Showing posts with label environment. Show all posts
Showing posts with label environment. Show all posts

Monday, February 23, 2015

Even When Working on Sustainability Initiatives, We Should Follow Our Own Advice

Reduce, Reuse, Recycle + Collaborate

In Sustainability, we are so used to the first impression that we are creating more work for the people. Extra. Excess. MORE.
It is ironic only because that is the opposite of what we are usually trying to do with the physical items we work with. We want to reduce packaging. We want to cut energy use. We want to lessen our effects on the environment.
We want, want, want - but we almost always want less.
And you see when you look at successful case studies about how - in quantifiable terms - sustainability created a net positive for a company, it is always through revealing inefficiencies and showing a company where they could use less and have the same or even a better outcome. Saving money by using less or using what we already have smarter. That is an outcome both sustainability processionals and executive leadership can get behind.

And then it struck me. Rarely as we actually creating more. And if we are, we might be doing it wrong.
We look at current processes and try to innovate and reimagine how they could be done less negatives effects on people involved and the environment. Often we end up looking backwards at older techniques or methods that seemed outdated, but in the wake of new regulations or energy costs. We have a lot to learn from that past. We didn't always pollute and consumer at the rates we do. And not all the old ways are better, but sometimes repurposing an old technique or idea gives us insight we are blind to because of modern solutions.

This brings me to my point. We are always chanting from our soapbox for others to reduce, reuse, and recycle. Perhaps we start framing our ideas in this way. Reduce the amount of new work we are putting on the plate of the operations or design or public affairs department. Reuse and recycle ideas, using a modern perspective and innovation, to transform the way we do business today. Collaborate - it can be hard enough to get one group to listen to your chants about going green, but make sure you know everyone who will be a part of the change you are trying to create and engage them in the decision making process. In other words:

1) Create and Assign Less New, Stand Alone Work

When working on a sustainability initiative, see how you can better the project you are working on as a whole rather than only coming from the side of sustainability. Frame your research and analysis in this manner and you will be able to share with people affected by your initiative that they can change the way they currently do something to a more sustainable method and benefit themselves, instead of having to add a whole new process or responsibility to their job description. If we share that we did not create more work, but instead we created work to support their current work - we can enact better change faster.

2) Look to the Past for Inspiration, Innovate and Repurpose Accordingly

As I said before, we didn't always pollute or consume at the rate we do nowadays. Look back to techniques we used before certain unsustainable technologies came on the scene. Also, Mother Nature - as she so often is - can be a great inspiration for sustainable methods. Check out or previous article on biomimicry to find out how many incredible innovative processes have been created by mimicking how nature has been doing them for eons.

3) Find the Right Fit

Lastly, make sure you are plugged in to the right people and network when presenting ideas. Lack of visibility of goals at organizations can make one department raise an eyebrow at your solutions, which would have been immediately celebrated by one department. When you have an idea that affects many stakeholders, map those affected and see if you can get people representing those different interests all at one table.





Wednesday, January 14, 2015

Appreciating How Things Are Made

I have just spent the past two weeks in China watching how things are made on a scale that is almost incomprehensible.
Making things has been an intimate part of human existence, making shelter, tools - and now things you could never imagine.  Who knew we needed a Hello Kitty shaped laser pointer for kitties?  But we did and we make it.
Interestingly in the USA there is an attention being put on the Makers Movement, which draws attention to the craft of how things are made.  When we understand all the details of how to make something, we appreciate it at such a different level than we would if we just bought the finished product.
cut fabric ready to be assembled

More often than not in the USA and Canada, we buy a lot of finished products.  The time to make something from scratch is almost impossible if we look at everything we use in our homes.

Let’s take the shirt you are wearing right now.  If you were going to make your own shirt at your dining room table right now - what would you need?
There are a lot of pieces to a shirt. We need fabric, thread, buttons, and labels, maybe your shirt has a print on it, and maybe it has elastic.  And we need to think where did the material for all of those things come from too?  The plastic in your buttons, the yarn for that fabric - how did it get to be
the color it is?

So why spend time talking about all the details it takes to make something? 

When I watch that shirt in a factory getting made, from receiving the fabric, counting out each button, cutting the fabric, setting it up in the sewing machine, sewing it, adding a pocket, washing it, pressing and then packaging it.
I can’t look at the clothes in my closet the same again.  I saw each part of my shirt, the details and intricacies of each piece and the time it took to build them and the materials that they are made out of and all of a sudden the way I valued my shirt changed.
Seeing the amount of time and care it took, I should know all of this in order to pay the true value of the product.
And the detail of making something also needs to include what is happening on the social and environmental side.  Were those workers paid fairly? Were their working environments safe? Was the water that left the factory treated correctly? That is only to name a few. 

My take away when I am making a purchase - any purchase, from a fork to tissue paper – is ask the questions: “How was this made?”, “What is this made from?, “What could the social or environmental impact be for this product?”, and "how will I value this product?"

Most of the time I am not going to have the answer, but asking the question gets me thinking and talking.  Since everything we buy has an impact and we all have the ability to ask questions and when we learn the answers, we make better decisions.

This is important to making change.

Monday, January 12, 2015

Chemicals: Villains of the Natural World...or Not



Recently, something fascinating was brought to my attention by a speaker on biomimicry. Interested in what that means? Read on to learn more...

There is a common misconception. This misconception is that chemicals are man-made hazards that pollute and threaten an otherwise chemical-free natural world.

Chemical [kem-i-kuh l] (noun)
1. a substance produced by or used in a chemical process.
2. of or relating to, used in, or produced by chemistry

Chemistry? Remember chemistry class? The science class that tried to teach you about the structure and property of substances and the changes they go through. And the Periodic Table of the Elements! Everyone knows that. But most of those elements didn't seem so evil...Carbon, Oxygen...the building blocks of life are contained in that colorful table.

So maybe chemicals aren't pure evil. Certainly combinations of them can be harmful to the health of living things - but chemicals are the building blocks of everything - natural and not.

There is this perception that the word "chemical" is evil, yet nature offers some incredible natural chemical solutions to very real world problems. Seashells inspiring self-assembling in nanotechnology. Plants inspiring biodegradable plastics made from CO2. Peacocks and butterflies inspiring color with light instead of pigments.

If we are going to truly understand chemistry enough to make real change - we need to stop villainizing chemicals and look to understand them instead. Biologists are being invited to the design table. Taking inspiration from nature to design for a sustainable future.

"Learning about the natural world is one thing. Learning from the natural world, that's the switch. That's the profound switch." -Janine Beynus, Biomimicry
Learn more at biomimicry.net
http://biomimicry.net/inspiring/

Thursday, January 8, 2015

The Super Coolest Thing Ever

Remember to step back and appreciate the grandeur of what you do.

Recently attending a conference by Textile Exchange in Portland, Oregon, I listened to an amazing Nike bigwig - Adam - talk about the merits of sustainability at Nike. But Adam also brought up a point that was too good to not share.

He told a story where he was on the plane. The guy next to him was reading an article in a magazine about Nike releasing garments made from recycled water bottles. Thrusting the magazine into Adam's face, his eager neighbor exclaimed, "Have you heard about this bro? Water bottles into clothing?? That is the super coolest thing ever!"

At this point, Nike had been working on textiles from recycled water bottles for several years. Adam had been integral in this process, dealing with the growing pains of whether 50% waste or 20% waste was enough of a hurdle - or if zero waste was the only acceptable option. Hours and years of struggles with this a topic inspired less than a "just do it" feeling in the pit of Adam's stomach.

A little put off by his seat-buddy's overzealous introduction and feeling unamused with the subject, Adam leaned forward to respond when words suddenly hit him a little deeper -

That is the super coolest thing ever.

He thought: We make clothing out of water bottles. Something that didn't exist not too long ago. We found a way to recycle something hard on the environment and creating waste in our world. We are making a difference.

"You know what?" Adam conceded happily, "you're right. That is the super coolest thing ever."

This simple anecdote reminded me of how often when we work so hard towards a goal, churning on the problems and obstacles standing in our way for too long, we lose sight of how amazing and important the work we are doing really is. When you are feeling frustrated by minimal progress, staunch opposition, or just being stuck - let's step back and give our journey a chance to speak for itself.

The work we do is important - it will take years, many people, and lots of energy to take the little steps that eventually carry us over the finish line. The work we do is not easy - but the struggle makes us stronger and teaches us lessons for a better future. And, who knows? The work we do, when shown to an outsider - say, an excited dude on a place - might just be the super coolest thing ever.

Find out more about Nike uniforms made from discarded water bottles: http://www.ecouterre.com/nike-outfits-world-cup-teams-in-jerseys-made-from-recycled-bottles/
http://www.ecouterre.com/watch-how-nike-recycles-plastic-water-bottles-into-football-jerseys-video/

Wednesday, May 2, 2012

Organic - learn more and make change

I am very excited and honored to have had the opportunity to work with experts in the organic movement for an Earth Day series we did at prAna.

Make sure you check out all of the blog posts about organic, why it is important and why we need to look beyond the food we eat but also to the clothes we wear.

Post 1 - Annie's 
Shauna Sadowski Director of Sustainability shared why organic is important to Annie's and why they work so hard to ensure that the wonderful food they create takes care of the soil and the farmers. Read the post here

Post 2 - Hood River Garlic
Terri Hixson is an organic garlic and blueberry farmer here in Hood River where I live. She has been certified organic for 10 years and feel so strongly the need to only produce crops that are not poisoning the planet or herself. Read the post here

Post 3 - Textile Exchange
Liesl Truscott is the farm team manager for textile exchange is working directly with organic cotton farmers globally to understand and build capacity for organic cotton farmers. She shares the impact of organic and why we need to think broadly about the clothes we wear. Read the post here

Post 4 - prAna
Here I talk about the realities of organic cotton and the need to grow the amount of organic products in the market. We need to see a shift in consumer understanding and the efforts that prAna is taking to move this forward. Read the post here