Originally posted by corydalus. Remixed as per his Creative Commons permissions.
I got a piece of mail from PG&E today. This is not uncommon: aside from my regular statements, they send me a lot of spam. Apparently they’re not satisfied to overcharge me and make it impossible to pay online…they want more out of me.
I opened the mail skeptically, but was pleased to discover that this mail was about saving power. Great! Saving power is a win-win-win situation: saves me money, saves them money, helps the environment and the oil situation. I’m onboard! How can I save energy, PG&E, how?
“Dear Evan Hamilton,
Did you know that you could save 25% on your energy bill by getting our ‘Smart AC’?”
Now, you may read this and think that it’s no big deal. What you don’t realize is that I DON’T HAVE AIR CONDITIONING. I live in an old building and nobody here has AC, we have windows and fans.
PG&E knows this, because they provide my power! But instead of taking the time to figure this out, they send me this letter anyway. Well guess what, PG&E? I am now going to throw this useless letter, which is plastic-y and unrecylable, into the trash. You know what is going to happen to this trash? It’s either going to a landfill, which is an unsustainable solution to our waste problem, or it’s going to be burned like 16 percent of waste in the USA. What’s that going to do for the environment? Is it going to save electricity or oil to have millions of PG&E letters shoved around landfills by tractors and backhoes?
If you are going to make your company “green”, or “energy-saving”, think carefully about how you’re going to do it. You don’t have to make your organization 100% Green (Flock didn’t for the Eco Edition), but you should make sure that your “Eco” initiatives are not actually causing more harm than help.