December 24, 2009

Sustainability - Big or small?

Sustainability is a broad topic. According to wikipedia "Sustainability has become a wide-ranging term that can be applied to almost every facet of life on Earth" http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sustainability.

As Paul Hawkin noted in referring to CSR, ""The term 'socially responsible investing' is so broad it is meaningless," . So where does that leave "sustainability", broader in scope because it extends well beyond investment into accountability and the regulatory purview?

"Sustainability" as a lens at which to look at issues facing people. Real issues, impacting real people at a community level, be it a neighborhood, municipality or larger scale. But only when discuss issues in those terms do people really engage beyond the echo chamber of so called "experts" the pontificate on sustainability in blogs and even for a living, imagine that.

Having grappled with reporting on sustainability for a multi-national company, in the most general of terms, there is more of a sense of feeding the beast than solving problems.
Both are important, as reporting is the first step toward accountability, but the last mile is in holding companies and communities co-responsible for how they interact and addressing issues. So that is the focus of this site, highlighting communities that exist virtually, but act physically to solve issues.





May 24, 2009

From Environment to Sustainability

Since I started on a quest to better understand our environmental footprint, I was exposed to Sustainability as a holistic concept, thanks to James Farrar, I am blogging once again.

Ok. So that interrelationship between all aspects of our lives (social, economic, environmental) should have been obvious. But it wasn't. And for 99.9% of the world that awareness is just dawning. Is this a call to action to work together on unprecedented global scale or is it second fiddle to localized needs of the day. And if it is the latter, what can we do to make enough of an impact to turn things into a direction that will be effective. In the 150th year anniversary of "Origin of Species", how viable are we? That is what sustainability is really about. Is there a Sustainable Footprint for our species on a macro level that translates to an organizational and individual level?