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New Commitments Yield New Markets

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Sofie Beckham, IKEA Trading Americas March 17, 2004. 2. A sense of ... Sofie Beckham, Forestry Manager, IKEA Trading Americas Inter IKEA Systems B. V. 2000 ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: New Commitments Yield New Markets


1
New Commitments Yield New Markets
  • Sustainable Enterprise Summit
  • March 17, 2004

2
A sense of where we are
  • In the past 20 years
  • Economic output up 75
  • Energy use up 40
  • Meat consumption up 70
  • Auto production up 45
  • Paper use up 90
  • Advertising up 100
  • World population up 35
  • Meanwhile
  • 75 of marine fisheries are fished to capacity or
    overfished 5 in 1960
  • Water supplies per person dropped by a third
    between 1970 and 1990
  • A Nevada-sized area of forest is lost every year
  • Roughly half of the people in the world live on
    less than 2 a day

3
Premise of this Panel
  • Unprecedented growth of demand for natural
    resources
  • Rapidly accelerated pressure on natural systems
  • More people competing for their fair share
  • Something has to give
  • Somebody has to lead
  • There are real business opportunities and
    advantages for those who commit to lead the way

4
Panelists
  • Madeleine Jacobs, Head of Sustainable
    Development, ABN AMRO
  • Thomas Jorling, Vice President, Environmental
    Affairs, International Paper
  • Sofie Beckham, Forestry Manager, IKEA
    Trading Americas

5
Questions
  • What are the business motivations that persuaded
    your corporation to make these commitments?
  • What have been the most significant challenges,
    obstacles, or impediments to putting these
    commitments into practice?
  • What do you think the future of sustainability
    commitments will be in your industry?

6
Format
  • All three will address the first two questions
  • Discussion
  • All three will speak about the future
  • Discussion

7
New Commitments Yield New Markets
Thomas Jorling Vice President Environmental
Affairs
8
THREE DRIVERS OF COMMITMENTS
  • mandatory / regulatory
  • VOC, NOX, SO2
  • voluntary / external
  • CCX, EPA-climate leaders
  • voluntary internal
  • endangered species banking, wetlands
    mitigation banking

9
WHY MOVE TO CAP AND TRADE AND OTHER MARKET
MECHANISMS
  • To learn and gain experiences with the emerging
    techniques that offer the promise of
    cost-effective pollution control beyond current
    standards - these include VOC, NOX, SO2 and
    perhaps soon - CO2
  • To participate at the earliest possible stages of
    the development of these mechanisms to help
    influence the shape and content to assure
    practicality and feasibility
  • To test the reality of markets in natural
    resources (i.e. endangered species, conservation
    easements, wetlands mitigation)
  • As a natural resource/forest land based industry
    these markets not only offer environmental
    achievement but also ways of unlocking value from
    assets

10
CHALLENGES / OBSTACLES TO THESE EMERGING
MECHANISMS
  • Exploring and testing the new while spending is
    still being driven by the old i.e. capital
    spending is dominated by EPA rules, no discretion
    not to spend compliance required even though
    high cost little benefit
  • Maintaining existing environmental infrastructure
    both OM and capital sucks up resources at a
    time when global competitiveness is keen
  • Conflicting public policy and law many EPA
    requirements result in more greenhouse gas
    emissions with no comparative assessment that
    such result is worth the environmental benefit
    from the requirement
  • Rules that require incremental reductions across
    all systems at high cost lock in old technology
    and discourage new technology

11
WRI Sustainable Enterprise SummitWashington,
March 17, 2004
New Commitments Yield New Markets for Financial
Institutions
  • Madeleine Jacobs
  • Head of Sustainable Development
  • ABN AMRO

12
Our Sustainability Learning Curve
SD business Strategy
Value Creation
Equator Principles
OG policy
Mining policy
Forestry dialog
Loss Avoidance
APP
Dialog with FOE
Freeport
Value Destruction
Proactive External Dialogue
Wake-Up Call
Developing Internal Standards
Common Sector Baseline
Case Specific Defence
Innocence
Pursuing the Business Case
13
The Equator Principles
  • Voluntary declaration among leading group of
    Project Finance Banks
  • Establishes a common framework for
    commercial Banks
  • Will provide loans only to borrowers
    complying with Environmental Social standards
    and processes
  • Based on IFC/World Bank guidelines/policies
  • With 20 Banks adopting, a de facto industry
    standard

14
The SD Business Rationale for Financial
Institutions
  • Our LT success is linked to core competencies
    that underpin
  • our role as a Bank
  • Trust
  • Client Satisfaction
  • Risk Management
  • Employee Satisfaction Attraction

15
Challenges in the implementation of commitments
  • Building the Business Case
  • Translating SD into a focused business strategy
  • Making dilemmas tangible/enabling people at the
    front
  • Compliance
  • Dealing with emerging markets clients with
    standards still lagging

16
WRI Summit New Commitments Yield New Markets
Social Environmental Responsibility in a
Competitive Marketplace
17
Question 1 IKEA Business Motivations
  • DRIVERS
  • The IKEA vision- Create a better everyday life
    for the many people.
  • Past challenges/milestones- IKEA must be
    proactive towards social and environmental issues
    to ensure our long-term future.
  • External groups- NGOs and other external groups
    have increased our awareness of important issues.

18
Question 1 IKEA Business Motivations
  • ADVANTAGES
  • Raw material security- IKEA must be proactive to
    have supply!
  • Eco-efficiencies- Efficient raw material use has
    a positive effect on costs.
  • Marketplace differentiation- Consumer awareness
    of social and environmental issues is growing.

19
Question 2 Challenges, obstacles and impediments
  • Communication-Internal/external
  • Resources-New competencies and tools needed
  • Varying global conditions-Different countries,
    different conditions

20
Questions and Answers
21
Final Question
  • What do you think the future of sustainability
    commitments will be in your industry?

22
Question 3 Future of Sustainability Commitments
  • Deepening commitments
  • Partnerships will increase
  • Systems thinking/New tools

23
Question 3 Future of Sustainability Commitments
  • Product recovery
  • Product tracing
  • Consumption

24
We have only just begun, we still have a long way
to go!!!
25
THE FUTURE
  • Likely to be an extended period of policy
    gridlock and impasse until inefficiencies build
    to an inescapable need to change
  • That need will result from (or produce) a
    convergence between
  • Development of systems and processes (including
    those based on markets) that are coherent,
    cost-effective and efficient
  • Examples of results from innovation pilot
    demonstrations involving governments and NGOs
  • Rapid development of transforming technology,
    especially in climate / environment friendly
    energy production, water cleaning, etc.
  • Growing spirit of partnership rather than
    adversarial relations among stakeholders

26
  • Some of this will be driven by what appears to
    be a unifying concept sustainability.
  • Sustainability recognizes that environmental,
    economic and social welfare conditions all have
    to be addressed if 9 billion people can satisfy
    their basic aspirations for a decent quality of
    life without degrading the life supporting
    biosphere.

27
New Roles and Opportunities for the Financial
Sector
  • We are entering an era where we rebalance
    priorities of the 90s- toward governance and
    people/planet
  • A more active role for Banks as part of society,
    working towards balanced solutions jointly with
    public sector and industry clients
  • SD will become a critical internal success factor
    for Banks
  • New markets and products
  • SRI funds, sell and buy side research (focus on
    governance people/planet)
  • Brownfield lending, Renewable Energy funding,
    Emissions trading
  • Corporate Finance and Project Finance Advisory

28
Questions and Answers
29
Thank You
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