Archive for January 22nd, 2008

“Once regarded as irrelevant to economic activity, environmental problems are drastically rewriting the rules for business, investors, and consumers, affecting over $100 billion in annual capital flows,” say Worldwatch Institute project co-directors Gary Gardner and Thomas Prugh.

The world’s first global, sustainable market is becoming a reality according to a new report from the Worldwatch Institute. Environmental initiatives, revolutionary industrial production methods and a surge in environmentally focused investment groups are all highlighted among the increasingly important role that environmental issues play in the new world economy.

Another sign of dramatic change is the 575 environmental and energy hedge funds now in existence, most of them formed in the last few years. “Clean tech” has rapidly grown to be the third largest recipient of venture capital, trailing only the Internet and biotechnology. And 54 banks, representing 85 percent of global private project finance capacity, have endorsed the Equator Principles, a new international standard of sustainability investment.

The report also highlights how the current global economy is outpacing its “ecological base” using up natural resources at an unsustainable rate but notes that we possess the power and tools to change its course.

“Continued human progress now depends on an economic transformation that is more profound than any seen in the last century,” says Worldwatch president Christopher Flavin. “We should be practicing a sustainable approach to economics that takes advantage of the capability of markets to allocate scarce resources while explicitly recognizing that our economy is dependent on the broader ecosystem that contains it.”

Read the Worldwatch article at Adam Smith, Meet Mom Earth, more on the report at State of the World 2008: Innovations for a Sustainable Economy (full report available for purchase: $15 e-book, $18.95 paperback)

Share This

Comments No Comments »

cm_logo_v3.pngCompostmodern is an interdisciplinary design conference dedicated to promoting sustainable solutions within the design community at huge. It will be held in San Francisco this Saturday, January 19, 2008.

This is a great chance to get insight on the role of design in the shift towards sustainability from some of the most respected voices on business, environment and design.

Speakers include

Joel Makower (GreenBiz.com) a well- respected voice on business, the environment, and the bottom line. The Associated Press has called him the guru of green business practices. Joel is co-founder and executive editor of Greener World Media, Inc. which produces GreenBiz.com and its sister sites, ClimateBiz.com, GreenerBuildings.com, and GreenerComputing.com.

Alex Steffen (Worldchanging) the Executive Editor of Worldchanging since he co-founded the organization in 2003, as the next phase in a lifetime of work exploring ways of building a better future. In a very short time, Worldchanging has become the most widely read sustainability related publication on the World wide web, with an archive of over 7,000 articles by leading thinkers around the world.

Adam Werbach (Act Now Productions) founder and CEO of Act Now. He’s highly regarded as one of the worlds experts in sustainability. At age 23, Adam was elected as the youngest president ever of the Sierra Club, the oldest and largest environmental organization in the United Says.

Marc Alt and (AIGA Center for Sustainable Design) Marc Alt is the principal of Marc Alt + Partners, a New York based design consultancy specializing in research, business analysis, brand strategy, and environmental strategy for corporations, non-profi ts and philanthropic organizations. And co-chair of the AIGA Center for Sustainable Design (CFSD), a nationwide initiative to elevate sustainable thinking within the design profession at big.

…and many more thoroughly engaging speakers are on the list so if you are in the San Francisco area this weekend mark your calendar for Compostmodern 08 and get your green on. Register here.

Share This

Comments No Comments »

greenergadgets537.jpg
I’ve been with the same cell provider for five about five years. I actually don’t use the cell phone daily but it was and remains my “land line” in the US. On a current visit, I tried to get a new charger for the phone, which is all of 2 years old, and the salesperson acted like I wanted parts for an antique.

They don’t make chargers or batteries for this phone anymore. The word of the day was “obsolete”, as in you’re the sucker who purchased a product which would become obsolete before its useful life was over. And as in we are the company who sold you a product that would quickly become obsolete and we aren’t going to do anything when it does.

I understand that technology evolves very fast. However, there is a problem when companies don’t take responsibility for end use. Cell phones, personal, DVD players and all the soon-to-be obsolete parts that are sold with them have created the major global problem of how to deal with e-waste. Very little of our gadgets get recycled and when they do it is often to the detriment of the environment, developing countries or already disenfranchised segments of our society.

Tackling this and other sustainability issues within the technology industry is the focus of the Greener Gadgets Conference in NYC February 1st, 2008. Greener Gadgets is a one day conference featuring key representatives from some of the largest consumer electronics companies in the world, innovators from academic thinktanks, members of startups focused on renewable energy, and some of the leading minds in the word of sustainable design and business.

Industry leaders, entrepreneurs, journalists, and designers will gather to discuss the business case for the greening of the consumer electronics industry.

Topics to be addressed include: design for sustainability, product life cycle management, take-back and recycling programs, energy efficiency, greener materials, and green lifestyle and product marketing. An attached gallery space will feature a green prototype office display and technology exhibits from companies on the cutting edge of green tech.

I’ll be there, will you? Learn more and get involved at the Greener Gadgets website!

Also check out this great resource on e-waste by Jennifer Van Der Meer of o2-NYC. And the GreenPeace Guide to Greener Electronics.

What’s your idea of a green gadget? Got a design in mind? Check out the Greener Gadgets Design Competition, over $4,500 in prizes up for grabs for ideas that bring solutions for greener electronics.

Share This

Comments No Comments »

Close
E-mail It