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John Elkington

John Elkington

A world authority on corporate responsibility and sustainable development.

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Journal

Launching the Verbier Institute

John Elkington · 31 August 2014 · Leave a Comment

VI1

On the train towards Verbier

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Ditto

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W Hotel in Verbier

VI4Desktop art

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Wall art

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Up the mountain

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Chateau de Chillon at speed from train

Spent Friday and Saturday en route to, at and on way back from Verbier, Switzerland, keynoting the launch of the Verbier Institute.

Other speakers included Julia Groves of the Trillion Fund, Aleyn Smith-Gillespie of the Carbon Trust, André Schneider of the EPFL and the Danish artist Per Arnoldi.

Kudos to the Verbier Institute team: Anders Sjostedt, Robert Howe and Michael Mathres.

Some fascinating conversations along the way, during and after, especially with André. Among the things we discussed: the EPFL Blue Brain Project and the Venice Time Machine. Plus a bunch of other things.

Had read about them both before, but it’s amazing what interesting work is going on in some parts of Europe. Turned out that André is a Dr Who fan, too.

Had a quick-fire trip (with my case) up the mountains afterwards, with perhaps 10 minutes at the top before taking a cabine down to Verbier and then down into the valley, to catch the first of two trains back to Geneva. Gave a useful perspective on it all.

Fingers crossed that the Institute takes off.

SABMiller and a juggled elephant

John Elkington · 27 August 2014 · Leave a Comment

SABMiller1Bottled

SABMiller2

Juggled

Went with Sam to see Andy Wales and Andre Fourie of SABMiller, to discuss the company’s Prosper initiative. Came away quite (American sense) impressed.

Then, as we were walking back to Hyde Park Corner, saw the sculpture of the juggled elegant – and, risking life and limb, made our way across Park Lane to inspect from closer quarters.

Remarkable.

Elephant Hawk Moth in Forest Row

John Elkington · 24 August 2014 · Leave a Comment

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Diverse fish in relief, made by Jonathan’s goldsmith grandfather in Munich

SH2 caterpillar

Elephant hawk moth caterpillar, I think

SH3VW

VW cushion, with a VW camper van parked outside

SH4panorama

Panorama of the garden, with pond in which vicious dragonfly nymphs lurk

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Embraced by a tree

NN6roots

Uprooted

SH7hobbits

Hobbits

SH8thistles

Bleached thistles in a landscape

SH9JandE

Jonathan and Elaine

SH10greenhouse

Greenhouse, with what may be biological pest control habitats

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Blackboard outside the garden shop

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Lifebelt

SH12groupshot

Group shot with Jonathan

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Group shot with me

A lovely day in Forest Row, near East Grinstead, with Jonathan Shopley, his wife Andrea, her mother Peggy (who hosted me in Durban when I was there many, many moons ago), and their daughters Arianne and Kira.

Delighted to see Jonathan’s motorbike propped outside, the one which he rode from South Africa to Britain in the mid-1980s, landing up on our doorstep in Barnes, and working with me for several year before heading on to such places as ADL, LBS (for an MBA) and the Carbon Neutral Company.

One of the first things we saw once out in their glorious garden was a huge caterpillar, which I think we have established was an Elephant Hawk Moth, getting ready for greater things.

Jonathan, Elaine and I had a wonderful walk around the area and through the grounds of Michael Hall, the nearby Rudolf Steiner school. Lots of butterflies and moths, plus blackberries and damsons in the hedgerows.

Amazing how much history is clustered nearby, including Chartwell and the hospital where the Guinea Pig Club was founded by WWII casualties who were being treated by the legendary reconstructive plastic surgeon, Archibald McIndoe.

Rather idiotically, I left my Barbour at the Shopley’s home when we drove off, something I’m increasingly inclined to do, with a debris field extending behind me that is worthy of the most absent-minded professor. Happily it has been found: it’s old, bought for my second Davos in 2003, but a garment to which (despite appearances) I am more than a little attached.

Novo Nordisk BHAG session in Copenhagen

John Elkington · 23 August 2014 · Leave a Comment

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Screen on floor of the first session

NN2Geodesic roof eyes the proceedings

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Geoff Kendall facilitates a table

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Derek’s badged

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Values etched in glass

NN6Values on wheels

Flew to Copenhagen on Thursday evening, for a stakeholder session yesterday – exploring where Novo Nordisk might head next in its sustainability thinking and ambitions.

Arrived very late at the Phoenix Hotel, but luckily found Polly Cortice just checking in – and joined her and Jonathon Porritt for a delightful supper.

The full session the following day was facilitated by Rob Cameron and Geoff Kendall of SustainAbility. In introducing myself up front, for the outsiders and the Novo Nordisk people, I said I had realised the previous evening that I had now worked, off and on, with Novo Nordisk for 25 years.

In 1989, the company’s then-president Mads Ovlisen invited Julia Hailes and I in to do an early environmental audit of the company, in the wake of the publication of The Green Consumer Guide, which had caused problems for the industrial enzymes side of the business.

The company has changed profoundly since, spinning out its enzymes business, rechartering itself around the Triple Bottom Line, and growing like fury. and the growth looks set to continue. In the next 9 years, for example,  it is set to grow from just over 40,000 people to around 60,000.

But the values we were impressed by way back in 1989 remain largely unchanged – though various of the external stakeholders wondered how Novo Nordisk can reconcile further growth (which will drive it up the ranks of global pharmaceutical companies) with its values.

In the afternoon, the Sustainability Committee, which Lise Kingo chairs, joined us for an animated – and animating – discussion. The proceedings were subject to the Chatham House Rule, so much of the detail must remain under wraps until Novo Nordisk publishes the results.

On the flight back, I finished off Helen Macdonald’s wonderful book, H Is For Hawk. Quite simply, it is superb – and deeply intertwined with T.H. White’s The Goshawk, which I read in my early teens (though I confess I failed to realise then just how much abuse White unwittingly did to his hawk.)

In memory of Stephen Lloyd

John Elkington · 22 August 2014 · Leave a Comment

STL photo web

It was with immense sadness that I heard of the death of Stephen Lloyd when I was on a flight back from Copenhagen this evening. The story came, indirectly, via the website of The Lawyer.

I tried to post elements of the following appreciation on the website, but apparently failed to test to show that I was a human rather than a bot – which involved typing in the second and fifth letter of the word SOFTWARE. (I look forward to the day when such websites can detect real human emotions …)

And the emotions are very real.

I first met Stephen when he served as legal counsel for the ill-fated Earthlife Foundation in the 1980s. Later he played the same role when I was Chairman of The Environment Foundation, which subsequently morphed into the Foundation for Democracy and Sustainable Development, under its then Director Halina Ward.

The story I wanted to share has to do with the period after the Trustees of The Environment Foundation decided to apply to the Charity Commissioners for permission to embrace the charitable objective of sustainable development. We were told point-blank that sustainable development was commercial, ergo couldn’t be a charitable objective. To add insult to injury, the Commissioners then tried to shut us down.

Stephen was utterly incensed. He fought our case for two years, and when it extended into a third year volunteered to continue pro bono. It was a joy to stand shoulder-to-shoulder with such a man, alongside the late Helen Holdaway, during what proved to be a fairly protracted fight.

In the end, thanks to Stephen, we won.

So one key legacy of Stephen’s legal work is the fact that sustainable development is now a charitable objective in this country.

He will be missed hugely, in so many different ways.

Those who knew him better as family members, friends or colleagues will be far closer to the epicentre of this seismic shock. We send them our best wishes – and our thanks for sharing this wonderful man with us.

LATER ADDITION: For obituaries of Stephen, see http://www.theguardian.com/society/2014/aug/29/stephen-lloyd and http://www.independent.co.uk/news/obituaries/stephen-lloyd-lawyer-acclaimed-for-his-efforts-to-modernise-the-charity-sector-and-champion-the-idea-of-social-enterprise-9712963.html

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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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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.

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