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COLLECTING INFORMATION AND FORECASTING DEMAND | CHAPTER 3 81<br />

Actor and environmental activist<br />

Ed Begley Jr. exa<strong>min</strong>es a solar<br />

oven.<br />

• Due to millions of rural cooking fires, parts of Southern Asia suffer extremely poor<br />

air quality. A person cooking over an open wood or kerosene fire inhales the equivalent<br />

of two packs of cigarettes a day. Illinois-based Sun Ovens International makes family-sized<br />

and institutional solar ovens that use mirrors to redirect the sun’s rays into an<br />

insulated box. Used in 130 countries, the oven both saves money and reduces greenhouse<br />

gas emissions.<br />

Corporate environmentalism recognizes the need to integrate environmental issues into the<br />

firm’s strategic plans. Trends in the natural environment for marketers to be aware of include the<br />

shortage of raw materials, especially water; the increased cost of energy; increased pollution levels;<br />

and the changing role of governments. (See also “<strong>Marketing</strong> Insight: The Green <strong>Marketing</strong><br />

Revolution.”) 47<br />

• The earth’s raw materials consist of the infinite, the finite renewable, and the finite nonrenewable.<br />

Firms whose products require finite nonrenewable resources—oil, coal, platinum,<br />

zinc, silver—face substantial cost increases as depletion approaches. Firms that can develop<br />

substitute materials have an excellent opportunity.<br />

• One finite nonrenewable resource, oil, has created serious problems for the world economy. As<br />

oil prices soar, companies search for practical means to harness solar, nuclear, wind, and other<br />

alternative energies.<br />

• Some industrial activity will inevitably damage the natural environment, creating a large market<br />

for pollution-control solutions such as scrubbers, recycling centers, and landfill systems as well as<br />

for alternative ways to produce and package goods.<br />

• Many poor nations are doing little about pollution, lacking the funds or the political will. It is<br />

in the richer nations’ interest to help them control their pollution, but even richer nations<br />

today lack the necessary funds.<br />

The Technological Environment<br />

It is the essence of market capitalism to be dynamic and tolerate the creative destructiveness of<br />

technology as the price of progress. Transistors hurt the vacuum-tube industry, and autos hurt the<br />

railroads. Television hurt the newspapers, and the Internet hurt them both.<br />

When old industries fight or ignore new technologies, their businesses decline. Tower Records<br />

had ample warning that its music retail business would be hurt by Internet downloads of music (as<br />

well as the growing number of discount music retailers). Its failure to respond led to the liquidation<br />

of all its domestic physical stores in 2006.

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