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Perspectives on Green Business ENVS 5150 Brian Milani

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Presentation on theme: "Perspectives on Green Business ENVS 5150 Brian Milani"— Presentation transcript:

1 Perspectives on Green Business ENVS 5150 Brian Milani bmilani@web.ca

2 Course Overview Focus on overall economic context some attention to practical business problems Postindustrial: the Redefinition of Wealth Sectors & use-value Distinctions between –protection & alternatives –big & small business; corporate & community Importance of “values-driven” or “mission- driven” business Relationships within and outside of the firm

3 Green as Postindustrial from mechanics to organics from machinery to the landscape Increasing role of “public goods” and the Commons culture-based development substitutes intelligence for resources (people-intensive) focus on end-use, or human and environmental need from quantity to quality: redefining wealth

4 The Green Economy A Historical Transition: …from Quantity to Quality A Question of Potentials …not simply limits Key to Sustainability: Redefining Wealth

5 Principles of a Green Economy 1.The Primacy of Human Need, Service, Use-value, Intrinsic Value & Quality 2.Following Natural Flows 3.Waste Equals Food 4.Elegance and Multifunctionality 5.Appropriate Scale / Linked Scale 6.Diversity 7.Self-Reliance, Self-Organization, Self-Design 8.Participation & Direct Democracy 9.Human Creativity and Development 10.The Strategic role of the Built-environment, the Landscape & Spatial Design

6 Basics of a Green Economy 1.The Service Economy “Hot Showers and Cold Beer” Nutrition, Illumination, Entertainment, Access, Shelter, Community, etc. 2. The “Lake Economy” Flowing with nature, Every output an input, Closed-loop organization, Let nature do the work

7 Human Development in the Green Economy Production: human creativity the key Consumption: “end-use” Direct targeting of human need = massive resource savings Regulation: participation at all levels.

8 The Economy in Loops

9 Industrialism: The Divided Economy Invisible Visible Use-value Exchange-value “Consumption” “Production” People Things Unpaid Paid Women Men Informal Formal Private Public

10 Invisible Economy (1) Total Productive System of an Industrial Society (layer cake with icing) GNP-Monetized ½ of Cake Top two layers Non-Monetized Productive ½ of Cake Lower two layers GNP “Private” Sector Rests on GNP “Public” Sector Rests on Social Cooperative Love Economy Rests on Nature’s Layer “Private” Sector “Public”Sector “underground economy “Love Economy” Mother Nature All rights reserved.Copyright© 1982 Hazel Henderson 2

11 Industrialism: Accumulation Production-for-production’s-sake Invisibility of key factors Centralization of production, massive upfront investment Focus on labour productivity : resources substitute for human energy Cog-labour: humans as component parts Regulation: controls as limits Scarcity-based: role of waste since WWII Globalization: free trade & intellectual property

12 Postindustrialism: Regeneration New relationship of culture to economics: centrality of human development Substitution of human creativity for resources Direct targeting of human need: conscious consumption Human-scale technologies: production ‘distributed’ over the landscape ; Integration: ALL places are places of production Qualitative Wealth is PLACE-BASED Distributed regulation: incentives for positive action throughout economy. Self-reliance / interdependence: “Trade recipes, not cookies”

13 Structural obstacles to sustainability Nature of the Corporation Centrality of Economic Growth Ownership patterns inconsistent with Stewardship Alienated relationship to human need –Creating rather than responding to it

14 The Business Case for Sustainability Single Bottom Line Sustainability (SBLS) Essential to large corporations Not sufficient to create ecological economies Corporations need outside help!

15 Internal & External Action The balance is different for big & small business Relationship between democracy & economic evolution Centrality of Stakeholder relationships Importance of New Enterprise Networks

16 Market Transformation Social & Environmental Values become drivers of “mindful markets” Money & capital increasingly a means (not the end-goal) of economic development Involves the transformation of regulation —incentives & disincentives built into everyday economic life

17 3-D’s of Green Development Dematerialization Detoxification Decentralization

18 Common Sense Economics Herman Daly “Trade Recipes, not Cookies.” Increase restrictions on the flow of material goods and physical capital (to minimize transport costs, etc.) Lessen restrictions on the flow of information and culture. note: Globalization does exactly the opposite: via free trade and intellectual property law.

19 Corporate Strategies Corporations as financial, not production, entities Structural problems: the ‘bottom line’ documentary: The Corporation Need to change corporate DNA Need for outside help: regulation (EPR), new enterprises networks, certification The Stakeholder Corporation & democracy

20 Community / Small Business The realm of cutting-edge alternatives in almost every sector Need for new & stronger networks Local market power based on solid knowledge Import substitution Regenerative finance Necessity of empowering all sections of the community Community development Plans & Indicators

21 Living in De-Material World Redesign not simply controls Direct focus on human (& environmental) need The Service Economy: Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR) encouraging provision of services not stuff. Servicizing (voluntary EPR). The “Lake Economy”: economic biomimicry: sectoral orientation: regenerative food, energy, manufacturing, c ommunications. New forms of economic security Conscious support of the Commons Disarming the autonomous power of money Building a community/ecosystem base: localization.

22 Social Change Today Strategic priority of ALTERNATIVES over opposition. Community as the key locus for change, but every level requires action Need for long-term VISION Need for incremental change and PIONEER ENTERPRISES in ecological economic succession. Need for incentives/disincentives thoughout the entire economy.


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