Building the Blue Economy, with Gunter Pauli
~
April 23, 24, 25, 2010 ~
Santa Barbara
City College Campus, Santa Barbara, California
Hosted by
the SBCC Center for Sustainability
~Evening Talk & Book-Signing,
Fri, April 23, 7:30 - 9:30pm, SBCC Fe Bland Auditorium $15~
~Building the Blue Economy Workshop with Gunter Pauli, plus
guests***
,
SBCC Campus, Sat, April 24, 9am - 5pm, $120 ($100 early
registration/April 3)~
~Retreat with Gunter Pauli, Sunday, April 25, 10am - 4pm $300 ($250
early registration/April 3)~
How a new generation
of entrepreneurs can bring
innovations to the marketplace, secure basic needs for all,
and make sustainable businesses competitive.
Join the Santa Barbara City College Center
for Sustainability for a rare chance to spend time with one of the most
innovative thinkers of our times. Author of the newly published
book "The Blue Economy, 10 Years, 100 Innovations, 100 Million
Jobs" Gunter Pauli challenges us to give up doomsday
thinking...
Gunter Pauli suggests by emulating nature we can evolve from an economy
based on scarcity to an economy based on abundance---the cascading,
nutrient rich, Blue Economy. Founder of Zero Emissions
Research Initiatives (ZERI) Global Network, Gunter Pauli pioneered
the concept of waste being seen as a resource that with creative
thinking, can be used to create multiple enterprises from singular ones,
with benefits for the economy and the environment. Pauli is fond of
saying that returns on investment from these kinds of business models far
exceed those of companies like Microsoft.
Gunter Pauli, famous eco-entrepreneur and passionate proponent of green
development worldwide, is the former president of Ecover biodegradable
soap company who built Europe’s first ecological factory. Pauli is
the founder of Worldwatch Europe, and a member of the Club of Rome and
directs the Zero Emissions Research Initiative (ZERI) at the United
Nations University in Tokyo. He lectures regularly to business executives
and governments, and is the author of 17 books in 21 languages.
***Saturday Workshop with Gunter
Pauli/Afternoon break-out sessions with:
- Woody Tasch, President of Slow Money Alliance
- Kreigh Hampel, City of Burbank, Public Works, Recycling
Coordinator
- Randy Grissom, Director of the Santa Fe Community College
Sustainable Technologies Center
Sponsored by
the Santa Barbara City College Center for Sustainability
Co-sponsors: Santa Barbara Permaculture Network & SBCC Scheinfeld
Center for Entrepreneurship & Innovation
Event Info,
www.sbpermaculture.org,
margie@sbpermaculture.org, (805)962-2571
<<<>>>
More Information:
On YouTube: Gunter Pauli introduces "The
Blue Economy" and it`s 100 innovations.
100 Innovations:
Gunter Pauli releases one innovation per week for 100 weeks
100 Innovations/one per week go to
www.blueeconomy.de
- Introduction to the 100 innovations
- that could generate 100 million jobs within a decade
- By Gunter Pauli
- Imagine 100 innovations that could generate 100 million jobs over the
next decade. Over the next two years I will introduce these real
opportunities one by one, on the basis of technologies proven by
scientists to work, bench marked as a business somewhere in the world,
and ready to be introduced anywhere.
-
- As an entrepreneur, who established 10 companies, I have always been
searching for the best way to enter the market, to out compete the market
leaders. An entrepreneur introduces innovations, that respond to a need,
generate cash flow, create jobs and work with what is readily available.
With a track record in media, databank management, internet and
eco-products I was very much impacted by my incapacity to see how I
created collateral damage, trying to implement a new business model. What
happened?
- As president of Ecover, I promoted biodegradable soaps manufactured
in a green factory with a huge grass roof. I was shocked to learn that as
demand for palm oil - the main ingredient - increased, more rain forest
was destroyed. How could I ever have overlooked that cleaning up the
rivers in Europe leads to the destruction of the habitat of the
orangutan? I learned the hard way that biodegradability has nothing to do
with sustainability.
- As a consequence, it became a passion to imagine a model that has no
unintended consequences. I searched for the opportunity to create
companies that outcompete on the market, thanks to solid innovations,
dramatically increasing productivity, improving return on investment,
while operating in harmony with the ecosystems. I imagined business that
not only preserves the environment, rather businesses that enhance the
ecosystems in which my companies operate.
-
- The United Nations University and the Japanese Government offered me
the chance to imagine such businesses, scientifically proven and
economically viable. The platform in Japan permitted me to build a team
to pioneer concrete examples from a beer brewery in Africa, to coffee
farming in Colombia and waste management in Japan.
- The hands-on cases inspired me to go back to undertake a competitive
analysis and make an inventory of all innovations that are likely to
shape the future. A review of +2,200 innovations revealed that only very
few were adopted by business. Of all the sustainable innovations borrowed
from nature only three that had become main-stream with sales in excess
of 100 million: Velcro from the USA, Lotusan from Germany marketed by Sto
and Proboscis-inspired needles from Japan made by Terumo.
-
- I turned to the projects I knew, the scientists I visited, the CEOs I
had met and discussed the best ideas with business journalists, corporate
strategists, management scholars, policy makers and innovation experts.
Thanks to their input I drew up a list of 100 innovations that are likely
to change the competitive game in many sectors.
-
- There was a major surprise. When the experts advised me on the
magnitude of potential job generation, the number reached 100 million.
Checking the benchmarks before me, I was surprised that one third of the
business ideas are already invoicing and the several innovations
represent platform technologies applicable in dozens of sectors. This
proves there is potential.
-
- A business model emerged that fundamentally changes the rules on the
market. Instead of a triple bottom line, there is a triple cash flow, not
just for the company, also for the community. How is this possible? Ever
since management focused on core business based on core competence,
companies have discarded any opportunity outside their tight focus on
economies of scale, making more of the same cheaper through mergers and
acquisitions.
-
- The 100 cases that will be released one after the other provide
insights on how costs within that core business model turn into multiple
incomes applying a concept known as economies of scope. This clustering
of value adding generates revenues that did not even exist. This is the
core uniqueness of the competitive business models that will be released
one by one as of February 22, 2010. There is more.
-
- Once entrepreneurs can generate multiple revenues, value and cash
flow, then it is easier to understand why these innovations also create
jobs. On top of that, since value is created out of something that had no
value before, there is no substitution effect. The traditional economist
will be surprised that higher productivity now equates with job creation.
- While the generation of additional cash flow will be a main argument,
the fact that the market leaders have limited means to formulate a
competitive response turns the odds in favor of the entrepreneur.
- Companies that have decades of experience and a loyal customer base
worldwide, supported by a stable cash flow and profit margins; will not
easily hand over a major part of business to a newcomer. However, as
postulated, these innovations change the rules of the game, often without
openly informing the key players, taking them off guard and without the
internal competences to respond.
-
- When I promoted a detergent to the market without advertising, how
could companies like Unilever, Henkel and Procter react when their
marketing mix is dependent on advertising? This is exactly the
opportunity that entrepreneurs can embrace.
- The portfolio of opportunities based on these 100 cases is vast. More
than one entrepreneur, more than one investor, more than one venture fund
can take the initiative. That is the main reason for offering this
inspiration open source.
- The 100 cases offer an insight into an emerging economy - the Blue
Economy- that is more competitive, generates jobs, brings innovations
that steer business towards sustainability and builds up social capital.
- Who would not like to join this?
- Gunter Pauli
- Author of the Blue Economy, 10 Years, 100 Innovations, 100 Million
Jobs
Visit The World Congress on Zero Emissions
Initiatives:
http://www.zeroemissionshawaii.org/
-end-