The Blue
Economy
*
Submitted by GEC Team on Fri, 11/13/2009 - 04:16 GEC-4: Technology
and
http://www.worldacademy.org/forum/blue-economy
The Blue
Economy
Cultivating a
New Business Model for a Time of Crisis
by Gunter
Pauli*
How a new generation
of entrepreneurs can bring innovations to the marketplace, secure the
basic needs of all, and make sustainable businesses
competitive.
Mere months after the 2008 financial meltdown, the International Labor
Organization (ILO) reported the loss of 50 million jobs. Developing
economies were deeply affected by massive layoffs in the formal sector
and the loss of income in the informal sector. It was a social shock
that unsettled the world. In essence, the world economy for the past
few decades was capitalized on money that simply did not exist.
Downsizing and outsourcing were some of the key driving forces of
every major industrial group. "Wealth" was generated by
making "assets" appear as though by magic through leveraging
credit and creating financial instruments that contributed not even
remotely to the value of the business. Money was multiplied over and
over in special accounts without risk, initiative, or production of
real assets. Innovation was limited to investments that could produce
multiple short term returns. Entrepreneurs, on the other hand, verged
on becoming a vanishing breed.
The form of capitalism that has dominated world societies is entirely
disconnected from peoples' real needs. Some two billion people
struggle to get by on less than two dollars a day, lacking access to
food, water, health, and energy, the most basic requirements for
survival. Over 25% of the world's youth are unemployed. Yet one
billion of us are overnourished and swim in 400 million tons of
electronic waste with higher metal concentrations than the ores
extracted from the earth. Conservatively, the top 70% of the world's
wealth is concentrated in the top 10% of the population.
The business model that
requires companies to invest more in order to save the environment
will be replaced with a framework that permits less investment and
more revenues while building social capital.
Fortunately, times are changing. This book is about that change. As
the second decade of the 21st century sets the stage for a new
economy, the core question we answer is, "What is the business
framework we really need?"
Up to now, the model driving our economies depended on perpetual
growth, requiring ever more resources and investments. This model has
inherent flaws. It leads to unjust societies, highly skewed and
exploitative economies, and devastated ecosystems. The business model
that defines corporate environmental responsibility in terms of size
of investment, and defines corporate success as increased shareholder
value and grandiose executive compensation, must be replaced. The new
economy must be more effective and more collaborative. It must become
truly sustainable, introducing innovations that permit less
investment, generate more revenues, and build the strengths of a
community and builds up social capital - not debt. This is the
business framework that will drive the new Blue Economy. This is the
framework that will seek out and define true sustainability for all
living species on Earth.
The prevailing economic model predicates that scarcity is the major
limitation. Industry searches for ever higher agricultural yields and
manufactory outputs, demanding that the Earth and human labor produce
more. We must re-evaluate this notion and begin to more fully utilize
what the Earth and labor produce, rather than demanding more materials
and more output. It is time to end the insatiable quest for ever lower
costs that drives business towards economies of scale through
egamergers and acquisitions financed by billion dollar loans. It is
time to adopt broad-based innovative strategies that generate multiple
revenues and greater cash flows while creating more jobs. It is time
for a Blue Economy.
In shifting our focus
to economies of scope, the framework of the Blue Economy opens
possibilities for a new generation of entrepreneurs who use what is
available to sustainably address the needs of the Earth and all its
citizens.
The shift from the model of core businesses based on a single core
competence and economies of scale to a framework of multiple
businesses with aligned economies of scope may sound unrealistic to
the executive trained by any leading business school. However, the
current global crisis highlights the need for an framework of economic
development that is based on fundamental innovation and that will
generate desperately needed jobs while sustainably addressing the
needs of the earth and all its citizens. This "blue"
approach is not only viable, it has already begun to take root. Four
years of research has identified a portfolio of 100 innovations
including whole systems models that have the potential to generate as
many as 100 million jobs worldwide over the next 10 years.
Cascading nutrients and
energy
The first set of innovations, all proven and benchmarked at a
remarkable scale, cascade nutrients and energy the way ecosystems do.
This means that everything contributes according to its capacity, and
everything stays in the nutrient stream - even waste is not wasted.
Instead of contrived scarcity and shortages, what we see in the new
economic framework is abundance - of food, energy, jobs, and revenue.
For example:
* Under the
leadership of Paolo Lugari, Las Gaviotas in Colombia converted a
desolate savannah created by 400 years of extensive cattle farming
into a lush rainforest that provides residents with abundant water,
food, and fuel while building valuable social capital. The project
regenerates biodiversity, and becomes an island of peace in a world of
poverty and violence, while the land value increased more over 25
years than the shares of Microsoft, turning the local population
bankable.
*
Small-diameter wood is a pernicious fire hazard in forests
throughout the world. In New Mexico, USA, the peoples of a Native
American Picuris pueblo have used a whole systems model introduced by
Robert Haspel and Linda Taylor centered on mushrooms and their growth
substrate to converted this fire hazard into a resource that provides
jobs, food, and livestock feed while upholding their traditions and
culture. This stands in stark contrast to how this hazard is handled
elsewhere in the western US. Each year we see dramatic images of wild
fires devastating rural and even suburban areas of California.
* The
silkworm converts leaves into nutrients, which easily blend with soil
bacteria, quickly attracting micro-organisms and regenerating topsoil
that will safeguard agricultural production and build food security.
Additionally, silk -as discovered by Fritz Vollrath based at Oxford
University- itself can be used to replace high performance titanium in
health care and consumer products, reducing the burden that titanium
mining places on the Earth, while sequestering carbon. Simply
replacing the titanium and stainless steel razor requires the planting
of 250,000 hectares of mulberry trees on desolate and infertile land,
which apart from generating top soil creates an estimated 12.5 million
jobs.
* Anders
Nyquist (Sweden) mathematically codified the termites' ability to
utilize air flows for temperature and humidity controls into a model
that makes automated climate control systems obsolete, successfully
moderating the effect of ice-cold Scandinavian winters. With the new
technology made possible by his research, buildings can be designed to
warm or cool as needed. The "energy saving" model of locking
all living species into an airtight and heavily insulated room cannot
truly serve the purpose of energy savings. It merely creates an
environment where the infectious species proliferate. If one person
sneezes, then everyone sneezes.
Substituting
"something" with "nothing"
Our society is heavily accustomed to consuming products that create
massive waste and pollution. These products and their manufacturing
processes have squandered limited resources and mired many in living
environments that are loaded with toxic residue and the spoils of
production. The genesis of M1H1 or swine flu can be attributed to just
such a scenario. Real, lasting solutions - truly sustainable solutions
- require a fundamental shift in our awareness. We will need
breakthrough innovations, such as the second set of innovations which
exemplify how "something" - models of unsustainable
production and consumption - can be replaced by "nothing."
For example:
*
Consumers do not realize that the cost per kilowatt hour of
electricity stored by a hearing aid or a pacemaker battery may easily
surpass 100!. The 40 billion batteries we dump into landfills every
year required energy-intensive mining and smelting in their
manufacture. While a "green" battery may someday be
developed, it remains dependent on mining which is part of the old
business model. The technology is available that would permit us to
simply eliminate the battery altogether. The Fraunhofer Institute in
Germany has already presented a cellphone powered by the differential
between ambient and body temperature and the pressure generated by our
voice. Professor Jorge Reynolds (Colombia), a pioneer in whale
research, has developed the first pacemaker that requires no
batteries, no surgery, and only local anaesthesia, cutting costs
carried by social security by factor 200, and dramatically reducing
the trauma for the patient.
* The
alarming proliferation of drug-resistant bacterial and viral strains
requires science to venture towards solutions based on technologies
that mirror natural systems, such as the ability of red algae seaweed
to deafen bacteria. Australian scientists Peter Steinberg and Staffan
Kjelleberg (Australia) discovered that red algae seaweed could
mitigate the spread of bacteria - without killing them and without
poisonous chemistry - simply by making the bacteria unable to
communicate. If bacteria do not hear others of their species, they
move on and do not populate a surface. This means that they cannot
create a biofilm, a superstructure that plays a critical role in many
diseases.
*
The simple but elegant power of a vortex as industrialized by
Curt Hallberg and his team at Watreco AB (Sweden) replaces chemicals
with purely physical effects to remove bacteria and air from water.
This eliminates the need for bactericides while cutting energy
consumption. Many chemicals are replaced by the forces of physics.
Since a vortex is reliably generated by gravity, it has the potential
to generate drinking water with a minimal expense of
energy.
There are over one hundred
such innovations described in the forthcoming book, The Blue Economy,
presented as a Report to the Club of Rome. Each has been benchmarked
and brought to fruition in different parts of the world. They are are
just a few examples of what is possible, and the insights they supply
give us a positive future outlook. The new "blue" business
framework will work with what is locally available to generate
multiple revenues and respond to basic needs. It will provide a
platform that merges creative entrepreneurship with breakthrough
innovations to nurture life, secure food and shelter for all, and
sustain the Earth's natural systems.
This mirrors the
evolutionary path of nature. Indeed, just as ecosystems evolved to
ever more efficient nutrient and energy cycles, bringing ever more
diversity while developing resilience, flexibility, and performance,
the Blue Economy will increasingly rely on less energy and provide
more diversity through innovations brought to the market by ever more
entrepreneurs fortified with a vision of real sustainability and
prepared to take the risks. More players will be encouraged to respond
to critical needs, linking the triangle of innovation, sustainability,
and entrepreneurship away from scarcity and into abundance. Debt
becomes social capital, external costs become opportunities to
differentiate on the market.
Re-imagining our economic future requires entrepreneurs in science,
social affairs, business, environment, and culture. We must make
information available, exposing the opportunities we have to
accelerate these innovations on the market, and refrain from imposing
the laws. We will reach out to others we never imagined working with,
so that we efficiently and purposefully allocate resources so that we
can respond to the needs of all with what we have. We must to move
away from an economy where the engine of growth is indebtedness loaded
upon our children and grandchildren, squandering those future
generations' material resources.
The incapacity to imagine
meaningful jobs and to provide worthy challenges to a whole generation
equates to telling the young that there is no future for them, that
their generation is lost. With over one billion young people entering
the labor market in the next decade, we must move toward a Blue
Economy, based on what we have and what we can share with those who
have not.
*Gunter Pauli (1956) is an inveterate entrepreneur whose scope of
initiatives span business, culture, science, and education. Aurelio
Peccei, founder of the Club of Rome, exposed Gunter to a systems
approach which has influenced his research and projects ever since. In
1994, with the support of the Japanese government at Tokyo's United
Nations University, he launched an initiative to design an economic
framework and business model that converts all waste, including
emissions, into a value- added cascading model that draws from whole
systems in nature. In 2004 he undertook a massive research project to
identify innovations that would shift business towards higher levels
of competitiveness and sustainability, while generating millions of
jobs through the creation of a platform for entrepreneurship. In
Spring 2010 he will personally direct a two-year initiative that will
regularly present Blue Economy business models to inspire
entrepreneurs to translate these opportunities into worldwide business
initiatives. Gunter is a member of the Club of Rome and the author of
17 books, published in 21 languagues, and 36 fables that bring science
and entrepreneurship to young children. He is married with four
children, including his adopted daughter from Zimbabwe, Chido
Govero.
This paper is based on the
new book The Blue Economy: 10 years, 100 Innovations. 100 Million
Jobs,published by Paradigm Publications (New Mexico, USA) with the
support of UNEP and IUCN.
Written by Prof. Dr. h.c. Gunter Pauli,
Founder and Director of ZERI,
September 2009
>>>>>>>>>>>>
Santa Barbara City College
Center for Sustainability
Hosts:
From Green Jobs
to the Blue Economy
with Gunter Pauli of
the ZERI Foundation
Saturday, December 5, 6:30-9 pm 2009
Admission $10 general public, $5 students
SBCC West Campus, Fe Bland Forum
How a new generation of
entrepreneurs can
bring innovations to the marketplace,
secure basic needs for all,
and make sustainable businesses competitive.
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.
Gunter
Pauli, famous eco-entrepreneur and passionate proponent of green
development worldwide, will discuss the potential for green jobs to
revitalize and reinvigorate our economy with creative systems thinking
in a public talk on December 5, hosted by the Santa Barbara
City College Center for Sustainability. Author of the soon
to be released book "The Blue Economy, 10 Years; 100
Innovations; 100,000,000 Jobs", Pauli shares four years of
research and case studies identifying 100 innovations that have the
potential to generate as many as 100 million jobs worldwide in the
next 10 years.
The former
president of the hugely successful biodegradable soap company Ecover,
Pauli was responsible for Europe's first ecological factory located in
Belgium, that subsequently turned into a "green" tourist
attraction. He founded "Zero Emissions Research and
Initiatives" (ZERI) at the United Nations University in
Tokyo, and established the Global ZERI Network, redesigning
production and consumption into clusters of industries inspired by
natural systems. Leapfrogging past stagnant models of business
that no longer work, Pauli is known for innovative strategies for the
first and third worlds, involving the genius of both street kids and
savvy business icons alike. Noting that whole systems thinking
is a learned process best learned early, Pauli has written children's
books in many languages and helped create curriculums for
schools.
At the evening
talk Pauli will share successful entrepreneurial projects from around
the world that exemplify ZERI's waste equals food and system design
logic, including a program to convert coffee pulp to mushrooms,
brewery waste to pig food, and spirulina from the heat of a coal power
plant. Waste is always 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
was born in Antwerp, Belgium in 1956. He graduated in Economics from
Loyola's University in Belgium and obtained his masters in business
administration from INSEAD in France. His many entrepreneurial
activities span business, culture, science, politics and the
environment. Pauli is the founder and former President of Worldwatch
Europe, and a member of the Club of Rome. He is the author of 17 books
in 21 languages. Pauli currently lives in Japan.
The event takes place on Sat, Dec 5, 6:30-9pm at the Fe Bland Forum
on the SBCC West Campus, 721 Cliff Drive. Admission is $10 for
general public, $5 for students. No reservations are required.
For more information please call (805) 965-0581, ext 2177, email
msbushman@sbcc.edu; http://sustainability.sbcc.edu
Hosted by the SBCC Center for
Sustainability. Co-sponsors: Santa Barbara Permaculture
Network Non-Profit, SBCC Scheinfeld Center for Entrepreneurship &
Innovation, and the SBCC Students for Sustainability. Part of
the SB Carbon Economy series convened by Quail Springs & Orella
Ranch.
ZERI Workshop Info:
***December 3-5, 2009 Workshop
In-depth 3 day ZERI training with Gunter Pauli to be held at
Orella Ranch on the Gaviota Coast as a part of the Carbon Economy
series. $675, includes workshop, camping on-site, and meals.
For more information www.carboneconomysb.com or
www.zeri.org.
Gunter Pauli on YouTube:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=piH8lIZDwLQ
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=v9Ctoy1PuuY
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xJbJHo7sbZU
Quotes by Gunter Pauli:
"There is no unemployment in eco-systems"
"Eliminate pollution by absorbing waste the way ecosystems
do"
"A new model of enterprise, see the company as an open economic
system and a closed ecological system"
ìNature does not know the concept of waste; the only species capable
of making something no one desires is the human speciesî.
-end-
*
Lo