This collection of contributions from 35 leading thinkers and practitioners associated with the Programme was published to launch the second decade of The Prince of Wales's Business & the Environment Programme (BEP). It focuses on engaging the world of business in a reflective, challenging conversation about its pivotal role in shaping humanity's future and furthering sustainable development.
1. HRH THE PRINCE OF WALES’S
BUSINESS & THE ENVIRONMENT PROGRAMME
DEVELOPED BY THE UNIVERSITY OF CAMBRIDGE PROGRAMME FOR INDUSTRY
Facing
the Future
Business, Society and the Sustainable Development Challenge
3. CONTENTS
CONTENTS
The articles in this publication address six key themes
critical to facing the challenge of sustainable development:
Foreword HRH The Prince of wales 6 Ben Cohen I Co-founder, Ben and Jerry’s Ice Cream 42 4 Age of insecurity 66 6 Power of civil society 92
Dr Vandana Shiva I Director, Research Foundation 44 How do we address the environmental and How can and do NGOs, consumers and citizens
Business & the Environment Programme 8
for Science, Technology and Ecology social problems exacerbating global insecurity? influence business and government to pursue
and the Sustainability Agenda
Professor Tom Gladwin I Professor of 68 more sustainable policies and practice?
Chad Holliday I Chairman & CEO of DuPont 46
BEP milestones 14 Sustainable Enterprise, University of Michigan Jean-Paul Jeanrenaud I Head of Business 94
Paul Gilding I Founder & Executive Chairman, Ecos 46
Lise Kingo I Executive Vice-President, 71 and Industry Relations, WWF International
Fred Phaswana I Chairman, Transnet 48
1 Limits to growth 16 Novo Nordisk Sarah Severn I Director of Sustainable Business 96
Is humankind approaching the limits to growth and Dr Melissa Lane I Lecturer in History, University 50 Development, Nike
Will Day I UNDP Special Advisor, former Chief 73
how do we adapt? of Cambridge
Executive, Care International Colin Hines I Associate, International Forum 98
Professor Jorgen Randers I Norwegian Professor Rod Aspinwall I Chair, Sustainable 52 on Globalisation
18 Professor Klaus Töpfer I Executive Director, 75
School of Management Development Forum for Wales
United Nations Environment Programme Caroline Southey I Editor, Financial Mail 100
The Rt Hon Tony Blair, MP I UK Prime Minister 20 Chris Pomfret I Former Marketing and 78 Penny Newman I CEO, Café Direct 102
3 Adaptive technology 54
Richard Sandbrook I Senior Advisor, UNDP 23 Environment Co-ordinator, Unilever
Can technological ingenuity alone overcome climate
Malcolm Brinded I Executive Director of Oil 25 Business & the Environment programme: 104
change, resource depletion and other sustainability
& Gas Exploration, Shell 5 Whose rules? 80 The next 10 years
challenges?
Peter Woicke I Executive Vice-President, 28 How do we re-shape local, national, international and
Jonathan Lash I President, World Resources 56 BEP 108
International Finance Corporation corporate governance to promote and embed
Institute
sustainable development?
Bill McDonough I Founding Partner and 30 Dr Wolfgang Schneider I Vice-President for 58 Programme publications 109
Principal, William McDonough and Partners Michael Meacher I MP for Oldham West and 82
Government and Environmental Affairs, Ford Europe
Royton and former UK Environment Minis ter How to join the Business & the 110
Jeremy Pelczer I Chief Executive, American Water 32 Dr Jeremy Leggett I Chief Executive, Solarcentury 61
Madeleine Jacobs I Senior Vice President & 85 Environment Programme
Dr Karl-Henrik Robèrt I Founder, The 62 Head of Group Sustainable Development, ABN Amro
2 Transformative leadership 34 Natural Step
Dr Paul Ekins I Head of the Environment Group, 87
Who should take a lead and what must they do? Debra Dunn I Senior Vice-President, 64 Policy Studies Institute
Caroline Lucas I Green Party MEP for South 37 Hewlett Packard
Professor Tim O’Riordan I Professor of 88
East England
Environmental Sciences, University of East Anglia
Lord Browne of Madingley I Chairman and 40
Iqbal Surve I CEO of Sekunjalo Investments 90
Chief Executive of BP
4 Business & the Environment Programme: FACING THE FUTURE 5
4. INTRODUCTION
sophisticated understanding of the situations in which Each individual business leader has enormous potential to
FOREWORD different technologies will, and will not, bring long term enhance the capacity to deliver sustainable development,
benefits to mankind. Indeed, I would argue that the need helping to secure the long-term future of their company and
HRH The Prince of Wales for wisdom and restraint in our actions has never been the societies within which it operates. They can do this by
To 10th Anniversary Report for the Business and the Environment Programme
greater. But at the moment, that kind of wisdom is in drawing attention to the short term thinking of financial
worryingly short supply. markets; by rejecting policy and strategy papers that fail to
address sustainability; by appointing, promoting and
Another of the Programme’s hallmarks has been its rewarding people who have the right priorities; and by asking
conviction that changing conventional corporate mindsets is difficult questions about everything from procurement
‘Facing the Future’is a highly about exactly what the barriers are to a sustainable
as important as changing corporate behaviour. To act policies to waste minimisation. They can also establish
appropriate subject to mark the economy. Looking at the results, one of the things I found
responsibly in the world, we have to see the world for what dialogue with people – such as the NGOs – who will ask
tenth anniversary of an organisation fascinating was the extent to which the different Dialogues
it is, not for what we might like it to be. It's all very well, for awkward and challenging questions, and they can take an
dedicated to sustainability. So I – whether in South Africa, the United States or Cambridge –
instance, to talk meaningfully of the need for 'globalisation open and transparent approach to reporting what they and
couldn’t be more pleased that some identified pretty much the same list of barriers each time.
with a human face’but the reality is often very different. Left their companies do. That is why this programme is aimed so
of the many committed and And right at the top of the list was short-term thinking.
to its own devices, globalisation will continue to sow the directly at the leaders of the business community.
thoughtful individuals who have participated in the
seeds for ever greater poverty, disease and hunger in the
Programme have agreed to share their insights in this The inability of most of us to think or plan clearly much
cities of the developing world, and the loss of viable, self- Many of the well-argued articles in this report demonstrate
publication. The topics covered here are a rich and eclectic beyond the pressures of the next few months is at the heart
sufficient rural populations. Such intractable social problems that good progress has been made on some of the major
mix, but none of the articles is less than thought-provoking of many of the sharpest sustainability dilemmas we face
may seem a long way away from the Business and the sustainability challenges over the last ten years, very often
and together they indicate the sheer breadth of the today. Part of the problem, of course, is the sheer pace of
Environment Programme's core agenda – let alone the daily through individual acts of leadership. I am delighted that my
sustainability agenda that confronts us all. change, especially when it comes to the development and
reality of hard-pressed business people dealing with the short Business and the Environment Programme has been able to
introduction of new technologies. No-one would dispute
term pressures I mentioned earlier. But it seems to me we play a part in that process and I hope that this report will
This is a Programme that has always tried to persuade the fact that technology delivers many important benefits
are now at a watershed, with crucial choices to be made. And encourage others to ‘Face the Future’, and have the courage
participants and alumni to reach out beyond the usual to mankind. But if we are serious about sustainability I think
I believe the business community has an unprecedented of their convictions in addressing the manifold challenges of
material about 'the business case for sustainable we have to recognise that the same technological capability
opportunity to help reshape the global economy in order sustainability.
development'. I am aware, for instance, of the Sustainable also enables us to change the life-support systems of our
both to improve the lives of the world's poor and to protect
Economy Dialogue that has been running over the last few planet, very directly, very quickly, and in many cases,
the life support systems of our planet.
years, encouraging people to think much more deeply irreversibly. I believe we need to develop a much more
6 Business & the Environment Programme: FACING THE FUTURE 7
5. INTRODUCTION
BUSINESS & THE ENVIRONMENT The 10 years since the Business & the Environment
Programme held its first seminar for business leaders has
PROGRAMME AND THE witnessed a profusion of new initiatives, new thinking and
SUSTAINABILITY AGENDA new practice in the field of corporate sustainability.
Hundreds of companies have used the ‘triple bottom line’
accounting to start thinking in a much more integrated way
Polly Courtice
about their wider responsibilities. Many are increasingly
Director of the University of Cambridge Programme for Industry I Co-Director of the Business & the
Environment Programme geared to their different stakeholders, including employees,
consumers, host communities, business suppliers and NGOs,
Jonathon Porritt and are now measuring and reporting on environmental and
Chairman of the UK Sustainable Development Commission I Director of Forum for the Future I social areas of concern.
Co-Director of the Business & the Environment Programme.
These leaders accept the constraints to business-as-usual that
It is more than 40 years since Rachel Carson’s landmark nevertheless business leaders, academics and civil society
will need to be imposed to negotiate the sustainable
book, ‘Silent Spring’, marked the beginning of the modern leaders – some featured in this publication – who really are
business funnel depicted on this page. But even amongst
environmental movement. Over the last 50 years the confronting the business-as-usual mindset. We salute these
these leaders, there is real uncertainty as to how a broad
business community has made a slow but steady journey pioneers. In a world where there seems to be less and less
enough consensus about the need for radical change can be
towards more environmental and socially responsible trust between big business and society at large, their voices
established. Participants at the Business & the Environment
behaviour. The table overleaf gives an overview of that have a critical contribution to make in establishing the
Seminars, for example, are constantly wrestling with the
journey, driven by a complex mixture of external pressure, foundations of a genuinely sustainable economy.
different ‘boundary conditions’ that constrain the contribution
commercial opportunity and internal business leadership.
the business community can make. It is governments, after
What the table does not show, however – and this lies at the Yet, despite the well-publicised progress made by corporate
all, that determine the legal and fiduciary framework within
heart of our work within the Programme – is that society’s ‘first movers’, whose executives include many Business &
which companies must operate; it is consumers who are best
response, and the business community’s response as part of the Environment Programme alumni, faculty and
placed to use their purchasing power preferentially to reward
that, still falls far short of what is needed if we are to reach contributors, it is difficult not to be perturbed at how
proactive companies and punish the laggards; and it is
our goal of a sustainable future for coming generations. relatively few companies are engaged strategically and
investors who have it in their power (theoretically, at least)
systematically in the sustainable development agenda, and
to strike the right balance between securing a good return on
While that is the sober and challenging conclusion we feel how many are still testing the ground in a somewhat
their investments and minimising the damage done through
we have to draw from the available evidence, there are apprehensive and half–hearted way.
those investments to the environment, developing countries
and the prospects of future generations.
8 Business & the Environment Programme: FACING THE FUTURE 9
6. INTRODUCTION
BUSINESS AND SUSTAINABILITY:
TRENDS AND TRANSITIONS
DECADE < 70s 1970s 1980s 1990s 2000s
TRIGGER EVENTS • Silent Spring (‘62) • First Earth Day (’70) • Bhopal (‘84) • Earth Summit (’92) • Millennium Development Goals (’00)
• Acid rain concerns • UN Conference on the Human • Ozone Hole (’85) • Shell: Brent Spar and Nigeria (’95) • Anti-globalisation movement (civil protest at Davos, IMF meetings)
Environment – Stockholm (’72) • WCED-Brundtland Report (’87) • World Summit on Social De velopment – Copenhagen (’95) • US rejects Kyoto Protocol (‘01)
• Limits to Growth (’72) • Exxon Valdez (’89) • ‘Mad Cow Disease’ BSE (’96) • September 11th terrorist attacks (‘01)
• Love Canal (’78) • Chernobyl (‘86) • Kyoto Protocol (’97) • WSSD in Johannesburg (’02)
• Oil crisis (’78) • Montreal Protocol (’87) • GMO concerns (98-99) • Accounting scandals (Enron, Worldcom, Tyco)
• Three Mile Island (’79) • Seattle WTO riots (’99) • World Social Forum meetings
INSTITUTIONAL • Rise of environmental • Environmental laws and regulations • US Superfund • Business Charters (CERES principles; ICC principles, Keidanren Charter) • UN Global Compact launched
CONTEXT NGOs • Growth of environmental ministries • Growth of Multilateral Environmental • WBCSD formed • Global Reporting Initiative (GRI) guideline s
• US EPA established and enforcement bodies Agreements • ISO 14000 series, SA 8000 • Growth in socially responsible investment and increased
• Chemical industry’s Responsible Care • Partnerships (e.g. Forest Stewardship Council, Ethical Trading shareholder activism
programme Initiative) • Equator and London Principles
• Waste minimisation clubs • Dow Jones Sustainability Index • SIGMA Management Framework
• Green consumerism • Producer responsibility regulations (eco-labelling and product • Development of ISO Guideline on CSR
• Initial business charters (e.g. Valdez take-back) • Business partnership initiatives
Principles) • Supply chain management and audits • Uptake of climate-change related mechanisms
(emissions trading, CDM)
BUSINESS RESPONSE COMPLIANCE BEYOND COMPLIANCE CHANGING COURSE STRATEGIC INTEGRATION
ORGANISATIONAL Denial Resistant adaptation Compliance and cost avoidance Institutionalisation and innovation Evolving business models
STRATEGY Minimum regulatory standards Continual improvement
• Compliance • Risk minimisation • Environmental management systems • Corporate governance
• End-of pipe solutions • Impact reduction • Environmental/sustainability reporting • Integrated sustainability management
• Focus on hazardous waste emissions • Pre-emption of regulation • Cleaner production/eco-efficiency • Focus on human rights and transparency
and chemical releases • Total Quality Management • Stakeholder engagement • Sustainable production and consumption
• Remediation and abatement measures • Initial environmental and social audits • Focus on products • Design for environment, life cycle assessment, shift from
• Social managements systems products to service
• Ethical trading/supply chain initiatives • Promoting sustainable livelihoods
MANAGEMENT • Pollution control and compliance • Environmental impact assessments/TQEM • Strategic environmental management/Environmental cost • Integrated management systems
SYSTEMS & TOOLS • Pollution prevention and waste • Environmental and social management accounting/Cost benefit analysis • Corporate social responsibility/Sustainability reporting
management systems codes (ISO, EMAS, SA 8000, • Product stewardship/Partnerships/Stakeholder participation • Design for sustainability
EITI)/Voluntary agreements
Source: P Courtice & P Willis, 2005, based on N Acutt (unpubl. PhD thesis) and B Nattrass & M Altomare: The Natural Step for Business (New Society Publishers, Canada, 1999), with additional material by J Hanks
.
10 Business & the Environment Programme: FACING THE FUTURE 11
7. INTRODUCTION
This publication includes a collection of insights from times out of a 1000. That doesn’t make those pioneering development or corporate responsibility specialists on
organisations involved in the Business & the Environment examples less important. But it does raise the key questions, which so much of the delivery in companies still depends. THE BUSINESS BENEFITS OF
Programme and provides a host of encouraging pointers to posed by several non-corporate contributors (Michael The aim has been to empower the practitioners by ensuring SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT
the future. Their experience reflects the very real business Meacher, Vandana Shiva, Tom Gladwin, Caroline Lucas and that senior executives in all mainstream functions begin to ECO-EFFICIENCY
benefits of sustainable development which we emphasise others): Will the world make the transition to sustainable get a handle on both the risks and the opportunities that 1 Reduced costs
to our delegates. development in time? Will our technological ingenuity sustainable wealth creation entails. This ensures that 2 Costs avoided (Design for Environment,
enable us to pass through the narrowing resources funnel sustainable development is not delegated down to a group Eco-innovation)
But this publication also reflects the uncertainty described before we run out of cheap oil or fuel wood, or before of hard-pressed champions who then become the dumping 3 Optimal investment strategies
above about how far to go with the sustainability agenda. poverty, climate change, population growth or water ground for a host of challenges that should be owned at
QUALITY MANAGEMENT
Set against the magnitude of the challenge, some of the shortages combine to trigger social unrest on a global scale? board or management team level.
4 Better risk management
solutions appear limited or insubstantial: one company in
5 Greater responsiveness in volatile markets
India supplying local villages with small dam technologies As The Prince of Wales points out in his Foreword, the mission We would claim some success in changing corporate hearts
6 Staff motivation/commitment
to help control monsoon water; six million of the world’s of his Business & the Environment Programme is to wrestle and minds, but freely admit that our impact has been
7 Enhanced intellectual capital
poorest people provided with water and sanitation by 2015 with, and find solutions to, these uncomfortable questions. limited. Even one thousand alumni over 10 years can make
(meeting the Millennium Development Goals would require only a small contribution to collective corporate capacity to LICENCE TO OPERATE
260,000 people a day receiving the same services) a few Why do so many companies still find it so hard to break get on top of these challenges. Believing as passionately as 8 Reduced costs of compliance/planning
permits/licences
millions invested in renewables when tens of billions are ranks, even when they know they’re being held back by the we do in the potential of leading companies to act as ‘a
9 Enhanced reputation with all key stakeholders
still being pumped into unsustainable fossil fuels; a risk-averse mediocrity of their competitors and the ‘lowest force for good’ in the world today, we appreciate that we
partnership that provides 112 megawatts of green energy common denominator’ approach of so many of the trade too have to raise our game and make as big a contribution 10 Influence with regulator
(the equivalent of taking 98,000 vehicles off the road), associations to which they keep paying their dues? Why do to that process as we possibly can. MARKET ADVANTAGE
when hundreds of thousands of (old technology) new cars so few business leaders question publicly the manner in 11 Stronger brands
will be purchased this year in developing countries; an which fund managers and institutional investors pursue 12 Customer preference/loyalty
e-inclusion programme reaching around 300,000 people, unrealistic short-term gains at the expense of long-term 13 Lower costs of capital
when three billion people still live on less than $2 a day. value creation? How do we get across that such short- “No man can make a greater
14 New products/processes/services
termism is costing the planet dear and threatening the mistake than he who did nothing
15 Attracting the right talent
These are small steps, when viewed against the backdrop of well-being of future generations? because he could do only a little.”
SUSTAINABLE PROFITS
an economic system driven by short-term profit Edmund Burke engraved in the gardens of
16 New business/increased market share
maximisation, where responsibility to shareholders trumps A hallmark of the Programme right from the start is that our Madingley Hall, venue for the UK Seminar
17 Enhanced shareholder value
responsibility to a secure, sustainable and civilised world 999 delegates are not (in the main) the sustainable
12 Business & the Environment Programme: FACING THE FUTURE 13
8. INTRODUCTION
BEP MILESTONES
1994 1995 1997 1998 2001 2003 2004 2005
Programme Launch First Alumni Reunion First European Seminar, First London Lecture, First US Seminar, First Southern African Celebration of 10th ‘Facing the Future’ –
Schloss Leopoldskron, delivered by James Wingspread, Racine, Seminar, Lanzerac Manor, Anniversary Windsor Castle event to
First UK Senior Launch of the Alummi Salzburg, Austria Wolfensohn, President, Wisconsin Cape Town launch the next 10 years
Executives’ Seminar held Network World Bank Group Third London Lecture,
at Madingley Hall, 500th delegate Launch of the Sustainable delivered by the UK Launch of the 10th
Cambridge Feasibility study for Feasibility study for registered Economy Dialogue Prime Minister, the Rt Anniversary Publication
expansion of the extension of the Hon Tony Blair, MP ‘Facing the Future’
Programme Programme into the USA Second London Lecture, First Southern African
internationally delivered by Gro Harlem Reunion First Reunion for US Publication of the
Brundtland, Director Alumni in Ann Arbor, Sustainable Economy
General, World Health Michigan Dialogue report, and
Organisation launch of Phase II
Publication of second
Publication of the edition of Background Publication of Functional
Background Briefings Briefings Briefings
1,000th delegate
registered
14 Business & the Environment Programme: FACING THE FUTURE 15
9. LIMITS TO GROWTH
The growth question is fundamental to the global sustainable development
debate. It divides leading thinkers and players within corporations, governments,
academia and civil society.
Limits to
1
GROWTH?
In this section: On the one side are those who believe that the world
can sustain ever more economic growth and
Professor Jorgen Randers I Norwegian
School of Management consumption and that this path will alleviate endemic
problems such as poverty and inequity. On the other
The Rt Hon Tony Blair, MP I UK Prime Minister
are those who believe unrestrained growth is
Richard Sandbrook I Senior Advisor, UNDP
unsustainable, will bust the Earth’s natural carrying
Malcolm Brinded I Executive Director of Oil & Gas
capacity and is inimical to sustainable development.
Exploration, Shell
Peter Woicke I Executive Vice-President,
International Finance Corporation
Bill McDonough I Founding Partner and Principal,
William McDonough and Partners
Jeremy Pelczer I Chief Executive, American Water
16 Business & the Environment Programme: FACING THE FUTURE 17
10. LIMITS TO GROWTH
TAKING THE ROAD Thus, in my view, it is no longer enough in 2005 to be for
or against economic growth. The ‘for’ crowd must split in
LESS TRAVELLED two: i) those for growth, but within a sustainable footprint ,
and ii) those for growth without active regard for its
Professor Jorgen Randers ecological footprint. I expect the first group – to which I
Norwegian School of Management I Co-Author, Limits to Growth I Member of the Programme’s Core Faculty belong – to grow rapidly over the coming decades, as the
global damage from unrestrained economic growth
becomes increasingly apparent. The result will be a
tremendous increase in efforts to reduce the ecological
1 “In 2005 it is no longer enough to be simply ‘for’ or ‘against’ footprint per unit of GDP by boosting dematerialisation and
economic growth…” eco-efficiency. There will be many profitable opportunities
for innovative firms. Business can and should be part of
Ever since the 1970s, people have debated whether Year Update’, was published in 2004) my co-authors and I
this first group.
economic growth is necessary. Desirable? Possible? Some are less concerned about forms of economic growth with
believe everlasting growth is essential for progress and to little impact on the physical environment. More worrisome
At the start of the 21st century, the big question is this: can
maintain societal calm. Others insist it is impossible within is growth which destroys the natural resources that we
and will the global economy be dematerialised fast enough
a physically finite world. Some demand that economic depend on.
to avoid the destruction of the global environment? On this
growth is made sustainable. Passions run high and rational
issue the jury is still out. Meanwhile the response from any
exchange has been limited. Luckily, both the debate and the conceptual framework for Wackernagel, M. and William E. Rees, Our Ecological Footprint: Reducing Human
responsible global citizen, organisation or institution should Impact on the Earth. New Society Publishers, Gabriola Island. 1996.
sustainable development have grown in sophistication over
be to work hard to reduce the ecological footprint of their
I have been closer to this debate than most. In 1972 my 30 years. The advent (and tentative operationalisation) of
local economy, in whatever way proves politically feasible:
colleagues and I published ‘The Limits to Growth’, triggering the concept of humanity’s ‘ecological footprint’ has made
dematerialisation, redistribution of footprint from rich to
a fierce but, I believe, ultimately futile debate for and simple and understandable the crucial distinction between
poor or reduced consumption. Given that the desire for
against traditional economic growth, between economists, traditional economic growth (or GDP) and its physical
continued economic growth is unlikely to abate over the
environmentalists and others around the world. Our book consequences. If they so chose, enlightened politicians
next generation this will not be an easy road, but it is one
did not denounce all growth as bad. Rather, there was an could pledge ‘to increase human welfare while ensuring
we must tread.
explicit focus on the physical consequences of growth – the human ecological footprint remains below what the
resource use, emissions and biodiversity loss – for a finite global ecosystem can sustain’ and then evaluate all their
planet Earth. Both then and now (‘Limits to Growth: The 30 actions against this ecological measuring stick .
18 Business & the Environment Programme: FACING THE FUTURE 19
11. LIMITS TO GROWTH
TOWARDS A GREEN
INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION
The Rt Hon Tony Blair, MP
The UK Prime Minister
1 “a challenge so far-reaching in its impact and irreversible in its destructive Climate change will be a top priority for our [2005] G8
presidency. There is huge scope for improving energy
power, that it alters radically human existence”
efficiency and promoting the uptake of existing low carbon
technologies like photovoltaics, fuel cells and carbon
It is now plain that the emission of modelling, climate change means that as soon as the 2040s,
sequestration. We need to build an international consensus
greenhouse gases, associated with one year in two is likely to be even warmer than 2003.
on how we can speed up the introduction of these
industrialisation and strong
technologies. In short, we need to develop the new green
economic growth from a world Just as science and technology has given us the evidence
industrial revolution that can confront and overcome the
population that has increased to measure the danger of climate change, so it can help us
challenge of climate change.
sixfold in 200 years, is causing find safety from it. The potential for innovation, for
global warming at a rate that began as significant, has scientific discovery and hence for business investment and Extracted from the Business & the Environment Programme’s 10th Left to Right: Sir Nick Scheele, President of the Ford Motor Company and
become alarming and is simply unsustainable in the long- growth, is enormous. With the right framework for action, Anniversary Lecture, London, September 2004. Chairman of the Business & the Environment Programme Management
term. And by long-term I do not mean centuries ahead. I the very act of solving it can unleash a new and benign Committee. Polly Courtice, Director of the Cambridge Programme for
Industry and Co-Director of the Business & the Environment Programme.
mean within the lifetime of my children and possibly within commercial force…providing jobs, technology spin-offs and The Rt Hon Tony Blair, The UK Prime Minister, MP, Jonathon Porritt,
my own. And by unsustainable, I do not mean a new business opportunities as well as protecting the world Chairman of the UK Sustainable Development Commission and Co-Director
of the Business & the Environment Programme, Professor Alison Richard,
phenomenon causing problems of adjustment. I mean a we live in.
Vice-Chancellor of the University of Cambridge and member of the
challenge so far-reaching in its impact and irreversible in its Business & the Environment Programme Management Committee.
destructive power, that it alters radically human existence. The UK has shown that it can have a strongly growing
There is good evidence that the [2003] European heat wave economy while addressing environmental issues. Between
was influenced by global warming. It resulted in 26,000 1990 and 2002 the UK economy grew by 36%, while
premature deaths and cost $13.5 billion. On the latest greenhouse gas emissions fell by around 15%.
20 Business & the Environment Programme: FACING THE FUTURE 21
12. LIMITS TO GROWTH
THE SUSTAINABLE ECONOMY ASSET OR LIABILITY?
DIALOGUE THE POPULATION CHALLENGE
In 2003, The Prince of Wales’s Business & the Environment Programme Richard Sandbrook
launched a major initiative to clarify what business leaders believe should Senior advisor to UNDP I Member of the Programme’s Guest Faculty
be the fundamental goal of today’s economies and how the corporate
sector could help global progress towards this goal.
1 Several hundred senior executives, including By the end of 2004, the Sustainable Economy Dialogue “With two billion more people on the way in poor countries, how can global
BEP alumni, Programme delegates and a select group had been run 11 times at BEP events, involving nearly
companies re-think their business for the ‘have-not’ world?”
from outside the Programme, were given the 400 participants who spent between five and seven
opportunity to enquire deeply into three critical – yet hours in small -g roup sessions focused on these
The direst predictions about a population ‘bomb’, made them born into poverty. In the meantime consumption per
seldom asked – questions facing the global business questions. The results indicate a surprising degree of
back in the 1970s by US academic Paul Ehrlich and others, head accelerates almost everywhere; unemployment
community, namely: agreement among corporate executives about the
have not come to pass. The pessimists had predicted among young people – almost half the world’s population
fundamental goal of a good economy. There is also
spiralling human populations across the developing world, is under 24 – is rising steeply in the poor world; and the
Q1: FUNDAMENTAL GOAL widespread, albeit less consistent, agreement on what
triggering widespread food shortages and mass migrations. unfunded retirement of a growing percentage in the rich
What is the fundamental goal or purpose of a good keeps humanity from attaining this goal. The
world keeps many a chancellor awake.
economy? participants identified 10 – 15 failings, which have one
Instead, in the early 1990s, at UN conferences on
Q2: CURRENT FAILINGS thing in common: all are deeply embedded in the
population in Cairo and on women in Beijing, the world’s So where does business come in? How can corporations
Why do current economies fail to achieve this structure of modern society. Participants also offered a
governments agreed on what needed to be done to harness the tremendous human capital which large
fundamental goal? rich palate of ideas for business actions to address
contain human growth, namely, increase women’s literacy, populations offer, while actively supporting social trends
Q3: BUSINESS ACTION current failings. Our full findings will now be published
rights and wellbeing and reduce childhood mortality. World which prevent the stresses of over-population?
What can business do to help eliminate these failings? in ‘The Sustainable Economy Dialogue: Report and
population projections are now falling as country after
Reflections’. We hope they will provide rich material for
country comes below the magical 2.14 births per couple In some senses the answers are obvious and well tried.
corporate deliberation and action worldwide.
(the point at which birth and death rates are equal). Southern African companies are directly involved in national
Nevertheless, we cannot get complacent. While population thinking on birth control and HIV/AIDS. Unilever, taking a
growth has slowed, it will not peak for 50 years or so. more indirect approach, has made the needs of female
Within 30 years, two billion more people will enter the consumers – clean water, hygiene, family welfare –
world – 97% of them in developing countries, most of fundamental to their business case.
22 Business & the Environment Programme: FACING THE FUTURE 23
13. LIMITS TO GROWTH
The real stretch is how businesses can grow to
accommodate pro-poor solutions for future markets. The ENERGY DILEMMAS
overall rationale is clear: as OECD markets become
saturated, future markets need to be developed elsewhere.
Malcolm Brinded
Executive Director of Oil & Gas Exploration, Shell I Alumnus of the Programme
Yet so are the difficulties: poor people, in highly populated
countries, cannot offer much demand for products, given
that two billion of them live on less than $2 per day.
The solutions, in such circumstances, are complex. There is
1 There are two main sustainability challenges that we, as a Multinational energy companies will play a crucial role in
no doubt that the future global company that wants to
company and an industry, must help the world address. One meeting exploding demand in the developing world.
operate in the ‘have not’ world will have to radically rethink
is to help lift billions of people out of poverty by providing Realistically, most of this energy in the coming decades will
how it does its business. The issue is how to create
them with the modern energy needed for economic still be supplied by hydrocarbons, which is why Shell is
livelihoods that generate household income for the one
growth. The other is to do this in an environmentally investing approximately $15 billion per year to find and
thing that is in abundant supply – labour. The capital-
responsible way that responds, in particular, to growing deliver new oil and gas supplies.
intensive solutions we apply are not apposite. Take the
concern about climate change.
mining sector. In Tanzania some 15-20% of the population
Why hydrocarbons? Because alternatives like solar power or
relies on small-scale mining for their income. Can the big
About two billion people still live without electricity. They bio-fuels are currently more expensive to produce and will
mining houses outsource their raw material supply to them?
rely on firewood or dung for cooking or heating, sources of simply not be available in the quantities needed for several
Can the sugar manufacturers, the brewers and the food
fuel which are denuding their forests, damaging their health decades. With government support and private sector
industry do the same with small farmers? Can the paper
and squeezing out work and study time – especially for initiative, our energy scenarios envision bio-fuels, wind and
industry source its raw materials from a mass of growers
women and girls who collect the bulk of it. By 2050, solar power growing by as much as 10% per year. But even
rather than from vast capital-intensive plantations?
developing countries will be home to about 50% more then, they would only meet about 5% of global demand by
people and use five times more energy, doubling global 2020. The global energy system is simply too big for
For the corporate sector to be a part of the solution to the
energy demand. alternatives to make a significant impact more quickly. That
coming unemployment crisis and the wretchedness that
is why we expect the transition to low carbon alternatives
flows from it, then it has to rethink life in a world of six
to happen gradually, over this century.
billion plus – and do so now.
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14. LIMITS TO GROWTH
Shell long-term energy secenarios The Energy Challenge technology is also promising. Our patented coal gasification
process reduces carbon emissions by about 20%, (and local
emissions by more than 85%) compared with conventional
coal combustion, and can help fast growing coal users like
China and India manage their emissions. Carbon dioxide
sequestration will also become an increasingly important
part of the solution.
Responding to climate change and delivering the energy
1
needed to alleviate poverty will seriously challenge the
global energy system. It will demand concerted effort and
effective partnerships. Government policies will need to
support international energy markets and promote climate
protection. Energy users must use energy responsibly.
Energy companies and equipment makers must apply better
It is also why we take a long-term view of our investments and society find better (more convenient, cheaper or
technologies and make the massive investments needed.
in renewables and hydrogen (nearly $1 bn over the last five cleaner).
years). We are building commercially viable new energy
As an industry and as a company, we have a role and a
businesses by driving down costs and expanding the market The pressing question is how to deal with the
responsibility to meet this challenge effectively.
for biofuels, solar and wind power and hydrogen. environmental impacts, and especially the climate risks,
from the continued growth of hydrocarbon use in the
Will we run out of hydrocarbons before alternatives are meantime? Using more natural gas instead of coal is an
“Responding to climate change
available on a mass scale? No. There is still a lot of coal, oil important part of the answer. Gas is the cleanest burning
and gas to be found and produced. Oil sands and shale fossil fuel with carbon emissions half those from modern
and delivering the energy needed
alone contain many times more oil than Saudi Arabia. coal-fired power plants. (Our Malampaya project in the to alleviate poverty will seriously
Instead, the world will shift away from hydrocarbons for the Philippines, for example, already supplies 30% of the challenge the global energy
same reason we shifted from wood to coal or from horses country’s output.) Growth in the world’s global Liquefied system.”
to cars – because we develop alternatives that customers Natural Gas (LNG) business is therefore vital. New coal
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15. LIMITS TO GROWTH
SUSTAINABILITY TIGERS: Multinational companies operating in developing nations
could learn from such approaches. Through innovative
government has a huge opportunity to turn the situation to
advantage. One idea we have discussed is inviting all the
BALANCING GROWTH AND CSR IN thinking, such initiatives could be applied on a national and major automakers into China, but only allowing them to
EMERGING NATIONS regional scale. They also need to look more to local
suppliers, to building local capacity which will assist social
build advanced hybrid and fuel efficient cars. This is the kind
of circumstance where government influence and business
development. partnership are extremely important to sustainable
Peter Woicke
outcomes.
Executive Vice-President of the International Finance Corporation I Contributor to the Programme’s Seminars
The sustainable development implications of China’s
emergence as a consuming giant are enormous. How Will emerging countries develop sustainably? What is
1 As the private sector lending arm of the World Bank, the where a small minority own a vast majority of assets, is a
can business help China leapfrog the industrial era? the role of business in making this happen?
International Finance Corporation (IFC) has a remit to classic case.) They therefore have a genuine stake in
China is extremely worried about the environmental impact I think the next 10 years will be crunch time. Major equity
support ecologically and socially sustainable projects in poverty reduction and sustainable development.
of its growth. Government officials constantly ask me about investors such as the pension funds are still not addressing
developing countries. Peter Woicke reflects on emerging
accessing environmental technologies. One of the most environmental and social responsibility, neither are Wall
world approaches to the sustainability agenda. Can you give some examples?
frightening prospects, in energy terms, is the policy that Street analysts. If we could persuade these players to take
In China, the focus tends to be on corporate governance,
every Chinese family should have a car by 2020. Yet, the CSR seriously, the impact would be swift and huge.
What is the role of corporate social responsibility in treating minority shareholders better, for example. In Brazil,
developing nations? entrepreneurs are engaging in local politics. When President
In my admittedly rather harsh view, Northern multinationals Lula came to power many municipal governments lacked
have largely adopted corporate social responsibility (CSR) the management capacity to distribute food under his Zero
policies because of NGO and consumer pressure. The Hunger Programme. The IFC worked with national
difference in countries such as China, India, Brazil and corporations to help municipalities set up better distribution
Russia, in my experience, is that companies view CSR as key systems. In India, the emphasis is on social responsibility. We
to long-term survival. Their CEOs want to become important work with one major company in a very poor area, whose
national, regional and eventually global, players. They owner supplied villagers with the hydro-technology to build
believe to succeed at this level you not only need a good small dams to control the monsoon waters. The subsistence
bottom line, but also good environmental and social farmers now have enough water year-round. Ask the owner
policies. They also recognise that the instability in regional why he did this and he says “well, it didn’t cost me very
capital markets which harms their business is largely due to much and I can’t afford to operate in an area where there
huge inequities in income distribution. (Latin America, could be social disturbances if inequities persist.”
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