100,000 and…1
Those two numbers offer further proof that no matter what you think about climate change — whether you see it as a bogus issue or an existential threat —the climate, the consumer climate that is — is changing fast.
In fact, according to a recent
I can’t say I was surprised. For almost 50 years I’ve watched Kohler make one smart move after another, beginning in January 1978 when the Kohler booth at the annual home builders show featured 4 full scale bathrooms of the future, bathrooms that would still look good today. Each bathroom was the antithesis of the dark, dismal cramped 5 x 7 bath with a tub, a toilet and a sink that was pretty much the industry standard at the time.
The baths were a sensation (a fireplace in a bathroom, floor to ceiling glass, oh my!). But was most impressive was that Kohler, before anybody else in the housing industry, had figured out that the huge wave of baby boomer buyers wouldn’t want to buy either their parents’ Oldsmobile or their parents’ plain Jane ranch house or split level. Kohler foresaw the emergence of a move-up market that would want bigger and showier homes and come to dominate housing for more than a generation.
Kohler, in other words, is an innovative market leader, and, like Tesla has been hugely successful. It’s still a family-owned business, and according to Forbes, the Kohlers perennially rank among the world’s billionaire manufacturing families.
Now there’s a leader you might want to follow when trying to figure out what to do about consumer attitudes to climate change.
But to date the housing industry has, to be charitable, a spotty record when it comes to environmental issues, including climate change and energy conservation. In the 1970s, when the energy crisis led many jurisdictions to up insulation standards in building codes, many builders acted like installing R-30 ceiling insulation would put them out of business. Later on, when low-flush toilets became the law of the land, builders raised an uproar. And California’s tougher statewide energy codes were met with stiff resistance.
But now I think it’s time to follow leaders like Tesla and Kohler and to take seriously the change in public opinion about climate change and the threat it represents. Get over the politics. Voluntarily build more energy efficient homes, market them proudly and enthusiastically and honestly, sell more houses, make more money and do the world a favor.