lot of wasted money and trees at every event. The second issue was that exhibitors were giving away all sorts of disposable shiny things to attract people to their booths but attracting more freebie-seekers than those interested in what they offered. After the show, they would receive a list of who attended their booths but have no idea of each person’s interest level. This led to a lot of work for marketing and HR in the follow-up. Often, the follow-up didn’t happen at all, and clients would question the effectiveness of exhibiting.
To address these issues, I created GreenTexts™ and GreenTaps™, both employed by the Edmonton Convention Centre.
GreenTexts™ is an app that empowers environmentally conscious attendees to receive catalogues digitally, with a simple text at participating booths. Less carrying around heavy bags for attendees, less wasted trees, and lower printing costs for the exhibitor. Post-show, exhibitors also receive a list of segmented leads so sales can hit the ground running.
GreenTaps™ makes it easy for people to download an exhibitor’s marketing materials by simply tapping their phones on a programmable sticker attached to the booth. More trees saved!
Then COVID hit, and like many in our industry, we had to adapt to survive. No events meant no demand for promotional products nor our apps.
So, we created GreenShows™, our virtual event platform with a strong sustainability focus. In fact, it is the world’s first carbon-neutral virtual events platform. We buy carbon offsets for every event we produce, plant trees for every booth we build, and give attendees the option to give trees instead of plastic swag to attract people to join their lists. Our goal is to deliver more carbon-negative meetings and events.
As of February, we have booked six new events and planted 1600 more trees. Our future is green!
Back to one word can change everything. I am on a mission to change how we refer to our environment in conversations, from THE to OUR. Why?
When we refer to our environment as THE environment, it is separate from us. It is something that can be commodified, exploited, and sold.
However, when we say OUR environment, our minds naturally shift to responsibility, stewardship, and accountability. When we see it is OURS, we are no longer separate from it; we have to do something to protect it.
Let’s be more conscious of OUR environment, and recruit a broader audience by continuing to make the business case for sustainability.
Less Emissions now offers corporate shipping offsets, with Freightzy leading the way
Here at Bullfrog Power, we make it simple to choose green energy alternatives. But not all aspects of your carbon footprint are that easy to shrink. Less Emissions, our sister company, provides high-quality carbon offsets to help businesses and individuals address the emissions that are difficult to reduce or eliminate, like those from air travel. And now, Less can help companies achieve carbon neutral shipping.
Reducing the emissions from large transport is a difficult area to tackle. One day, electric trucks will likely be a viable green option. But until then, quality offsets are a much-needed way for organizations to address their emissions from first- or third-party shipping.
Freightzy sets an example for the shipping industry
Freightzy, a Guelph-based sole-source logistics provider that offers complete supply chain and shipping solutions, partnered with Less to offer a carbon neutral shipping option for their customers.
Sean Freedman, President of Freightzy, noted that the transportation sector produces about a third of greenhouse gas emissions in both the USA and Canada. “We want to be a leader in addressing the impact of our sector on climate change,” said Freedman. “By partnering with Less Emissions, we can offer our customers a greener way to bring their products to market.”
For clients who participate in Freightzy’s Carbon Neutral Program, Freightzy will purchase Gold Standard offsets on less than truckload (LTL) shipments booked directly through their portal. For all other modes of transit shipped with Freightzy, they will calculate the emissions and offer their clients the opportunity to purchase offsets through Less’s portfolio of Gold Standard projects. This allows Freightzy’s customers to address their Scope 3 emissions from shipping.
“I hope to inspire other logistics companies to offset emissions from customer shipments. The business case for us to do this makes sense, and I hope my competitors will do the same.”
Sean Freedman, President of Freightzy
Driving positive social impact with carbon neutral shipping
Freightzy is passionate about carbon neutral shipping and supporting sustainable ways of doing business. They began testing their program with a few clients in January 2020—collectively, they offset 47.41 tonnes of CO2 emissions. According to the EPA, that’s equivalent to the greenhouse gas emissions from ten passenger vehicles being driven for a year.
Choosing offsets with positive social impacts was also important to Freightzy. They chose Less Emissions’ Gold Standard offsets, which come from projects that meet at least three of the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals.
Purchasing carbon offsets from projects that support sustainable development in vulnerable communities ensures that offsetting also contributes to climate justice. Gold Standard-certified projects aim to improve the lives of those least responsible for the problem and least economically equipped to adapt to the changing conditions caused by climate change.
Freightzy Carbon Neutral customers are currently supporting three Gold Standard projects:
- A solid waste treatment plant in Vietnam that captures methane gas emissions from municipal waste and converts organic materials into sustainable compost for local farmers
- A biogas project in Thailand that captures biogas from wastewater from the Thai San Miguel Liquor distillery (TSML) and converts it into electricity
- A waste-heat-capture project at the Yingxin Glassworks Factory in China, where four boilers convert waste heat into electricity used for glass production
WWF-Canada
Using only habitat-friendly renewable energy is vital to combating climate change so that nature, wildlife and people can thrive together. Bullfrog Power is an important part of that fight, and World Wildlife Fund Canada is proud to be bullfrogpowered.
Volta Technique: making grid-scale energy storage from thin air
While navigating a global pandemic and a just recovery, we want to amplify the stories of those who are working towards a low-carbon future, like Volta Technique. To build a vibrant low-carbon economy, we’ll need innovative tech that supports our needs while preserving the environment. That’s why Bullfrog Power is sponsoring the Centre for Social Innovation’s Earth Tech, an accelerator for startups and nonprofits working on climate and freshwater solutions.
As we work to decarbonize the power grid, energy storage will be essential for meeting peak electricity demand without fossil fuels. But storing energy is difficult and often prohibitively expensive. Amir Pahlevanpour and Kamyar Rouindej founded Volta Technique with the goal of solving one of the climate crisis’ biggest challenges by bringing clean, effective, and low-cost storage to market.
Volta’s proprietary V-CESS technology uses compressed air energy storage (CAES) to efficiently store electricity at low costs for long durations. It can then regenerate power during peak demand periods at a large scale.
Shooting the breeze
Amir and Kamyar became friends during their Ph.D. programs at the University of Waterloo. “One day we were having one of our usual geeky conversations,” Kamyar remembered, “and I explained my research in more detail: an innovative and cost-effective way of storing electricity using air.”
His idea was to use excess electricity to compress air to high pressures and store it underground in tanker-like air caverns. Then, when there’s more demand for electricity, the air is fed through a turbine to regenerate electricity. In essence, it’s a mechanical battery that uses air instead of chemicals to store energy.
Kamyar’s innovative design also has much higher round-trip efficiency compared to existing technology because it recycles the heat generated during air compression. The thermal energy is stored separately, and then used to reheat the air before it enters the turbine.
The idea caught Amir’s attention, and they explored the potential applications and commercial value of the technology. Given that Kamyar and Amir were both entrepreneurial and had complimentary skill sets, they decided to start a venture after graduating. “We heard about the Earth Tech accelerator and decided to apply,” Amir said. “The moment that we heard our pitch had been successful, we knew that we had something that could really make a difference.”
Charging up
Having spent more than a decade in academia and the corporate world, Kamyar understood the slow pace and hurdles that cleantech innovations face on their way to market. Being part of an accelerator like Earth Tech meant a lot to him. “It introduced us to our cohort, a large group of like-minded individuals and teams who are doing their best to tackle the climate crisis,” he said. “Beyond that, the program gave us visibility and greater access to executives, investors, and the best mentor we could have asked for, Helen Platis. She’s not only a great mentor, but also a true friend.”
Given the pandemic, Volta’s biggest challenge right now is coping with financial instability and risk-aversion from investors. Limited access to capital is stalling their field testing, data collection, and technology analysis. “Nevertheless, we’ve been able to form some important partnerships with other companies and academia that will help us accelerate development and commercialization of our product,” Kamyar said.
Always evolving
Kamyar noted that the average hardware-based cleantech product takes four years or more to reach commercialization. After two years at Volta, the founders are still enjoying the journey of entrepreneurship. “I believe our biggest achievement to date has been creating awareness about climate change and the potential for innovative clean energy technologies to mitigate its environmental effects,” Kamyar said.
The Volta founders believe that raising awareness is the first step towards addressing climate change. “It starts with climate literacy, an understanding of the mutual impact of climate and society on each other,” Kamyar said. “This crisis requires much more attention from the tech and business sectors—they should be prioritizing products that address the root causes of climate change.”
“[Addressing climate change] starts with climate literacy, an understanding of the mutual impact of climate and society on each other.”
Kamyar Rouindej
Amir added that if and when the world adopts Volta’s technology, we’ll have fewer gas-fueled power plants, our data centres will use less energy to run and cool their servers, and large commercial facilities will emit fewer emissions to keep their buildings warm or cool. That’s a greener, smarter future worth fighting for.
Curious about other Earth Tech ventures? Read how Solar Wind Reliance Initiatives combines wind and solar to bring renewables to remote communities.
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