• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
John Elkington

John Elkington

A world authority on corporate responsibility and sustainable development.

  • About
    • Ambassador from the future
  • Past lives
    • Professional
      • Volans
      • SustainAbility
      • CounterCurrent
      • Boards & Advisory Boards
      • Awards & Listings
    • Personal
      • Family
      • Other Influences
      • Education
      • Photography
      • Music
      • Cycling
    • Website
  • Speaking
    • Media
    • Exhibitions
  • Publications
    • Books
    • Reports
    • Articles & Blogs
    • Contributions
    • Tweets
    • Unpublished Writing
  • Journal
  • Contact
  • Show Search
Hide Search

John Elkington

Breakthrough Salon, Durrells & Giraffe In Flip-Flops

John Elkington · 7 May 2017 · Leave a Comment

Covestro reception: there’s a plastic outline of an animal in there somewhere
Giraffe made of flip-flops

Finished Philip Kerr’s wonderful Prussian Blue novel today. Of the twelve in the series to date, one of the very best. Also bought a number of books this afternoon at Barnes Books, including Timothy Snyder’s On Tyranny and volume 2 of James Holland’s The War in the West historical series.

And ordered a copy of Scale: The Universal Laws of Growth, Innovation, Sustainability, And The Pace Of Life In Organisms, Cities, Economies, and Companies by Geoffrey West of the Santa Fe Institute. Here’s a note I wrote on his work back in 2011. He visited us at Volans on 8 February last year.

Spent a couple of days in Leverkusen earlier in the week, with members of the Carbon Productivity Consortium, in this case drawn from Volans, SYSTEMIQ and the Future-Fit Foundation. Extremely helpful discussions with Patrick Thomas, Richard Northcote and Markus Steilemann.

Earlier in the week, we did another Salon at Volans, this time co-hosted with Atlas of the Future. Great fun – as demonstrated in this photo taken, I think, by Lisa Goldapple of Atlas.

Some of the Salon participants, with me in green shirt

Otherwise, have been busily responding to feedback on the Harvard Business Review blog and preparing slide decks for Paris, Oslo and Vevey – where I’m headed in the next couple of weeks.

Nice contrast this evening, as the news of Macron’s win in France came in, was to watch the latest programme in the ITV series, The Durrells. Joyous. Only met Gerry Durrell (and his wife Lee, at a private preview of Phil Agland’s film Korup) once, but always adored his writing and attitude to the natural world.

My $12 Trillion Blog In Harvard Business Review

John Elkington · 4 May 2017 · Leave a Comment

HBR version of our Breakthrough Compass

Got back from Germany this evening to find Harvard Business Review had posted my Breakthrough blog. Details here: https://hbr.org/2017/05/saving-the-planet-from-ecological-disaster-is-a-12-trillion-opportunity. Please take a look and, if you like it, share.

UNGC Begins To Break Through In Delhi

John Elkington · 1 May 2017 · Leave a Comment

View from my Le Meridien room in Delhi, look towards the Sansad Bhavan, Or Parliament House, the circular building close to the horizon
‘No Honking’ sign seems to be universally ignored elsewhere in the city
After the final plenary session on Breakthrough innovation, with (from L to R) Shanaaz Preena of MAS Capital, Tanya Accone of UNICEF, Zenia Tata of The XPrize Foundation and Ingvild Sørensen of UNGC

Fascinating few days (24-27 April) in New Delhi with the UN Global Compact, at their Making Global Goals Local Business conference. I moderated a panel session on Breakthrough Innovation and then did a short keynote in the final plenary session on Breakthrough Innovation for the Sustainable Development Goals – alongside Zenia Tata of The Prize Foundation and Shaibal Roy of PA Consulting.

A profoundly encouraging response to both sessions – and delightful dinner afterwards with Lise Kingo, who heads the UNGC, before I had to race off to chair a session of the Social Stock Exchange Admissions Panel, by telephone.

Wonderful conversation on the plane back to London with someone who had heard me speak in Delhi and wanted me to speak at a conference of theirs in London in June.

On the flight I finished off Ari Shavit’s stunning book, My Promised Land. Can’t recommend it highly enough for anyone wanting to understand the history of Israel.

Uplifting and depressing in almost equal measure. On page 419, Shavit concludes, “We are a ragtag cast in an epic motion picture whose plot we do not understand and cannot grasp. The scrip writer went mad. The director ran away. The producer went bankrupt. But we are still here, on this biblical set. The camera is still rolling …”

Home from home in the skies

Then a really delightful surprise when I got home. I received an email from British Airways which started as follows:

Congratulations, we’re delighted to let you know that you have earned a lifetime Gold membership from the Executive Club. This means that you will continue to enjoy all of the fantastic benefits of Gold for life.

Blimey! Though I have to say that the immediate delight was quickly tempered by a sense of guilt, in terms of the amount of aircraft emissions and noise generated in the decades of flying I have devoted to the environmental and sustainability causes.

That said, we have offset all flights since way back in SustainAbility days, and also often asked clients to offset the emissions, too, doubling up.

My first flight with BA, at least that I remember, was in 1975, to Cairo – the year after the company was founded through a merger of BOAC and BEA. Well before Air Miles existed, I think. (Checking Wikipedia, it seems they were first introduced in 1992.)

My main memories of that particular trip to Egypt were of the crew lining up at the foot of the gangplank to see us off the plane, and the intense pain I experienced when I lay down to sleep in the Cairo hotel.

It turned out that I had cracked three ribs in a cycle accident in Covent Garden earlier in the day, where I was hit by an Indonesian driver (first day out on British roads) by the Floral Hall. There was a line of hundreds of people waiting outside the Hall to get into a Real Ale event, and not a single person moved to help me as I lay unconscious.

On the upside, I wrote a feature article on the work I had been doing in Egypt for New Scientist, called ‘Beware the Wrath of Osiris‘. Thanks to the magazine’s then Editor, Dr Bernard Dixon, this led on to quite a number of other pieces – which, in turn, led to my being invited by Max Nicholson to help set up Environmental Data Services (ENDS) in 1978. It’s amazing how serendipity sometimes works.

UBQ: The Dead Sea

John Elkington · 22 April 2017 · Leave a Comment

Headed east
Dead Sea almost in sight
Walking down to the saline solution
Driving west again, to Ben Gurion Airport, along the the West Bank wall

Last night, while sampling the delights of Chakra, recommended by Tato Bigio of UBQ and booked by Chris, we drank a bottle of Oded Shoseyov’s Bravdo wine, mentioned in the previous entry. And that encouraged us to switch plans and decide on the Dead Sea in the morning.

(My main memory of the Dead Sea from 1959 was flying over it in a Dakota – and, if memory serves, being invited into the cockpit by the pilot to help steer.)

Waiting to board a Dakota, with my mother Pat on the right, in blue, holding sister Caroline’s hand, and brother Gray and I as a blurred grouping in the middle

We went the whole hog this time, swimming in blistering sunshine (though the water was surprisingly cold) and enjoying the smooth sandpapering of the black mud. God only knows how many skins the mud I used had helped abrade over the millennia. But a cold beer tasted surprisingly wonderful afterwards.

As we were about to leave, we were asked for a lift by a young Dutch couple, Erik and Kim (who was suffering from early heat stroke), and took them as far as Ben Gurion airport in the rented, air-conditioned Mercedes. Seeing the West Bank wall – or barrier – was a painful reminder of the ongoing tensions that continue to roil this extraordinary land.

Am determined to finish off Ari Shavit’s My Promised Land on flights to and from Delhi next week.

UBQ: A Return To Jerusalem

John Elkington · 21 April 2017 · Leave a Comment

Rather than write a long travelogue, I will simply run a series of images to indicate the extraordinary diversity of sights we saw today in Jerusalem. Guided around by Chris (Sveen) and by Lauren Shachar, whose father was a Holocaust survivor. A wonderful combination of talents.

So much has changed since we were in Israel in 1959, but here in Jerusalem so much hasn’t – and so much, like the Western wall tunnels, has come to light since. As we drove east from Tel Aviv in the morning, I was expecting to see burned out vehicles from the 1948 war, where migrants arriving on the coast were rushed straight into battle. I remember being forcefully struck by the wreckage as a child. Nowadays it has been cleaned up and is more symbolic.

Entering Jerusalem, via the enlarged Jaffa Gate, early in the day
Panorama inside Gate: reminiscent of the citadel in Aleppo, on a much smaller scale
Calm before the storm
Framed
An ancient curving
Inside the Church of the Holy Sepulchre
Graffito on column outside Church of the Holy Sepulchre, from the late 1300s
And again, though different hand, script and date
Basket-style capital
Graffiti – or a hidden Basquiat?
Outside the rumoured prison cell where Jesus was held – on the opposing wall
Panorama from hotel roof, including the Dome of the Rock
Hallucinatory station of the cross
Down in the tunnels beneath the Muslim Quarter and alongside the Western Wall. This was a highlight of the day, with the tunnels running approximately 488 metres along the Western Wall. The scale of the building is almost beyond comprehension, at least in terms of the technology of the day. For example, one stone is 14 metres long and weighs almost 570 tons.
Smudged detail of a sculpture of “swifts of hope” in gardens of St John Eye Hospital
Hide-and-seek in street excavated after the demolition of the Jewish Quarter
Detail of mural, with old and new children
Composite picture of young Israeli soldiers during the 1967 capture of the city
Self explanatory, perhaps
Old – and very recognisable – postbox
Bullet holes from 1948 pockmark the Zion Gate
Towering
Ravaged poster explaining the Armenian genocide
Sunset panorama from the Mount of Olives, looking back across the Dome
My new-found friend on the Mount
Sunset
Millipede (huge) spotted eating dropped bread
The view east towards the desert as we head down from the Mount
  • « Go to Previous Page
  • Go to page 1
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Go to page 106
  • Go to page 107
  • Go to page 108
  • Go to page 109
  • Go to page 110
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Go to page 281
  • Go to Next Page »

Primary Sidebar

Introduction

I began this blog with an entry reporting on a visit to the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution on Cape Cod, on 30 September 2003. The blog element of the website has gone through several iterations since, with much of the older material still available.

Like so many things in my life, blog entries blur the boundaries between the personal and the professional. As explained on this site’s Home Page, the website and the blog are part platform for ongoing projects, part autobiography, and part accountability mechanism.

In addition, my blogs have appeared on many sites such as: Chinadialogue, CSRWire, Fast Company, GreenBiz, Guardian Sustainable Business, and the Harvard Business Review.

Recent Comments

  • Julia on Reminder of Glencot Years
  • Jeff on Shawn Phillips: A Night In Positano
  • Gaia Elkington on Gaia’s Strawberry Hill House Flowering

Journal Archive

About

John Elkington is a world authority on corporate responsibility and sustainable development. He is currently Founding Partner and Executive Chairman of Volans, a future-focused business working at the intersection of the sustainability, entrepreneurship and innovation movements.

Contact

john@johnelkington.com  |  +44 203 701 7550 | Twitter: @volansjohn

John Elkington

Copyright © 2025 John Elkington. All rights reserved. Log in