Teach that Old Business Some New Tricks

In our sustainability consulting, we ask prospective businesses partners and clients: “Are you currently implementing sustainability into your business?”  Encouragingly we are hearing more and more affirmative answers to the question.  For those not making changes, the response to the question often comes in the form of a question. 

•    “What is Sustainability?”

•    “How does Sustainability apply to my business?”

The business leaders that do not have an understanding of sustainability concepts often offer one of the following explanations for not pursuing sustainability in their business: 

•    This is a dramatic shift from how we currently do business.

•    Now is not the right time to be making changes.

•    Implementing business sustainability concepts will be too costly.

In my professional consulting experience, I find that companies frequently become overly focused on the execution of dated business goals.  Too often business models and strategies become stagnate, and companies fail to take proactive or immediate action to respond to the changing environment. 
 
“Most business people are so busy working for their business or in their business that they never find time to work on their business. Thus they fail to anticipate what might happen or what they might be able to make happen”. –The Fast East the Slow.
 
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Home to one third of the earth’s trees, the Taiga is the largest land-based biosphere and encircles the globe. Its immense oxygen production literally changes the atmosphere and refreshes the planet. It is this continuous renewal that has shaped Taiga Company’s vision to drive similar change in the business world. Taiga Company seeks to be the “oxygen for your business”.

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Posted via web from 3BL Media, CSR News, and Emily

Are Green Jobs the New High Value Career Track?

In our personal and professional consulting, we express to clients that pursing a ‘green’ career is a natural extension of living a sustainable lifestyle.   When you embrace eco awareness as a part of your daily life, it is natural to pursue the same in searching for a career.   Until recently, the future of the ‘green’ job market had been a little bit uncertain and not all that attractive financially.  Today’s green jobs are a whole different story.

According to Reuters’ first Carbon Salary Survey, ‘green’ professionals are now receiving top tier salaries.  The survey reported:

•    The average green collar worker receives $76,000 per year, with half of respondents receiving an annual bonus of $11,000.
•    The financial and legal sectors had the highest average salary at $116,000.
•    Green marketing, PR or media averaged $58,000.

According to GreenBiz, a new generation of workers are expecting more from employers. In some cases, companies have responded by promoting eco awareness and creating workplaces that are more appealing to the changing needs of job seekers.  

Today’s ‘green’ workers indicate that they feel well positioned in the current market.  Citing heightened response in the past few years from governments and businesses, of those polled:

•    68 percent felt solid about their job security. 
•    75 percent said they were satisfied with their jobs.
•    93 percent said they would recommend a career in the environmental sector to others.

So what does it take to get on the ‘green’ career track

Reuters identified the top criteria as a university degree, with sustainability qualifications and experience also important.  In our professional consulting, we interact with a variety of avenues to increase sustainability education, experience, and credentials.

In a recent post, What Does a Green Employee Look Like, businesses are also seeking employees with a genuine interest and passion for business sustainability.  Companies want a candidate with a balanced perspective.

As a sustainability consulting firm, we at Taiga Company are extremely enthusiastic about ‘green’ employment opportunities and a career path in the sustainability field.  The world is changing and those with the passion and experience will be on the forefront.

Posted via web from 3BL Media, CSR News, and Emily

3BL TV Presents: CSRunscripted – BP + Shell

CSRunscripted with Fabian Pattberg: BP + Shell http://amplify.com/u/5q9l

Posted via web from 3BL Media, CSR News, and Emily

Prestigious College in Hot Water from Going Green!

Bowdoin College in Brunswick, Maine has been awarded a $50,000 grant from the Maine Public Utilities Commission toward the installation of a solar hot water project for Thorne Hall, the largest dining hall on campus. The project, designed for the roof of Thorne, includes 24 glazed flat plate solar collectors, which will make up a 960-square-foot solar thermal array and the piping to solar storage tanks.

This is part of Bowdoin’s overall plan to conserve energy, eliminate waste CO2 and be carbon neutral by 2020. Seems fitting, since their mascot since 1913 has been the polar bear. The hot water generated by this solar thermal system will reduce the use of natural gas currently used to feed the dining hall’s hot water system. Thorne Hall is one of the largest users of water on campus, averaging 4,800 gallons per day for hungry and thirsty students.

Over 4 billion BTUs from fossil fuels will be avoided during the first 10 years of the system’s operation, according to ReVision Energy, the project consultant. That’s oil that can stay right in the ground.

The system also includes a BTU meter to monitor the system’s performance online, which will help serve as an important educational tool for students, faculty, staff and guests.

Mary Lou Kennedy, Bowdoin’s director of dining and bookstore services, says “The solar panels on Thorne Hall will be a tangible symbol to the students and the community of Bowdoin’s diversified approach to reducing the College’s greenhouse gas emissions.”  The solar hot water system is expected to be up and running this spring. Go Bowdoin!

Read more about the College’s Climate Action Plan here.

Greenopolis.com is dedicated to our users. We focus our attention on changing the world through recycling, waste-to-energy and conservation. We reward our users for their sustainable behaviors on our website, through our Greenopolis recycling kiosks and with curbside recycling programs.

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Posted via web from 3BL Media, CSR News, and Emily

Merge Stakeholder Expectations for Sustainable Supply Chain

Supply Chain Management has traditionally been focused on creating efficiencies within business relationships in an effort to reduce costs.  Recently the discussion of ‘Green’ or ‘Sustainable’ SCM has introduced the idea of incorporating sustainability concepts into the management of supply.

This added perspective has merged the values and expectations of key business stakeholders beyond traditional cost. Incorporating sustainability concepts into business relationships is creating a common sustainability line of sight  across the entire value chain.

In our previous post on sustainable Supply Chain Management, we have primarily focused on the best practices and opportunities for both customers and suppliers.  Sustainable Supply Chain Management incorporates a broader value proposition in its ability to effectively align the business sustainability needs of a company’s key stakeholders.

Stakeholders Engagement is more than just obtaining buy-in from employees and investors.  It includes:

•    Supplier Expectations: A new breed of ‘green’ and eco-minded suppliers are seeking to take market share from the competition.  They are expecting a shift in the playing field, as companies redefine their metrics for quality.

•    Consumer Expectations: Growing eco awareness has put the consumer preferences for alternative products on the leading edge of business sustainability.   These consumer expectations will ultimately ensure that only the most sustainable products and services will rise to the top.

•    Social and Local Community Expectations: Leading businesses are aligning their social activities with the engagement expectations of the communities in which they operate.  This provides a framework for business transactions carried out at the local level through partnerships with community groups and local businesses.

•    Environmental Expectations: The expectations to improved business operations continue to grow.  Environmental impacts are expanding beyond the walls of the company and incorporating the full lifecycle of products and services.

Business sustainability requires the involvement of those who have a vested interest in the future of the company.  By pursuing a sustainable supply chain, organizations are aligning the sustainability goals of company with the business drivers of key stakeholders.

Posted via web from 3BL Media, CSR News, and Emily

The Recycled Mattress Project at Hutchinson Correctional Facility

The guy in this picture is named Philip Barker. He’s an inmate at Hutchinson Correctional Facility in Kansas. In his spare time (which he has a lot of) he gets to dismantle, cut up and pull apart salvaged mattresses. He’s part of a new project, created by the Kansas state prison system, which aims to get minimum-custody inmates involved in recycling efforts.

So, what exactly is this Kansas prison project? In a nutshell, the state recognized that mattresses were taking up massive amounts of landfill space, so the prison decided to do something about it. A prison truck picks up old mattresses from surrounding landfills, brings them back to the prison, and then Philip and his other team members begin the recycling process.

I don’t know about you, but this sounds like a great idea to me!

After reading the article on knssradio.com I’d have to say that there are 3 main goals that the recycling project wants to achieve:

  1. It wants to be the first of its kind in the state of Kansas.

  2. It hopes to reduce the amount of landfill space that the mattresses take up…which is a lot.

  3. It aims to “give back” to the community by providing salvaged products like steel springs, foam and wood (which are then recycled into stuff like carpet padding and construction material).

This is a brand new project for the Kansas prison, so only 3 inmates have been commissioned to be a part of the recycling team. However, despite its infancy, it seems to be a success so far! Outside organizations like New Beginnings, which provides housing for displaced citizens, have already donated 40 mattresses to the prison, and surrounding counties are already in talks of getting their landfill mattresses picked up by the prison.

Apparently this isn’t the prison’s first environmental initiative. The prisoners have been recycling waste, turning prison blues into quilts and making reclaimed wooden children’s toys for years! Warden Sam Cline even said that the facility was recognized twice by the Kansas Department of Health and Environment for being the No. 1 “Green Team” among 157 state agencies.

I’m so happy that Hutchinson is implementing this project! I love the idea of getting inmates involved in recycling efforts. What do you think about it?

Greenopolis.com is dedicated to our users. We focus our attention on changing the world through recycling, waste-to-energy and conservation. We reward our users for their sustainable behaviors on our website, through our Greenopolis recycling kiosks and with curbside recycling programs.

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Posted via web from 3BL Media, CSR News, and Emily

Hollywood Goes Green

Admit it: You’ve got a celebrity crush. Everyone does. (Ok, so probably not EVERYONE, for you picky people… “Most People” is probably more accurate. I’m over it.) Why do you like them? Is it just because they are drop dead gorgeous, or do they actually have some personality traits that float your boat? What about their actions? Do they use their status for good or for bad?

Yikes! Who know day-dreaming about some person you’ve never met could lead to so many deep questions?

Well, in case you need to pick a new celebrity squeeze, the good folks at BeliefNet.com have some great suggestions. Ten of them, in fact. Take a look at this list from Megan O’Connell . I’ve selected a few of my favs and given you a closer look at her postings [Have more celebs to add to the list? Comment here.]:

1. Leonardo DiCaprio (aka MEGA HOTTIE WHOM I’VE BEEN IN LOVE WITH SINCE HE FIRST STARTED GUEST APPEARING ON “GROWING PAINS”…): “He lends his talents to projects like the climate change documentary The 11th Hour (which he narrated, co-produced and wrote) and the upcoming eco-friendly reality program “Greensburg” (he’s the executive producer) airing on the Discovery Channel’s Planet Green, which chronicles the green rebuilding of a town in Kansas that was destroyed by a tornado; he established the Leonardo DiCaprio Foundation which helps raise awareness of environmental issues; and he’s often caught tooling around Tinseltown in his Toyota Prius hybrid. DiCaprio stays green at home, too-with his $3,200 eco-friendly toilet!”

2. Ed Begley, Jr.

3. Alicia Silverstone

4. Ed Norton

5. George Clooney: “Clooney is a United Nations Messenger of Peace and has supported organizations such as Save Darfur. He has also worked to raise awareness about and decrease our nation’s dependence on oil by being a part of films such as “Syriana”–which fictionalized the rampant corruption of the oil industry–and by driving an electric car.”

6. Adrian Grenier

7. Cameron Diaz: “The Prius-driving Diaz has done many good green deeds as an environmental activist with organizations like the Environmental Media Association, for which she filmed public service announcements about energy conservation. She also helped spread carry the word message about the importance of protecting the earth to the MTV generation when she worked on the music video channel’s “Trippin’” TV Program, which featured Diaz and her friends traveling the world and working on environmental projects in other countries. Also, she helped Al Gore kick off the Live Earth concert series in 2007.”

8. Tom Hanks: “This big time, big screen star wasn’t satisfied with the a basic hybrid. His logic: while hybrids average an impressive 60 miles per gallon, they still require gas. Instead, Tom Hanks has been driving completely electric vehicles for years. The actor is so proud of his latest gas-free ride that he made a video explaining how his electric Scion xB works–while driving it around L.A. Hanks also works from his production company’s solar-powered office building.”

9. Daryl Hannah

10. Hayden Panettier

Want more? Check out her full story here.

By Gingerly Green of Two Girls Go Green (@TwoGirlsGoGreen)

Greenopolis.com is dedicated to our users. We focus our attention on changing the world through recycling, waste-to-energy and conservation. We reward our users for their sustainable behaviors on our website, through our Greenopolis recycling kiosks and with curbside recycling programs.

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Petroleum Katrina: Will BP and 400 Species Die for Our Sins?

BP is being excoriated for espousing a culture of safety and being “beyond petroleum, only to be at the center of a deadly explosion and potentiality worst oil spill in history. Are we to blame for this disaster, or is BP? Weigh in here.

Transocean, the owner of the platform will be under close scrutiny as will the company that makes the “blowout preventer” equipment that’s supposed to plug the well in a case like this. President Obama’s plan to open more areas to offshore drilling may sink like the rig itself.

But my mother always taught me that whenever I point a finger at someone, there are 3 more pointing back at me.

What’s my role in all this? I don’t even own stock in an oil company, and make most of my electricity from sunlight, chop my own wood, and drive a fuel efficient car.

But I benefit from nearly everything that runs on or is made from petroleum in this society. I get online on my HP computer- housed in a petroleum plastic cover that cannot be easily recycled, so trace that right to the oil well, along with my highly efficient but largely plastic flat screen TV. My goods I order online arrive by US Mail, Fed Ex or UPS, all fueled by petroleum. My back up heat is a biodiesel blend- but that’s actually a mix of petroleum and biofuel. My car’s dash and many parts are petroleum based, and it took a fair amount of petroleum energy to make it, along with my “green” house, most which was shipped from lumber yards and factories. I eat as local and organic as I can, but petroleum even fuels the transport to and from my local farm. Paints, cleaners, medical supplies, the list goes on and on, even for the greenest of us.

When George W. Bush publicly states that we are addicted to oil, it’s beyond obvious. It’s not a choice- the long finger of petroleum pokes its way into nearly every aspect of our lives, even to the hearse driving us to the cemetery. Please don’t bury me in a petroleum based casket, and use horses to carry me home, I beg you.

So how can we begin to extricate ourselves from this oily web? Well understand the system and where stuff comes from for one. Do I need everything I have shipped to my house, or can I walk to my local library, borrow a tool from a neighbor; grow more in my own garden? Can I recycle as much as possible, and ask the manufacturers of the rest to take it back? I used to ship old stuff back to the manufacturer without return address, just to make the point. Then I looked at the fuel I was using to do that.

It ain’t easy, and as old JC used to say, take the timber out your own eye before removing the splinter from your neighbor’s. And there are plenty of timbers to go around, from oil companies to transportation infrastructure to manufacturers to agriculture to regulators to “big gummint”. As one of my rabbis, Abraham Joshua Heschel wrote, “In a free society, some are guilty but all are responsible.”  Response-Able. It doesn’t take too many videos of flaming oil rigs and oil soaked seabird to make me respond, and examine what those fingers pointing back at me are seeing. I’ll reduce what I use, recycle more- especially the stuff already made from petroleum. Use it again and again. I’ll drive even less, and switch bit by bit away from stuff that leads me back to the oil well, because my oily fingerprints are on this one, too. Pogo taught us, “We have met the enemy, and he is us.” What will you do to wean yourself from more oil?

Greenopolis.com is dedicated to our users. We focus our attention on changing the world through recycling, waste-to-energy and conservation. We reward our users for their sustainable behaviors on our website, through our Greenopolis recycling kiosks and with curbside recycling programs.

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Posted via web from 3BL Media, CSR News, and Emily

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