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This
article originally appeared in GreenMoney
Journal (June/July,
2003).
In early June of 1992, the UN Conference on Environment
and Development cast a bright, if brief, spotlight on the
idea that balancing economic growth, social equity and environmental
protection was the key to sustainability. At the time, it
was not a widely held perspective. The environmental and
social traumas wrought by pure capitalism were to a large
degree being addressed with ideological fervor. Europe had
been able to balance socialism and capitalism in social
market economies, but as the health of the natural world
continued to decline, environmentalism often stood in stark
opposition to both.
A more subtle understanding of the ways in which these
values are intertwined began to emerge in the late 1980s
and early 1990s. The UN's Our Common Future, linked
corporate resource efficiency to human and environmental
health. Our conception of "Intelligent Products"
provided a design strategy that recognized the interdependence
of economy, ecology, and equity. And John Elkington's triple
bottom line became a useful tool for measuring corporate
performance against this trio of concerns.
For many in the corporate world, the proceedings of the
Earth Summit legitimized sustainability. Today, leading
manufacturers are minimizing pollution, cutting waste and
trimming resource consumption. Products with fewer harmful
chemicals are reaching the marketplace with less of an impact
on the natural world. Reduce, reuse, recycle is the new
business mantra. And the triple bottom line is replacing
purely economic metrics.
Where are we headed in the next ten years?
Hopefully, further along the road toward a rich definition
of corporate performance. The triple bottom line has been,
and remains, a useful tool for identifying problems and
integrating sustainability into the corporate agenda. In
practice, however, measuring performance at the bottom line
tends to be a balancing act between economic value and environmental
liabilities. For example, if the environmental impact of
a profitable product has been minimized by a more efficient
use of materials, its performance likely meets the triple
bottom line. But if the material itself is unsafe, as is
often the case, then efficient manufacturing is merely slowing
down ecological destruction-a rather dispiriting measure
of quality.
Consider this measure of quality writ large in the U.S.
economy. Due to the strength of the dollar against foreign
currencies, U.S. manufacturers are relying more and more
on cheap materials from overseas. Many materials from Asia,
where occupational health regulations are minimal, have
been found to be carcinogenic. Globally sourced materials
are rarely, if ever, assessed and so many "lean-thinking"
U.S. companies are applying efficiency measures to toxic
materials. The result: cheap products; expensive waste management
systems; rising health care costs-all of which adds up to
a very dull competitive edge in the global marketplace.
The U.S. trade deficit, a whopping $346 billion in 2001,
suggests the scale of the problem. A national commitment
to product quality could solve it.
Why not a sustaining industrial system built on a new definition
of quality? From our perspective, quality is embodied in
designs that allow industry to enhance the well being of
nature and culture while generating economic value. Ultimately,
quality design follows the laws of nature to create products,
processes and facilities so ecologically intelligent they
leave footprints to delight in rather than lament. In these
new human systems, materials become food for the soil or
flow back to industry forever.
Pursuing these positive aspirations at every level of commerce
anchors intelligent design deep within corporate business
strategy. And when good design drives the business agenda,
the path toward sustainability turns from trying to be "less
bad" to identifying healthful materials that generate
a wide spectrum of value-a shift from the triple bottom
line to the triple top line. If one approaches the design
process asking, "How can I grow prosperity, celebrate
my community, and enhance the health of all species?"
the results are likely to be far more positive and enriching
than those achieved by measuring at the bottom line the
degree to which you have minimized a liability.
The triple top line's positive aspirations often begin
in one sector and end up generating value in many others.
Moved by environmental concerns, Pendleton Woolen Mills
conceived an ecologically intelligent wool baby blanket.
Most wool products are dyed with chemicals that are harmful
to human health, which makes recycling of any kind problematic.
But working with McDonough Braungart Design Chemistry, Pendleton
assessed every ingredient in the dyeing and fixing processes
and created a completely safe, perfectly biodegradable product-infants
can literally eat the blanket, and when it wears out it
can be tossed on the garden to become food for the soil.
The blanket is also a model of thrift and social value,
a profitable product that requires no regulations and carries
no hidden costs for waste management or health care. It
turns on its head the notion that ecologically intelligent
design is expensive.
Dr. Govindappa Venkataswamy, an ophthalmologist from Madurai,
India, built a triple top line business model on positive
social aspirations. As Harriet Rubin wrote in her Fast
Company profile, Dr.V., was a young obstetrician when
he contracted rheumatoid arthritis and lost his ability
to deliver babies. Rather than give up medicine, he studied
ophthalmology, fashioned surgical instruments for his deformed
hands and became "the most admired cataract surgeon
in India." At 57 he began to create his remarkable
business: restoring sight, mostly for free. At his five
hospitals seventy percent of his patients pay nothing for
cataract surgeries. The other thirty percent, charged about
$125 each, subsidize the doctors' salaries, the transportation
of patients, and the costs of running the hospital. Today,
Dr. V's self-sustaining hospitals are the largest single
provider of eye surgery in the world. He has given sight
to more than 1 million people.
Ford Motor Company is showing how a blue chip company with
a sharp eye on the bottom line can adopt triple top line
vision. When Ford's executives and engineers began to plan
the renovation of their famed Rouge
River manufacturing plant they wanted to maximize economic
value. So along with other innovative designs, we conceived
a storm water management system based on a 450,000 square-foot
roof of topsoil and growing plants. In concert with porous
paving and a series of wetlands and swales, the "living
roof" will filter storm water run-off, replacing a
water treatment facility at a savings of $35 million. Thrown
in for free: habitat for native species, plants that create
oxygen and absorb particulate matter, and a pleasing natural
landscape. Now Ford executives are dreaming of the day when
children will safely and happily play along the Rouge.
By 2012 we hope to see millions of designs such as these
celebrating life in diverse and wonderful ways and creating
a world in which all children are nourished with fresh healthy
food, affordable health care, and a generous prosperity
that honors the laws of nature. Instead of a world of laments,
a world full of hope for the future and respect for the
Earth's abundant gifts.
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