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John Elkington

John Elkington

A world authority on corporate responsibility and sustainable development.

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Blog

SAP Sustainability Events in Frankfurt

John Elkington · 18 May 2010 · Leave a Comment

C1 Part of SAP sustainability-branded area C2 Peter Graf, SAP’s Chief Sustainability Officer C3 Tobias Dosch of SAP and Pieter Schoehuijs, Chief Information Officer at AkzoNobel C4 We are plugged C2B The shark is hungry C5 Karina interviewed – my turn next C6 Formula 1 exhibit C7 Co-CEO Bill McDermott – the word is ‘Sustainable’ C8 Co-CEO Jim Hagemann Snabe

Took the Eurostar from London to Brussels yesterday, then an ICE train to Frankfurt, arriving late – but just in time for dinner with a number of people from SAP. Managed somehow to mislay the ticket I had printed off for the ICE train while still in London, and scrambled around Brussels to find a way of accessing and printing the ticket – trying first an internet cafe and then an Ibis Hotel, helped remotely by Sam. Luckily, we made it work – but I never came across the ticket again, suggesting some sort of Bermuda Triangle in my luggage.

Then up very early this morning to get to the Messe conference complex in time for a 07.00 start, with a breakfast-time panel discussion. Early hour meant slightly thin audience to begin with, though it filled out later, and we apparently had the biggest audience of all the sessions at that time. Extraordinary weather outside, with rain drumming on the conference centre roof, very audibly.

We did various interviews – for one showing me looking quite tired, and “jowly”, noted our erstwhile intern Zheng Jieying from Auckland, see here. In the early afternoon, there was a bigger panel session, during which I also trailed the “we’re moving from push to pull” in corporate sustainability reporting message, which will be central to our new report – The Transparent Economy – which launched next week at the GRI conference in Amsterdam.

Then I headed for the airport with co-panellist Karina Litvack of F&C.  When I opened a conference centre door to exit and collect my bag, a great heap of snow and sleet fell across me. Found out later  that my plane had been hit by lightning, so the passengers for Munich had to be transferred to another aircraft. All handled surprisingly smoothly.

The Garden in Full Bloom

John Elkington · 16 May 2010 · Leave a Comment

Barnes 1 Barnes 1 Barnes 2 Barnes 2

Our garden is more or less at it peak at the moment, spilling over with bluebells and sweet cicely, and with all sorts of plants and vines filling the air with perfume – particularly something that has scrambled up the eucalyptus from a neighbour’s garden. A fair number of bees around, particularly various types of bumblebee, but the fate of bees internationally is a growing concern. Their contribution to agriculture is part of the evolving ecosystem services space, something we cover in our latest report, The Biosphere Economy. Many years ago, I wanted to keep bees, even had a pair of hives and a honey extractor inherited from an uncle of Kerry Effingham’s, but life intervened. Apparently there’s a new type of hive, much simpler, which has had me musing again.

 

 

Cricket in the Rain

John Elkington · 16 May 2010 · Leave a Comment

C Reflection C Barnes Common Local Nature Reserve C Path C Cricket starts C As the rain begins

Elaine and I walked Hania across to Barnes station just before 5 this afternoon, breathing in the smells of the Hawthorn blossom and what may have been Queen Anne’s Lace or Hedge Parsley. As we walked back, the cricketers came out to play, so we wandered in among the trees to watch, partly because the rain was starting fall.

We gradually made our way home, at one stage standing under a Horse Chestnut across from Chris Patten’s home as the rain thumped down. I watched it blur a distant Poplar – and found myself thinking of how the men in the WWI trenches would have experienced such downpours. Wonderful feeling, to be sheltered by a great tree.

Have spent much of the day wading through the newspapers from the past week – and, at one stage, booking a Eurostar ticket for tomorrow, in case my flight to Frankfurt is grounded by the incoming ash. Some geologists say that we are possibly heading into a period where some much larger Icelandic volcanoes begin to erupt. Time to explore videoconferencing more seriously?

Rain 1 Rain 1 Rain 2 Rain 2  

If It’s Saturday, It Must Be Bradford

John Elkington · 15 May 2010 · Leave a Comment

Caption School of Management 1 Caption School of Management 2 Caption Professor Arthur Francis kicks us off Kyoko and husband Kyoko Fukukawa and her husband And their daughter And their daughter

Travelled by train, via Leeds, to Bradford – to do a lecture at Bradford University’s School of Management. Amazing to see the landscape taken over by the acid yellow colour of rape fields. Read a stack of magazines, including Newsweek, which foresees the end of the euro and a second great depression. Theme of my talk was the Phoenix Economy, the title of our report last year, which plays into the same space, with discussion of the implication of the work of long-dead economists like Nikolai Kondratiev and Joseph Schumpeter on long-wave economic cycles.

Very much liked the School’s new extension, shown in the first two photos, on the back of the old building, shown in the fourth. Was hosted by, among other Kyoko Fukukawa, whose book on CSR in Asia I did a foreword for some time back. Lively discussion with School of Management alumni, and others, after which I took a bus back to Leeds and then headed south, getting home around 21.30.

Little Sister Treats Big Sister

John Elkington · 14 May 2010 · Leave a Comment

Caption Amy and Sam at Vats Caption JP, Sam, Rafael, Charmian Caption Charmian, Alex Caption Amy and Sam

Lovely evening at Vats in Lamb’s Conduit Street with nine of us, from Volans (Amy, Charmian, Erica, Rafael, Sam) and SustainAbility (Alex, Gary, JP). Much discussion of the nodoubt apocryphal story of English archers’ fingers and the origin of the V-sign. Nice that these days Volans can afford to treat SustainAbility. Afterwards, cycled home in a slightly light-headed state, though cool evening air helped no end.

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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.

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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

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