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MAHATMA GANDHI ~ Truth never damages a cause that is just.
Friday, 7 September 2018
Profits v planet: can big business and the environment get along?
Sustainability can bring benefits to everybody – including company execs with their eyes on the bottom line
Yossi Sheffi
Greenpeace volunteers in orangutan costumes protest outside the offices of Nestlé in Beijing, March 2010.
Photograph: Alamy
Warren
Buffett said, “It takes 20 years to build a reputation and five minutes
to ruin it.” It has been more than two decades now since a 1996 issue
of Lifemagazine depicted a Pakistani boy sewing a Nike soccer ball,
reportedly for six cents per hour. After the story, the company lost
more than half its market capitalisation in just one year – it took Nike
six years of demonstrated social responsibility to recuperate. Even
today Nike is – fairly or unfairly – ranked low on lists of ethical
companies. It has survived financially, but the reputation of the brand
may never recover.
Environmental reputations can be just as hard to rebuild. NGOs like Greenpeace
and the World Wildlife Fund believe in the potential fragility of the
environment, and they see the potential fragility of companies’ brands
as a means of pressuring them to change.
“When Greenpeace reaches for its toolbox, it tends to find only one
tool, and that’s a mallet,” said Scott Poynton, founder of the Forest
Trust “and it tends to beat people over the head with it.”
If you want evidence the mallet approach works, consider KitKat. In
2010, Guinness World Records certified that KitKat was the world’s most
global brand, sold in more countries than any other that year. But on 17
March that year, Greenpeace released a video parody of a KitKat
commercial.
The clip opens with a bored office worker feeding papers into a
shredder. Then, the screen turns red with the text “Have a break?” The
worker opens a KitKat wrapper, but instead of fingers of chocolate, he
finds the finger of an orangutan – complete with tufts of orange hair.
Coworkers watch in horror as he crunches into the finger and blood
dribbles on to his keyboard. The video urged viewers to “give the
orangutan a break” and “stop Nestlé buying palm oil from companies that
destroy rainforests”.
Greenpeace
used the power of social media to attack fast, far, and wide. In a
matter of weeks, 1.5 million people had watched the video.
The attack surprised Nestlé. For one thing, the company thought it
had already been addressing the issue. Nestlé had adopted a “no
deforestation” policy when directly sourcing palm oil, committing that
its palm oil would “not come from areas cleared of natural forest after
November 2005”. Nestlé neither produced palm oil nor owned any farms
near orangutan habitats, nor had it ever ordered the clearing of
rainforests to increase production of palm oil – but one of its
suppliers had. Bosses attempted to address the issue by cancelling that
supplier’s contracts, a response that initially failed. Although the
effects of the campaign on KitKat sales are not publicly known, we can
infer they were significant – it took just eight weeks for the company
to agree to Greenpeace’s demands.
Public shaming may drive change in some notable instances, but
success stories such as this are few and far between. Campaigns from
environmental NGOs such as Greenpeace are necessarily targeted, their
effectiveness limited to the company or brand under fire. After a summer
of heatwaves and forest fires you might think that any CEO worth their
salt would have sustainability in mind, whether for righteous
(environmental) or unrighteous (PR) reasons. The problem is that
sustainability and public image are two of many factors that a company
must balance to be successful.
Each and every day CEOs across the world face numerous decisions, and
sustainability is just one in a long list of priorities. Few will
simply admit that they don’t care, although it is clear from interviews
conducted with them that many will only go as far as the customers
demand, or only make environmentally positive decisions if they also
reduce costs.
When it comes to sustainability in business it may even be necessary
to take an entirely agnostic view on the science of climate change. To
some extent it is irrelevant whether business executives personally
embrace environmentalists’ arguments about “the challenge of our time”,
or if they believe it is a hoax. The business merits of sustainability
are based on the fact that even the most ardent climate-sceptic company
executives face natural resource costs, public relations problems,
regulatory burdens, and a green consumer segment.
Regardless of what they may personally believe, they still have to
balance whether and how to pursue environmental initiatives, weighing
time and resources against many competing demands. Naturally, most of
them focus on green initiatives that are aligned with their
shareholders’ performance goals.
The dual role of businesses’ supply chains in creating both economic
growth (including jobs) and environmental impact highlights a fallacy in
the Greenpeace story of “profits v planet”. The environmentalists’
narrative ignores the role of businesses and their supply chains in both
employing people and delivering improved standards of living to
humanity, especially to the billions of people who have yet to enjoy the
plenty that modern industry can provide.
After Walmart’s 2011 pledge to buy more sustainable seafood,
Greenpeace contended that Walmart was not doing enough, whereas Alaskan
fishermen and state officials complained that Walmart was asking too
much of them. The real conflict is not “profits v planet” but rather
“some people v other people”. Our challenge is to prove that
sustainability benefits everybody, but especially those CEOs whose
company profits drive such decision making.
• This is an edited extract from Balancing Green by Yossi Sheffi (MIT Press)
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