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Natural Capitalism Right on the Money Feb 1, 2000 (113 of 125 found this helpful)
In the summer of 1999, the Harvard Business Review treated the business community to a glimpse of a bold new model for business and industry in the 21st century. The HBR has been filling requests ever since for the article by Amory Lovins, L. Hunter Lovins and Paul Hawken titled "A Road Map for Natural Capitalism." The article described how businesses could profit by employing strategies built around a more productive use of natural resources. The authors explained in a very practical, yet compelling manner how these strategies could go a long way toward solving many current environmental problems.
Business readers and anyone concerned about the changing global economy and its impact on the ecosystem will want more than copies of the HBR article once they realize it was actually a tantalizing synopsis of the authors' new book, "Natural Capitalism: Creating the Next Industrial Revolution" (Little, Brown, 1999). This important book can take its place alongside such touchstone volumes as "Future Shock," "Megatrends " and "The New New." The authors describe in vivid detail how business and industry can gain competitive advantage through a new business model based on doing much more with much less.
The authors set out to prove that changing realities of the information economy and global competitiveness are already transforming industry and commerce in ways unforeseen even a few years ago. The new business model takes into account the values of all forms of "capital" including human, manufactured, financial, and natural. "Natural Capitalism" starts with an elegantly simple premise: economies need no longer be based on the idea that human capital is finite and natural resources are infinitely abundant when the obvious truth of the 21st Century is exactly the opposite.
With mounting confidence, Lovins, Lovins and Hawken predict that the latest industrial revolution will create "a vital economy that uses radically less material and energy." Businesses that recognize the trend toward this new type of industrialism will gain advantage over their less alert competitors. Those that postpone this shift will be left behind and will eventually, make themselves irrelevant in the new economy.
Theirs is not merely a detailed updating of Buckminster Fuller's "small is beautiful" thesis. Rather, the authors describe a step-by-step process of business restructuring that should result in more efficiency at the corporate, national and global level. Such a process, if carried out across several industries simultaneously, would make it much easier for governments to promote social equity and conserve or even restore the natural ecosystems reaching across traditional borders.
This next stage of industrialism, the authors' "natural capitalism," is founded on four core business strategies already being adopted by the most innovative corporations across the globe. The strategies suggest that companies need to:
1) employ technology and design innovations to use resources much more productively. This results, of course, in companies using fewer resources, reducing pollution, and setting the stage to create more jobs;
2) practice "biomimicry" by redesigning industrial systems to be more like biological systems, leading to an elimination of even the concept of waste;
3) shift from an economy based on goods and purchases to an economy based on service and flow. This concept leads to a quantum shift in how manufacturing companies service their clients, especially in terms of inventories, sales strategies, etc; and
4) reinvest in "natural capital" to sustain, restore and expand the resources on which industry, and ultimately all life, and therefore all livelihood, depends.
"Natural Capitalism" is not a "gloom and doom, industry vs. the environment" anti-consumerism rant. Neither do the authors fall into the trap of proposing a Pollyanna hypothesis that begins with "if only
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Beyond Darwin Jan 4, 2000 (82 of 93 found this helpful)
As this new century begins, if there is only one book which everyone on the planet should read, it would be Natural Capitalism. Why is it so important? In my opinion, because it provides the most convincing, the most compelling argument in support of Wendell Berry's assertion that "what is good for the world will be good for us." Darwin's concept of natural selection becomes irrelevant if there is no environment in which such selection can occur. The authors introduce us to "The Next Industrial Revolution" with all oif its emerging possibilities. In subsequent chapters, they continue to examine natural capitalism in terms of "four central strategies": radical resource productivity, biomimicry, service and flow economy, and investment in it. According to the authors, natural capitalism "is about choices we can make that can start to tip economic and social outcomes in positive directions. And it is already occurring -- because it is necessary, possible, and practrical." For me, the information provided in Chapter 3 was almost incomprehensible in terms of the nature and extent of waste. Of the $9 trillion spent every year in the United States, at least $2 trillion is wasted annually. How? For example: Highway accidents ($150 billion), highway congestion ($100 billion in lost productivity), total hidden costs of driving (nearly $1 trillion), nonessential/fraudulent healthcare ($65 billion), inflated and unnecessary medical overhead ($250 billion), and crime ($450 billion). All of this waste can and should be reduced, if not eliminated. What the authors present, in effect, is a blueprint for the survival of the planet. All manner of statistical evidence supports their specific recommendations. Unless "The Next Industrial Revolution" succeeds in implementing those recommendations, natural capitalism will eventually be depleted ...and no one left to regret its loss.
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Compliments and Complement Nov 10, 1999 (30 of 33 found this helpful)
Paul Hawken is an excellent writer, clear thinker and first-rate synthesizer; Amory Lovins is a genius; and Hunter Lovins is a world-class organizer and positive force. So it's not surprising that this team has written a very important, must-read book. Capitalism does have its advantages after all, but as it is currently practiced it will lead us to our collective grave. Fortunately the dynamic trio, shows better ways of doing business.
For those of us who aren't CEO sorts (and can't immediately implement the type of innovations Natural Capitalism advocates), yet who still want their financial life to move us in a positive direction, I highly recommend The Mindful Money Guide. This book is an excellent complement to Natural Capitalism as it thoughtfully guides us to a healthier (in all senses of the word) and simpler financial life. It's also very well written.
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A very detailed analysis of sustainability Jul 19, 2006 (15 of 15 found this helpful)
Just a couple comments and caveats to add not covered in the in-depth Spotlight Reviews. First, this book is absolutely loaded with stats and data and provides a more rigerous, academic treatment of working towards more sustainable way to grow businesses and communities. The fact that the references at the end go on for 55 pages attest to this level of detail!). Given that the authors are from one of the most prominent "think tanks" of eco-capitalism - The Rocky Mountain Institute - explains this level of detail and expertise. But, it really can come across as a "brain dump" where every fact the authors knew of are piled into the chapters (whose origins are earlier position papers). So, if you really need hard data and lots of factoids, this book is a top, well-researched and dependable reference.
Another missed opportunity is its rather ineffective and non-visual layout - just page after page of small text (uhh). So much more could have been done to lay out the chapter divisions in an easier-to-read format. Like mining gold nuggets from tons of ore, extracting the main points from this tapestry of various position papers takes sifting through tons of text - and it is a voluminous text. But, if you are serious about this topic, this is one of the prominent, "must-have" references.
Alternatively, a somewhat less detailed, more headlined overview of "eco-capitalism" (the environmental crisis, renewable energy, hydrogen economy, eco-efficiency, sustainable cities and overall environmental economics) is ECO-ECONOMY by Lester R. Brown. It gives the reader an excellent overview of the problem and potential solutions along with a strong dose of both reality and inspiriation. Not all experts make great writers, but Brown seems to be both.
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The One Book That Can Save Capitalism & The Planet Dec 12, 2006 (13 of 13 found this helpful)
Edit of 19 Jan 08 to add links.
This book is pro-business, pro-market, and pro-life. It outlines how profits can be made by going green and getting in touch with the actual cost of goods and services. It demonstrates how efficiencies can produce a 71% per year after tax Return on Investment (ROI).
On page 261, the following quote summarizes the intellectual victory that this book represents over economic fundamentalism: "That theology treats living things as dead, nature as a nuisance, several billion years' design experience as casually discard able, and the future as worthless."
The three authors are "originals" whose genius dates back to the 1980's, and I am finding that the books written in the 1970's and 1980's were a quarter-century before their time of acceptance, and now pressing urgent and relevant.
They advocate a shift from a production economy that disregards the actual costs of goods, toward a service economy in which durability, ease of repair, and the elimination of waste transforms commerce so that we have sustainable profit, not short-term destructive profit.
The basic premise of the book is that in the next 100 years the population will double while available natural resources will drop by one half to three quarters.
The authors are damningly trenchant when they point out that we have taken just 300 years to consume 3.8 billion years of natural capital by turning scarce resources into permanent waste.
I am at one with these authors when they suggest that labor is now abundant--I for one believe that national leaders must demand full employment and cease substituting technology, which requires natural capital, for human capital. We need to reverse the process and restore full employment, community-based resource allocation.
In the course of two days with this book, I pulled 21 key ideas that I list here in tribute to these authors and their work:
1) Cars can generate electricity during the 90% of the time they are parked, and this will allow the replacement of ALL coal and nuclear plants
2) We waste 1 million pounds per person per year in the USA
3) Authors are saving business, not fighting business
4) Two trillion out of nine trillion in the total economy per year is waste of no value, including time spent in automobile gridlock
5) Real-time feedback is the number one resource saver
6) Biological processes create Kevlar strength silk (spiders) and walls (oysters)--we should emulate them instead of continuing our toxic ways.
7) Green buildings increase human productivity while reducing waste
8) Continuous education of designers and engineers is the single best investment for continually updating our ability to eliminate waste
9) Point to point air travel in smaller more numerous aircraft is a much more efficient alterative to the hub systems
10) We must end our perverse subsidies of wasteful agricultural, energy, forestry, fishery and other harmful practices by publicizing the foolish budget allocations
11) We should tax pollution and waste rather than income
12) Agricultural residues can be used to make paper, which can be recycled and substituted (e.g. electronic). We must end junk mail and unneeded packaging that outlasts its contents.
13) Restore localized agriculture, deep sustainable farming that does not deplete topsoil, get smart on water and fuel consumption.
14) Get a national water policy and water education, recover all rain (which can meet all of Africa's needs), use gray water; get a grip on toilets to include separate capture of urine and feces.
15) Protect the climate
16) Conserving energy is cheaper, faster, better than trying to produce more
17) Cancel