Transcript Document
Outline
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Introduce Ourselves – prior lives outside of sustainability
Why do companies do sustainability?
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What does it take to be a truly sustainable company
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Brainstorm
Hierarchy of bubbles
Walmart vs. Interface vs. Patagonia
Journey toward sustainability – is it even possible
Design Flaw
Laws of Ecology / Business Survival
Biomimicry
Marketing as behavior change
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Where is sustainability marketing today?
Defining greenwashing: 7 sins
Exercise: ad review
Exercise: Coke vs. Sodastream vs. Honest Tea vs. Vitamin Water
Where is sustainability marketing going?
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Authenticity – “what is your evil?”
SEEC
Wal-Mart’s Progress
4 Laws of Ecology:
Design Principles
1)
Everything is connected to everything else - humans and other species
are connected/dependent on a number of other species.
2)
Everything must go somewhere - no matter what you do, and no matter
what you use, it has to go somewhere.
3)
Nature knows best - Like it says, nature knows best. As much as you think
it might help a place by repainting it, you are submitting the fumes into
the air and into your lungs. Why not put siding on it?
4)
There is no such thing as a free lunch - Everything you do, must have a
reason behind it. For example, a class pizza party. In order to win the
party, you have to fill out a survey, and submit it back to your teacher.
This law basically means you have to do something in order to get
something in return.
“System Conditions” for
sustainability as design constraints
The Four System Conditions...
. . . Reworded as The Four Principles of Sustainability
In a sustainable society, nature is not
subject to systematically increasing:
To become a sustainable society we must...
1. concentrations of substances
extracted from the earth's crust
1. eliminate our contribution to the progressive
buildup of substances extracted from the Earth's crust
(for example, heavy metals and fossil fuels)
2. concentrations of substances
produced by society
2. eliminate our contribution to the progressive
buildup of chemicals and compounds produced by
society (for example, dioxins, PCBs, and DDT )
3. degradation by physical means
3. eliminate our contribution to the progressive
physical degradation and destruction of nature and
natural processes (for example, over harvesting forests
and paving over critical wildlife habitat); and
4. and, in that society, people are not
subject to conditions that systemically
undermine their capacity to meet their
needs
4. eliminate our contribution to conditions that
undermine people’s capacity to meet their basic
human needs (for example, unsafe working conditions
and not enough pay to live on).
Taken from the Natural Step, www.thenaturalstep.org
Nature's 10 Simple Rules for Business
Survival (Werbach 2009)
1. Diversify across generations.
2. Adapt to the changing environment -- and specialize.
3. Celebrate transparency.
4. Plan and execute systematically, not compartmentally.
5. Form groups and protect the young.
6. Integrate metrics.
7. Improve with each cycle.
8. Right-size regularly, rather than downsize occasionally.
9. Foster longevity, not immediate gratification.
10. Waste nothing, recycle everything, and borrow little
Biomimicry
Biomimicry: Energy Efficiency and
Rotor Design
Fans and other rotational devices are a major part of the human built environment, and a
major component of our total energy usage. Although we've been building such devices
since at least 100 B.C., we've never built them like Nature does until now. Naturally
flowing fluids, gases, and heat follow a common geometric pattern that differs in shape
from conventional human-made rotors. Nature moves water and air using a logarithmic or
exponentially growing spiral, as commonly seen in seashells. PAX Scientific Inc. applied this
fundamental geometry in fans, mixers, propellers, turbines and pumps. Depending on
application, the resulting designs reduce energy usage by a staggering 10-85% over
conventional rotors, and noise by up to 75%.
Sun Chips
Growing 7-Up
GE Plant a Bulb
Greenwashing
• Green-wash (green’wash’, -wôsh’) – verb: the act of misleading consumers
regarding the environmental practices of a company or the environmental
benefits of a product or service.
1. Sin of the Hidden Trade-Off
2. Sin of No Proof
3. Sin of Vagueness
4. Sin of Irrelevance
5. Sin of Fibbing
6. Sin of Lesser of Two Evils
7. Sin of Worshipping False Labels
From:
Terrachoice, Scot Case
Buckets for the Cure