Objective
This workshop is meant to stimulate
and enable participants to be aware and propose solutions
on how nature should be and can be involved in improving
commerce and industrialization in their trade and area
of work without damaging the environment.
Synopsis of Natural Capitalism
This
concept is initiated by three leading business visionaries
in a book titled “Natural Capitalism”. They
explained how the world is on the verge of a new industrial
revolution—one that promises to transform our
fundamental notions about commerce and its role in shaping
our future. Natural Capitalism describes a future in
which business and environmental interests increasingly
overlap, and in which businesses can better satisfy
their customers' needs, increase profits, and help solve
environmental problems all at the same time.
Natural capital refers to the natural
resources and ecosystem services that make possible
all economic activity, indeed all life. These services
are of immense economic value; some are literally priceless,
since they have no known substitutes. Yet current business
practices typically fail to take into account the value
of these assets—which is rising with their scarcity.
As a result, natural capital is being degraded and liquidated
by the wasteful use of such resources as energy, materials,
water, fiber, and topsoil.
The
first of natural capitalism's four interlinked principles,
therefore, is radically increased resource productivity.
Implementing just this first principle can significantly
improve a firm's bottom line, and can also help finance
the other three. They are: redesigning industry on biological
models with closed loops and zero waste; shifting from
the sale of goods (for example, light bulbs) to the
provision of services (illumination); and reinvesting
in the natural capital that is the basis of future prosperity.
Citing hundreds of compelling stories
from a wide array of sectors, Natural Capitalism shows
how these four changes will enable businesses to act
as if natural capital were being properly valued, without
waiting for consensus on what that value should be.
Even today, when natural capital is hardly accounted
for on corporate balance sheets, these four principles
are so profitable that firms adopting them can gain
striking competitive advantage—as early adopters
are already doing. These innovators are also discovering
that by downsizing their unproductive tons, gallons,
and kilowatt-hours they can keep more people, who will
foster the innovation that drives future improvement.
Natural
Capitalism's preface states: "Although [this] is
a book abounding in solutions, it is not about 'fixes.'
Nor is it a how-to manual. It is a portrayal of opportunities
that if captured will lead to no less than a transformation
of commerce and of all societal institutions. Natural
capitalism maps the general direction of a journey that
requires overturning long-held assumptions, even questioning
what we value and how we are to live. Yet the early
stages in the decades-long odyssey are turning out to
release extraordinary benefits. Among these are what
business innovator Peter Senge calls 'hidden reserves
within the enterprise'—'lost energy,' trapped
in stale employee and customer relationships, that can
be channeled into success for both today's shareholders
and future generations. All three of us have witnessed
this excitement and enhanced total factor productivity
in many of the businesses we have counseled. It is real;
it is replicable…"
Eco-efficiency,
an increasingly popular concept used by business to
describe incremental improvements in materials use and
environmental impact, is only one small part of a richer
and more complex web of ideas and solutions. Without
a fundamental rethinking of the structure and the reward
system of commerce, narrowly focused eco-efficiency
could be a disaster for the environment by overwhelming
resource savings with even larger growth in the production
of the wrong products, produced by the wrong processes,
from the wrong materials, in the wrong place, at the
wrong scale, and delivered using the wrong business
models. With so many wrongs outweighing one right, more
efficient production by itself could become not the
servant but the enemy of a durable economy. Reconciling
ecological with economic goals requires not just eco-efficiency
alone, but also three additional principles, all inter-dependent
and mutually reinforcing. Only that combination of all
four principles can yield the full benefits and the
logical consistency of natural capitalism.
Who Should Attend
CEO
Managers
Engineers
Teachers
Entrepreneurs
It is also suitable for anyone who
is concerned with environmental issues and conservation.
Speaker and Facilitator
Key Facilitator
Our leading facilitator cum speaker is Mr Tay Kheng
Soon. Mr Tay is a well-known “eco-architect”
in Singapore. He is the former Scout Commissioner of
Singapore and the chief architect in the building of
the present Scout Camp in Singapore. He is also the
owner of Eco Camp at Mawai with the objective of promoting
Eco-education. Mr Tay is involved in many businesses
in the region including the Flight-Ship programme in
Australia, Eco-Village in Southern China, and Eco-campsites
in Malaysia.
Assistant Facilitator
Our assistant facilitator
is Mr Leong Kwok Peng. Kwok Peng is the co-founder of
Edu Outdoor Activities (EOA) Pte Ltd specializing in
corporate training programmes i.e. Natural Innovations,
Natural Captalism and EcoManagement™.
Kwok Peng is currently the Chairman
of the Marine Conservation Group of Nature Society (S’pore).
His knowledge and experience in Nature related programmes
is enormous. Some of his nature related projects includes:
| • |
Project leader in the coral reef
relocation project from Pulau Ayer Chawan to Sentosa
from 1994 –1995. |
| • |
Collaborated with Underwater World
Sentosa to relocate a smaller scale coral relocation
from Pulau Seringat to Sentosa in 1997. |
| • |
Went on the Marine Park of Indonesia
expedition (Aseanarean Series) in 1999 organised
by the Raffles Marina to document the marine parks
of Indonesia. |
|