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Can Burt’s Bees Turn Clorox Green?

Bob Rowe

Roxanne Quimby and Burt Shavitz in 2001. The two started Burt’s Bees, now part of Clorox.

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Published: January 6, 2008

IN the summer of 1984, Burt Shavitz, a beekeeper in Maine, picked up Roxanne Quimby, a 33-year-old single mother down on her luck, as she hitchhiked to the post office in Dexter, Me. More than a dozen years Ms. Quimby’s senior, the guy locals called “the bee-man” sold honey in pickle jars from the back of his pickup truck. To Ms. Quimby, he seemed to be living an idyllic life in the wilderness (including making his home inside a small turkey coop).

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Karen Tam for the New York Times

John Replogle, C.E.O. of Burt’s Bees, tastes the company’s avocado butter hair product.

She offered to help Mr. Shavitz tend to his beehives. The two became lovers and eventually birthed Burt’s Bees, a niche company famous for beeswax lip balm, lotions, soaps and shampoos, as well as for its homespun packaging and feel-good, eco-friendly marketing. The bearded man whose image is used to peddle the products is modeled after Mr. Shavitz.

Today, the couple’s quirky enterprise is owned by the Clorox Company, a consumer products giant best known for making bleach, which bought it for $913 million in November. Clorox plans to turn Burt’s Bees into a mainstream American brand sold in big-box stores like Wal-Mart. Along the way, Clorox executives say, they plan to learn from unusual business practices at Burt’s Bees — many centered on environmental sustainability. Clorox, the company promises, is going green.

But not even Clorox can sanitize the details of a fallout between Mr. Shavitz and Ms. Quimby that began in the late 1990s — when Ms. Quimby managed to buy out the bee-man for a low, six-figure sum. She has been paid more than $300 million for her stake in Burt’s Bees, and she spends her time traveling, refurbishing fancy homes in Florida and preserving large tracts of land in Maine. Burt himself, now 72, makes his home again in the converted turkey coop — expanded but without running water or electricity — but with $4 million or so to his name.

As unlikely as their journeys have been, Ms. Quimby and Mr. Shavitz are pioneers in an entrepreneurial movement that has lately won the affection of corporate behemoths.

Clorox was willing to pay almost $1 billion for Burt’s Bees because big companies see big opportunities in the market for green products. From 2000 to 2007, Burt’s Bees’ annual revenue soared to $164 million from $23 million. Analysts say there is far more growth to be had by it and its competitors as consumers keep gravitating toward products that promise organic and environmental benefits.

In the last couple of years, L’Oréal paid $1.4 billion for the Body Shop and Colgate-Palmolive bought 84 percent of Tom’s of Maine, which makes natural toothpaste and deodorant, for $100 million. Clorox is also creating eco-friendly product lines of its own.

Many corporate leaders have sold their shareholders on green initiatives by pointing out that they help cut costs — an argument that is more persuasive now, while energy costs are sky high. But as companies rush to put out more and more “natural,” “organic” or “green” products, consumers and advocacy groups are increasingly questioning the meaning of these labels.

Clorox, for one, will face plenty of skepticism. Environmentalists have long said that bleach is harmful when drained into city sewers. The disinfectant has become a stand-in for jokes about chemicals and the environment, and a new round seems to have begun this fall when the company acquired Burt’s Bees.

“Who likes Burt’s Bees now that it’s been bought by Clorox?” Alison Stewart, a host on National Public Radio, said in November. “You know, just slap some bleach on your lips, it’ll all be good.”

Clorox executives have been fighting what they call “misinformation” about bleach for years. The company says that 95 to 98 percent of its bleach breaks into salt and water and that the remaining byproduct is safe for sewer systems. And Clorox sells many products that have nothing to do with bleach — including Brita water filters, Glad trash bags and Hidden Valley salad dressings.

Still, after Clorox agreed to buy Burt’s Bees last fall, scores of customers called Burt’s Bees and accused the company of selling out. John Replogle, the chief executive of Burt’s Bees, says he personally responded to customers who left their phone numbers.

“Don’t judge Clorox as much by where they’ve been as much as where they intend to go,” Mr. Replogle says he told them.

For her part, Ms. Quimby is at peace with the Clorox deal. “I feel the fact that I was able to sell the company accelerated the process of land conservation in terms of what I could do,” she says. “So if there is any negative karma, I’m neutral.”

BACK in 1984, at the end of their first summer together, Mr. Shavitz suggested that Ms. Quimby use some of his beeswax to make candles. She did, and the candles sold for $3 a pair at a crafts fair. Ms. Quimby then started experimenting, making beeswax polishes for shoes and furniture from recipes she found in an old farmer’s manual. Those products found some fans, but didn’t sell well.

When the pair incorporated as a company — in 1989 or 1991, no one can quite remember when — Mr. Shavitz owned one-third and Ms. Quimby owned two-thirds, she says. The famous Burt’s Bees lip balm was born in 1991, and that item, a combination of beeswax and sweet almond oil, helped the company find a niche in personal care products.

Mr. Shavitz was still active in the company in 1993, when they moved its base to North Carolina. Sales had reached $3 million a year, and they wanted to find a state with lower taxes and more workers to keep their business growing, Ms. Quimby says.

During this time, the couple had a falling-out, their romance became strained, and Mr. Shavitz decided to return to Maine. It is unclear exactly when he moved back permanently; Ms. Quimby said it was in 1993, but in a written response to questions, Mr. Shavitz implied that it was later.

What is clear is that Mr. Shavitz lost out on a huge payday. In 1999, Ms. Quimby bought out his one-third share in Burt’s Bees by buying him a house in Maine. Much grander than a turkey coop, the home cost $130,000, Ms. Quimby says. She now calls that figure “embarrassing” considering how much she made from the company.

Mr. Shavitz did not respond when asked if he hired advisers to determine whether he had been paid a fair valuation for his stake. He sold the house in Maine a few months after Ms. Quimby bought it for him because, she says, he missed his turkey coop. (He has since enlarged it to about 12 feet by 20 feet.)

By 2000, Burt’s Bees was pulling in $23 million in revenue, according to the company. Ms. Quimby said she had always intended to sell the company and had received offers for quite some time before she put it up for auction in 2003. That year, AEA Investors, a private equity firm in New York, paid Ms. Quimby $141.6 million for an 80 percent stake in Burt’s Bees. If Mr. Shavitz had held onto the stake he traded to Ms. Quimby for $130,000, it would have been worth about $59 million.

At the time of that deal, Mr. Shavitz demanded more money and Ms. Quimby said she agreed to pay him $4 million. Burt’s Bees also pays Mr. Shavitz an undisclosed amount each year for using his name and image on its products. Through a Burt’s Bees spokeswoman, Mr. Shavitz declined to comment on any payments he had received or the reasons for his fallout with Ms. Quimby. When asked if he and Ms. Quimby were still friends, Mr. Shavitz said, “Sure.”

“What happened between us in our personal relationship in the past is history,” he said in a statement. “The magic of living life for me is, and always has been, the magic of living on the land, not in the magic of money.”

Under AEA’s watch, Burt’s Bees products expanded into stores like CVS, Walgreens and Target. AEA hired Mr. Replogle from Unilever, where he was general manager for the company’s North American skin care business, to be chief executive. This fall, AEA accepted Clorox’s bid. Ms. Quimby sold her remaining 20 percent share in Burt’s Bees to Clorox for about $183 million.

Ms. Quimby, 57, now runs Happy Green Bee, a company that makes organic clothing for children. She says she spent more than $50 million to buy 100,000 acres where she tries to restore the land to its natural state by blocking hunting, closing roads and dismantling bridges.

In the meantime, the task of defending Clorox’s purchase of Burt’s Bees has fallen on Mr. Replogle’s shoulders. He says that in six months, he will post a blog on the Burt’s Bees site about whether he thinks Clorox is making enough progress on its green initiatives. He says Burt’s Bees’ 380 employees have an opportunity to influence the direction of Clorox, a company that generated $4.8 billion in sales last year and employs 7,800 people.

Burt’s Bees maintains its founders’ green philosophies. Employees’ bonuses are based in part on how well the company meets energy conservation goals, and there are prime parking spaces for staff members who drive hybrid cars or carpool. It buys offsets for 100 percent of its carbon emissions and is working toward a goal of sending no trash to landfills by 2020.

Mr. Replogle calls his current job a “mission” and says he is trying to reinvent business with an idea he calls “the Greater Good,” based on the founders’ ideals. The premise is that if companies are socially responsible, profit will follow. Burt’s Bees not only prioritizes the natural origin of its ingredients but also emphasizes animal rights, responsible trade, employee benefits and the environment.

Like most natural-products companies, Burt’s Bees has the luxury of charging enough for its goods to pay for such causes. A 0.15-ounce tube of Burt’s Bees basic lip balm, for example, costs $3. The same-size tube of ChapStick, which uses synthetic ingredients, costs $1.69.

Burt’s Bees is not perfect, Mr. Replogle acknowledges. The company obtains all of its beeswax from hives in Ethiopia, so shipping the ingredient across the Atlantic adds to carbon emissions.

LATELY, Burt’s Bees has started to police its industry. The company’s research lab is full of competitors’ products labeled “natural,” and employees of Burt’s Bees test those assertions.

Burt’s Bees has also led a group of companies that have teamed up with the Natural Products Association to create a standard for natural personal care products, complete with stickers to label items that make the cut. To qualify, brands must create products that are at least 95 percent natural and contain no ingredients known to be harmful. The stickers will make their debut in April.

Consumers “walk down the aisle in the grocery stores’ health and beauty area, and they’re confronted with ‘natural’ at every turn,” says Daniel Fabricant, vice president for scientific and regulatory affairs at the association. “We just don’t want to see the term misused any longer.”

To prove his own bona fides, Mr. Replogle grabs a bottle of Burt’s Bees avocado butter hair treatment, squeezes some onto his finger and dramatically licks it off. He then passes the tube to two Clorox executives so they can have a taste.

“If you can’t put it into your mouth, you shouldn’t put it on your skin,” he says. “I’d like to see other companies do that.”

Clorox says it is reshaping its product mix so that more of its products will be eco-friendly by its 100th anniversary in 2013. Two weeks ago, the company introduced Green Works, household cleaning solutions labeled as 99 percent natural. The last 1 percent consists of preservatives and fragrances.

Clorox says Green Works is more natural than all other cleaning products.

“It is the standard-setter,” says Beth Springer, vice president for strategy and growth at Clorox.

Green Works products are so new that outside groups have had little time to evaluate the company’s assertions. But Clorox says it believes that consumers will pay more for natural products. So, while they may be more expensive to produce, they will also be more profitable. Clorox research recently found that 53 percent of consumers planned to buy more eco-friendly products this year and that 47 percent were willing to pay 20 percent to 25 percent premiums for them.

While Clorox has decided to keep its brand off of Burt’s Bees products, its name is on the Green Works cleaning line.

“We spent a lot of time talking with consumers who wanted to keep their homes clean and healthy but wanted more natural alternatives,” Ms. Springer says. “And they confessed in most cases they were disappointed with having to pay more for products that didn’t work. So we concluded that we would initially bring it out with the Clorox brand name endorsing it because it gave people a belief in its efficacy.”

Then she lapses into Burt’s Bees speak as she continues.

“If we think about the Greater Good,” Ms. Springer says, “one lesson we’ve learned is, if you set your mind to the goal of more natural and sustainable practices, you might actually surprise yourself with what you can accomplish.”

Eco-Power

GREEN BUILDING 101: Eco-Power!

by Jill and SarahGB101Ecopower

Most of us underestimate or ignore our incredible dependence on electricity. But after the heat waves that swept the U.S. and most of Europe last month, it was impossible to look the other way. Temperatures skyrocketed, we jacked up the A/C, and – poof! – out went the power. Nothing like a blackout to remind us that we’re all connected by our need for electricity. But just as we can cause a major outage through the accumulation of our personal actions, we can as easily facilitate the reverse effect through simple, smart choices about what kind of energy we use and how we use it.

Today’s Green Building 101 talks about how to retrofit your home to be more energy-efficient, as well as how to convert to more clean, green and efficient sources of energy. There are lots of things you can do to cut back on those energy bills, from simply turning off lights, all the way to installing photovoltaics and going off the grid. However ambitious you feel, we’ve got you covered.
At home, you now have more choices than ever for becoming energy efficient and environmentally friendly. If you are building or renovating your house, you can get LEED-H points for everything from buying Energy Star appliances and lighting fixtures, to installing a renewable electricity generation system such as solar panels or wind turbines.

But even if you aren’t building or renovating right now, there are many little steps you can take to inch your way towards energy independence:

Green Building 101, Energy efficiency, Philips Simplicity LED light bulbs, Energy efficient architecture, green architecture

Green your utilities
A surprising number of power companies offer the option to purchase green power, and many that don’t supply renewable energy directly offer credit schemes that effectively offset standard energy consumption by helping to fund progress towards more sustainable sources. The EPA has a region-specific guide to help you locate a green power supplier in your area.

Cut down on energy use in your house:

Green Building 101, Energy efficiency, Philips Simplicity LED light bulbs, Energy efficient architecture, green architecture

1) Kill your vampire power: Keeping things plugged in, even when they are switched off, sips a constant stream of energy out of your power outlets. Unplug your cell phone chargers, stereos and toaster ovens, and watch your energy bills sink.

2) Buy Energy Star appliances: These are certified and labeled so that you know you are getting an energy efficient machine. If you have old, tired appliances in your house, consider investing in something new. Although you have to pay up front to buy something new, you’ll be surprised to see how much less cash efficient appliances demand over time.

3) Turn off your lights! You just don’t need to have them on that much – especially during the day if you have any daylight. And as we mentioned in last week’s GB101, compact fluorescent bulbs (CFLs) save energy over incandescents, and going to bed at a normal hour means that you won’t be — as the old cliché goes — burning the midnight oil.

The sun., Photovoltaics, Solar Power, Green Building 101, Energy efficiency, Green architecture

Go off the grid
If you’ve already taken all the baby steps towards renewable energy and are ready for more serious action, you may want to consider setting up your own personal energy-generating system at home. Obviously, as with all building and renovation projects, this sort of thing is an investment and the upfront costs are not cheap. However, the cost of installing your own solar or wind generators often pays for itself in a few years time with all the money you save in energy bills – not to mention tax breaks and improved property values. Here are some of your options:

Solar Power
The sun is the most reliable, renewable and clean energy source we have, so it’s amazing to me that more people don’t use solar power. Not only can you use passive solar design to heat and cool your house more efficiently, but you can generate your own heat and electricty using photovoltaics. Typical barriers to entry in the past have included high costs, low efficiency and plain old reticence to stick bulky and ugly looking things like solar panels atop our roofs. However, there have been massive improvements in photovoltaic technology in the past few years, and with recent blackouts and spikes in energy costs – not to mention new tax breaks and solar legislation – it’s getting to the point where you really have no good excuse anymore.

Photovoltaic systems have become cheaper, more efficient, and most importantly, a lot better looking in the past few years. Say goodbye to the ugly awkward roof-mounted panels of the 70s – today’s photovoltaics are often incorporated directly into the materials you use to clad your house. There are now solar roofing shingles, solar side-cladding, and even solar-powered glass windows!

BIPV, Building Integrated Photovoltaics, Solar Roof shingles, Solar Roof Tiles, Green Building 101, Energy efficiency, Green architecture

If you live in California, now is an especially sunny time for you…
Just this week, California’s governator, Arnold Schwarzenegger, signed the landmark million solar roofs bill, which will expand the tax rebate program, increase the number of people who can sell solar electricity back to utility companies, and require builders to offer solar power as a new home option beginning in 2011.

For more info about how to go solar in California, click here >


BIPV, Building Integrated Photovoltaics, Solar Roof shingles, Solar Roof Tiles, Green Building 101, Energy efficiency, Green architecture

Xsunx, solar powered glass, BIPV, Building Integrated Photovoltaics, Solar Roof shingles, Solar Roof Tiles, Green Building 101, Energy efficiency, Green architecture

Geothermal
Often people have the idea that geothermal energy can only be harnassed in geologically active regions of the world such as Iceland, Italy and California. Not so! While that might be where the majority of geothermal power plants exist – anywhere you can drill down into the earth, you can heat up water: creating a clean, efficient energy source for heating and cooling your home, completely bypassing the whole need for boilers, furnaces and all that jazz.. In 1993, the Environmental Protection Agency proclaimed geothermal heat pumps – aka “ground-source heat pumps” – to be the most energy-efficient, environmentally friendly and cost-effective residential heating system available.

Surprisingly, a non-geologically active place like New York City (built on bedrock) is actually a great place for geothermal heat pumps, because granite is excellent for transferring heat. We discovered this exciting news after reading about a geothermally-heated townhouse in Tribeca.

For more information on geothermal heat pumps and geothermal power, check out the U.S. Department of Energy’s online resources >

geothermal power, geothermal heating and cooling, iceland geologic activity, Jill Fehrenbacher, Green Building 101, Energy efficient building

Wind
Wind power is blowing up right now. According to the Earth Policy Institute, “Wind is the world’s fastest-growing energy source with an average annual growth rate of 29 percent over the last ten years.” Most people are familiar with the pinwheel-like design of a wind turbine; in rural areas, you’ll often see wind farms lined with giant, slow-spinning blades. The idea is simple: rotating turbine blades gather kinetic energy from the wind, spinning an internal shaft that generates power. This process is incredibly clean, producing zero emissions.

Green Building 101, Energy efficiency, Philips Simplicity LED light bulbs, Energy efficient architecture, green architecture

At home, there are two primary ways to get wind power: you can purchase it through a power company that offers wind, or you can get a residential-scale turbine for your own home. The first option tends to be easier, more scalable, and more reliable. The company Renewable Choice, for example, offers flexible services which allow you to switch to 100% wind, supplement your standard energy with partial wind power, or just purchase credits that offset your fossil fuel energy usage by supporting the advancement of wind technology.

If you get a small turbine for home, you will have the satisfaction of knowing you’re generating some power right on your property, and will likely save some money and use less energy from the municipal grid. However, when the wind isn’t blowing at your house, you can’t rely on the accumulated “energy bank” that comes with buying wind from a bigger supplier.

Micro-Hydro

As the term suggests, micro-hydro is power generated from water currents — on a small scale. Compared to tidal (or lunar) power generated from ocean tides or large hydroelectric dams, micro-hydro generally comes from river currents and provides energy for a small number of buildings in close proximity to the source. The process mimics a wind turbine in that the running water rotates a wheel or blades that generate energy. While it’s not as practical or as widely applicable as solar or wind, micro-hydro is extremely economical, and where water is available and fast-flowing, it’s also highly efficient. Because it’s great for off-grid living, it’s also an excellent application in developing countries where there is no grid to connect to. Quite a good resource on small-scale hydro power can be found here.

Green Building 101, Energy efficiency, Philips Simplicity LED light bulbs, Energy efficient architecture, green architecture

Net Metering:

If ever there were a concrete illustration of our ability to conserve power and advance sustainable technology, it’s the picture of an electric meter running backwards. “Net metering” is a method for incentivizing consumer investment in renewable energy portfolios. When customers generate more power than they are using, the excess gets stored for later use, or fed back into the grid for more even distribution across the board. It’s a mutually beneficial arrangement for consumers and suppliers alike, and it dramatically eases the environmental burden of power demands, all while giving renewable energy the added allure of financial gain for all. (See more at the U.S. Dept. of Energy.)

The U.S government now offers a number of financial incentives to help you go green. Check out:

Tax credits for energy efficiency >

What is the Green Grid?

The Green Grid is a consortium of information technology companies and professionals seeking to improve energy efficiency in data centers around the globe. The Green Grid takes a broad-reaching approach to data center efficiency focusing on data center “power pillars” that span the gamut of technology, infrastructure and processes present in today’s data center environments. The consortium’s working focus includes research, standards writing, published studies and continuing education.

Comprised of an interactive body of members who share and improve current best practices around data center efficiency, The Green Grid scope includes collaboration with end users and government organizations worldwide to ensure that each organizational goal is aligned with both developers and users of data center technology. All interested parties are encouraged to join and become active participants in the quest to improve overall data center power efficiencies.

Board of Directors member companies are AMD, APC, Dell, HP, IBM, Intel, Microsoft, Rackable Systems, SprayCool, Sun Microsystems and VMware.

Green IT today!!!

In terms of minimizing the negative impact of business operations on the environment, there is a lot companies can do with their existing technology.

The most important thing to do now is reduce carbon emissions, whether that means using old or new technologies—and often what’s in place already suffices if used creatively and conservatively. To achieve this goal, the IT departments of businesses and public sector organizations need to adopt green practices, which should include the use of Thin-Client/Virtual Technologies (Citrix, VM Ware, MS Softgrid) and mobile workforces. While new technologies may offer greater efficiencies in terms of ‘greenness’ than older ones, businesses needn’t be so eager to throw out all the old technology in favor of the new—especially if their budgets, at least for now, are unable to support such immediate changes.

When the term ‘carbon footprint’ is used to reference all potential impacts on the environment, it becomes pretty easy to go back basics when figuring out ways to be more Eco-Friendly. If companies have not already adopted recycling programs or telecommuting policies, for example, they can start there to begin having a positive impact right away. Indeed, simple things like making sure all employees shut their computers and office lights off at the end of the day can make a significant difference this very day. These environmentally positive actions can be done without having to install all new infrastructure or the initiation of complex procedures. In fact IT Administrators can configure client machines to shut down at predetermined times, automating the process of ‘Green IT’. For more information, please contact us at M&T Group USA, LLC.

Angel L. Rodriguez
President
M&T Group USA, LLC
E: arodriguez@mtgroupusa.com
W: www.mtgroupusa.com

Welcome to M&T Group USA

Welcome to the M&T Group WordPress site. I am pleased to be creating our first WordPress Weblog! I will be working with very talented individuals to get things rolling here and bring it up to speed.

Best,

Angel L. Rodriguez

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