This month sees the launch of the second Volans survey report, the first having been The Phoenix Economy. This time, we are focusing on ecosystem services, in The Biosphere Economy – which has just been spotlighted on the World Business Council for Sustainable Development (WBCSD) website. Am currently in Brazil, where we will do a local launch of the report at the Ethos annual conference in a few days. Our third survey report, The Transparent Economy, will launch at the Global Reporting Initiative (GRI) annual conference in Amsterdam later in the month.
Proposition in the Park
As I cycled in this morning, heading north through Hyde Park towards Speaker’s Corner, another cyclist overtook, then stopped dead. I overtook him, then he came up alongside. He said he had also once had a Dawes Mean Street of this vintage – I bought the bike in 1990, I think, but his had been wrecked in a traffic accident. He wanted to buy mine, but I had to declare my love for it – not least with its various scars and dents from accidents it has somehow carried me through. But a rather nice moment, nonetheless. A bit like having another rider admire one’s horse, not least because I had just passed a couple of what looked like Buckingham Palace horse-drawn carriages about three minutes earlier.
Cameraman
Went to the NFT to see a special showing of Craig McCall’s wonderful film Cameraman, on the life and work of cinematographer Jack Cardiff. He shot films like A Matter of Life and Death, The African Queen and Black Narcissus. Martin Scorsese took the stage to introduce the showing, followed by Sanjeev Bhaskar. The film has been 13 years in the making – and Gaia helped at one point, so she got a credit. Afterwards, Elaine, Gaia, Hania, Jake, Tor, Steve, Sandar and I had dinner together, in a tented restaurant on the north side of the river, where the air was cold, the food was cold, but the company was wonderfully warming.
Statue 1
Statue 2
Waiting, reflected
Tor, Jake, Hania
Steve, Elaine
Streetscape
BP’s reputation oiled
We haven’t read much – if anything – about it in the press, but one of the things that Tony Hayward did when he took over as BP’s CEO was to quietly drop one of the values that had been adopted and trumpeted by his predecessor, Lord John Brown. The value was green.
I am sure there is absolutely no link with the ecological horrors unfolding since the sinking of the Deepwater Horizon, but whether or not the Financial Times today is right that Hayward’s first response to the news of the disaster was to ask the question, “How the hell could this happen?”, it might just be worth the subsequent investigators asking the question whether that quiet change in the company’s declared values was a more significant than we might have realised?
I can’t help but agree with Simon Barnes in today’s Times, when he argues that, in so many respects, “our addiction to oil is madness.”
Nick Clegg’s A to My Scaling Q
Following the Green Economy rally I attended on Sunday (see 25 April post), DK Matai’s ATCA catalysed an exchange between Nick Clegg – leader of the Liberal Democrats – and five ATCA network members, including myself. The Huffington Post has now picked up on the exchange, see here.


