by Bob Miodonski
November 1, 2011
Greenbuild has grown in 10 years to become a prominent event in the plumbing-and-heating industry. Here are three helpful suggestions for the U.S. Green Building Council to make the event better.
Held Oct. 4-7 in Toronto,
Greenbuild 2011 took a step back in attendance this year. The USGBC announced
5,000 fewer people attended the event compared with last year in Chicago. The USGBC didn’t
help matters by taking Greenbuild north of the border. The location became a
factor for people who decided to stay home this year.
Part of their decision came down to the U.S. economy. Some potential
exhibitors also believed their costs would be higher and the logistics more
complicated at a trade show in Canada.
Carrying a passport and clearing Customs concerned people who otherwise might
have attended. Although I had dismissed these worries initially, I found plenty
of time to reconsider them during the four hours I stood in lines at Toronto’s airport.
Security screeners staged “unlawful strike activities,” according to one local
news source, to protest changes in their work schedules.
The USGBC had no way of knowing the labor slowdown would occur during Greenbuild.
And the organization had to believe the U.S.
economic recovery would be further along when it put Toronto on the schedule. Still, I couldn’t
help but think a U.S.
city would have benefited from whatever economic shot in the arm Greenbuild
could have provided it this year.
At Greenbuild’s opening ceremony, Kohler Co. President David Kohler said a strategy that integrates
business and environmental principles is the only strategy for the road
ahead.
“There are business opportunities in green,” he said. Kohler said his company’s
fastest-growing product lines are ones that conserve water without sacrificing
design and performance.
Keynote speaker Thomas Friedman
picked up that message when he said, “You can make a good living doing good
things.” Friedman went on to say that the green movement needs a price
signal.
“Price matters,” Friedman said. “When
gas was $4.50 or $5 a gallon, you couldn’t buy a Toyota Prius. When gas was $2
a gallon, you couldn’t sell a Prius. Without a price signal, you do not get
long-term consumer demand.”
Following his keynote address, Friedman joined a panel discussion, which
took place on a stage set up on the floor of a sports arena that normally hosts
hockey and basketball. Most attendees sat in stadium seats and on chairs on or around
the arena floor. Others listened from suites where parties were going on for
invited Greenbuild guests.
Or weren’t listening. Noise drifting down from the upper-level suites
distracted the panelists who interrupted their discussion several times to ask
for quiet so they could be heard.
When I looked around me from my third-row seat, I noticed most of the people on
the arena floor were engaged in the issues being discussed by the panelists. It
struck me that the panelists should be paying more attention to the people
hearing their message.
People will buy into green buildings in varying degrees. Deserving the most
attention are those who most want to advance the green building movement.
Bob Miodonski
miodonskib@bnpmedia.com
Bob Miodonski is the grouppublisher of the Plumbing Division of BNP Media. He can be reached at 847/405-4007, miodonskib@bnpmedia.com.
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