- Ford Motor Chairman Bill Ford opened his company’s meeting of journalists and bloggers last night with an inspirational talk about Ford’s evolution in recent years from a stodgy rust belt giant to a 21st century technology company. In an interview with David Kirkpatrick, author of The Facebook Effect, Henry Ford’s great-grandson talked about his journey as he pushed Ford to embed sustainability within the company’s entire operations.
What is fascinating is how this family scion is taking his family’s company back to its roots. When Henry Ford first dabbled in automobiles, his earliest models ran on diesel derived from peanut oil. Soybean-based plastic parts could be found in Ford automobiles during the 1930s, and at one point, Ford Motor’s founder even pounded a bumper made out of a soybean-based resin with a sledgehammer to prove its resilience.
Like other automakers, Ford drifted away from plant-derived fuels and materials, but now the company is embracing everything from soy-based foam to fabrics made out of recycled plastic bottles. The result is a renewed company that is not just an automobile manufacturer: Ford Motor is a technology, lifestyle and mobility company. And that lifestyle, dependent on mobility includes sustainability at its core. So what happened?

Bill Ford
Bill Ford talked about his first days with the company during the late 1980s when environmentalist just was not discussed at Ford’s headquarters in Dearborn. He realized that he did not want his company or industry to become like the tobacco companies, leaving him to have to apologize for what they did. He eventually become the first industrialist to speak at a Greenpeace conference in 2000, and noted that he was not sure who was freaked out more: him or the Greenpeace organizers.
The result has been a company that has accomplished huge improvements on the environmental stewardship front. The company has
slashed its consumption of energy and water, sharply
cut back on waste, and as Bill Ford mentioned, now 85 percent of a Ford vehicle is recyclable. Its factories are safer, the cars and trucks they are churning out are far more efficient and its employees are thriving--Ford estimated that 95 percent of the company’s moves towards sustainability came from Ford Motor’s employees.
But as Ford reminded the audience at Ford Field, if the purpose of a company is making people’s lives
better, than it has got to make their lives
easier and offer more options to help them move as urbanization rapidly increases this century. The idea of two cars in every garage is not just sustainable in the long run, so Ford is working with such shared car providers as Zipcar and established a “
BluePrint for Mobility” to alleviate gridlock through the use of smarter and autonomous technologies. Ideas like Ford’s
Traffic Jam Assist software that once seemed dreamy are now close to a reality. And it is important that these new technologies scale because a society plagued by gridlock will only fail. Hence mobility is not just about convenience, but in Ford’s words, is becoming a human right.
Automobile companies were set in their ways for decades, and their refusal to change with the times almost led to their death kneel a few years ago. But now Detroit is roaring back with Ford Motor leading the way. Like
Nike,
Microsoft and
Marks and Spencer, Ford Motor is turning the idea of what it means to be a more sustainable business on its head. The results, quite simply, are exciting to watch.
Published on Triple Pundit earlier this morning. You can follow Leon Kaye on Twitter.
Photos courtesy
Wikipedia and
Leon Kaye.
Full disclosure: Ford Motor Co. covered Leon Kaye’s expenses to travel to Michigan.
About The Author
Leon Kaye
Leon Kaye is the founder and editor of GreenGoPost.com and its advisory division,
GGP Media.
Contact him to discuss how he can work with your organization or event.
His focus is making the business case for sustainability and corporate social responsibility (CSR).
He writes for San Francisco-based
Triple Pundit,
Inhabitat and now
The Guardian, for which he writes about corporate responsibility, water, and green building. He has also written for AIA's
Architect Magazine.
Leon works out of Fresno and Silicon Valley, California, and when he has free time, he enjoys hiking, gardening, cooking, weightlifting, and planning his next trip to one of the 60 countries he has visited. He has an MBA from USC's Marshall School of Business and is also a proud graduate of the University of Maryland-Baltimore County (UMBC) and Cal State-Fresno.
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