Katherine Mangu-Ward has written a pretty sharp look at the ways in which corporations are -- and aren't -- rushing to make protecting the environment a key part of the businesses:
"For an example of a company apparently trying to single-handedly save the planet through expensive public relations alone, one neednt look farther than the corporate darling of serious environmentalists and greenish consumers alike: BP... A gas and oil company with $225 billion in revenue, BP is part of an industry that will keep environmental advocacy groups in business for as long at it exists. Yet these days BP is styling itself Beyond Petroleum and declaring that its thinking outside the barrel. BPs Environmental Team has crafted an elaborate advertising campaign and rebranding effort, recently expanded to the Web. Its goal: to convince the world that a company that sucks dead dinosaurs out of the earth, turns them into gasoline, and delivers that gas to SUVs can also be environmentally friendly enough to use a green and yellow sunburst (or is it a flower?) as its logo. ...
"Never mind that BPs spending on green projects constitutes less than half of 1 percent of its revenue. It publicly supports stricter pollution regulations and the Kyoto Protocols, the international agreement calling for reductions in greenhouse gas emissions, and gives money to groups that lobby for both. BP is selling itself as the anti-ExxonMobil."









