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John Elkington

John Elkington

A world authority on corporate responsibility and sustainable development.

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Search Results for: Tim elkington

Launch of ‘The Stretch Agenda’ in Bonn, Etcetera

John Elkington · 16 May 2015 · Leave a Comment

 

Elvira (Thissen) and Aimee (Watson) get ready to blow out the candles on their joint birthday cake - with Zoë (Arden) shooting the scene
Elvira (Thissen) and Aimee (Watson) get ready to blow out candles on joint birthday cake. Zoë (Arden) shoots.
The original Bundestag chamber: the blue circle is where we spoke from
The original Bundestag chamber in Bonn: the blue circle is where we spoke from
Part of the audience
Part of the audience
Line-up after lunch with Jeff Sachs and his daughter Hannah
Line-up after lunch with Jeff Sachs and his daughter Hannah: Tieless Tell and I on right
Designed to scare and save
Designed to scare and save: sustainability needs something of the same
Bacchus eyes us as we walk along the Rhine
Bacchus eyes us as we walk along the Rhine
Tell and Su (Kahumbu Stephanou)
Tell and Su (Kahumbu Stephanou)
Was it something I said?
Was it something I said?
Clues to how to do transformative change are in here somewhere
Clues to how to do transformative change are in here somewhere
Federal eagle
Federal eagle, sometimes called the ‘Fat Hen‘
Tell in the DeutschePost building
Tell in the Deutsche Post building
There's a former Postmaster-General in there somewhere
There’s a former Postmaster-General in there somewhere
From the 30-somethingth floor
From the 30-somethingth floor
Part of their wonderful collection of old mailboxes
Delivered by dolphins? Part of Deutsche Post’swonderful  collection of old mailboxes
The tower viewed from beneath our favourite Bonn chestnut tree
The tower viewed from beneath our favourite Bonn chestnut tree
Embraced
Embraced
Occluded view of St Paul's in rain from Aviva offices
Occluded view of St Paul’s in rain from Aviva offices
Spotted a huge dead carp in Barnes Pond as I walked home last night
Spotted a large dead carp in Barnes Pond as I walked home last night

After a delightful dry-run at SustainAbility’s London offices, we proceeded with the launch of our new publication, The Stretch Agenda: Breakthrough in the Boardroom. I headed to Bonn to keynote the first Bonn Conference for Global Transformation. This was co-hosted by the State Government of North Rhine-Westphalia and the Deutsche Gesellschaft für Internationale Zusammenarbeit (GIZ). The theme: ‘From Politics to Implementation.’

The Stretch Agenda is one output of the Breakthrough program we have been working on since late last year. Originally, we were thinking of a short report, which then morphed into a White Paper and then, only 5-6 weeks back, into a ‘playper,’ a dramatisation of an extraordinary Board meeting at a fictional company, MN-Co.

After introductions at the Bonn conference by Angelica Schwall-Düren (Minister of Federal Affairs, Europe and the Media, North Rhine-Westphalia), Tanja Gönner (Chair of the Management Board, GIZ) and Friedrich Kitschelt (State Secretary in the Federal Ministry for Economic Cooperation and Development), two of us kicked off the main event with TED-style presentations: Su Kahumbu Stephanou, Creative Director of Green Dreams TECH based in Nairobi, and myself – spotlighting the launch of The Stretch Agenda. Stacks of the publication were available throughout the reception area. Several people suggested staging the ‘play’ for their top teams, which was very encouraging.

Wonderful to be in cahoots over these several days with Tell Münzing, who I worked for 9 years ways back at SustainAbility, and later a co-founder of Impact Solutions, our strategic partner based in Berlin. We had several meetings outside the remit of the conference, including a Rhine-side lunch with Jeffrey Sachs (who I knew passingly via our joint work the Nestlé CSV Council) and various people from his Sustainable Development Solutions Network (SDSN) and from companies, including Richard Northcote of Bayer MaterialScience.

Not quite sure why, but I left my camera behind several times, in taxis and similar places, but each time had them returned in the nick of time. Then the case went missing and failed to reappear, despite a judicious search. Happily, however, it was found and returned by Fiona Bywaters of the Global Policy Action Plan, part of the World Future Council, where she works with Jakob von Uexküll, someone I first met when a bunch of us were in the process of forming The Other Economic Summit (TOES).

The conference was a great opportunity to catch up with old friends like Bunker Roy of Barefoot College, Alejandro Litovsky of the Earth Security Group and Ed Gillespie of Futerra. And to meet new folk, including people like Su, and Guido Schmidt-Traube and Adolf Kloke-Lesch of SDSN. In addition, Tell and I had a wonderful session with Katharina Tomoff of Deutsche Post, high in their Bonn tower.

Then back to the Ristorante Forissimo, in Kurt-Schumacher-Strasse, for a coffee. We had had dinner there on the first evening with Birgit Klesper of Deutsche Telekom, where she is Senior Vice President for Transformational Change & Corporate Responsibility. (One of these days I must compile a list of all the job titles that have surfaced in this field over the years …)

I had been struck by the beauty of the horse chestnut that graces the Ristorante Forissimo garden. After the Deutsche Post session, Tell and I decided to turn our coffees into lunch – and had a very productive brainstorming session in the dappled sunlight.

The back to London, first leg on a very crowded ICE train to Frankfurt. The following day I went along in rain to the Aviva offices at One New Change, overlooking St Paul’s, for the first meeting of the Friends Life Stewardship Committee under its new Chair, now that Justin Welby, the Archbishop of Canterbury, has stood down: Julie McConnell. A time of change, which is always interesting.

Then back to 2 Bloomsbury Place to do conference calls with the likes of The B Team in the US, GlobeScan in Canada and Grupo Bimbo in Mexico.

Rain continued through the day, off and on. After a fairly intensive week, something in me longs to be alongside a river, watching the wildlife. So it was strange, as I walked back home past Barnes Pond, that my eye caught sight of a large dead carp floating in the water. It looked like the ghost of a carp, or perhaps a 3D-printed version of a carp.

In any event, we had been discussing only a few days before whether there were still large fish in the Pond? As I took the picture, waiting until the duck hove in view, I noticed at least one more large shape underwater, further out. This carp had not been alone.

Leverkusen and London Fields

John Elkington · 4 May 2015 · Leave a Comment

Simon Pemberton
Simon Pemberton
Elvis cut-outs, 1
Elvis cut-outs, 1
Dartboard
Dartboard
Angel's wings
Angel’s wings
More gold, more wings
More gold, more wings
Faces
Faces
Illustration
Illustration (zooming in)
Debris field
Debris field
Sample of Simon's student workbook
Sample of Simon’s student workbook
En route to Hania's
En route to Hania’s
Elvis lives again, in Hania's window
Elvis lives again, in Hania’s window
Carrots
Carrots
Fridge art
Fridge art

A furiously busy week, with several days in Leverkusen alongside Amanda (Feldman), with Bayer MaterialScience. Great meetings with their CEO, Patrick Thomas, and new CFO, Frank Lutz. They are going through an IPO and searching for a new name and branding, which has been proving challenging, though the ‘People, Planet & Profit’ proposition is likely to be central.

Fascinating couple of days, working with Stephan Koch and a small group of key BMS sustainability and related people. Then a frustrating flight back, with delayed flight, endless lines for passports at Heathrow and then almost a shutting down of the M4 into London, though my lanky, white-haired Indian driver, Lofty, managed to sneak around just before the road closed.

On Saturday, we went across to London Fields, to see Simon Pemberton, an artist whose work we have enjoyed in the Financial Times. We had bought a new print of his, which is titled, ‘Preparations for the Next Life,’ showing a couple in or by a river, at night, probably in New York. I love artist’s studios, so had a field day, prowling around. Then on to Hania’s, just around the corner, for a lovely lunch, following a visit to Broadway Market which is at the foot of her road.

Have been working much of the weekend, meanwhile, on The Breakthrough Forecast, which is due to publish (or launch, given that it’s designed to be a website) in a couple of weeks, alongside our dramatised Board meeting, The Stretch Agenda.

Today, Andrew Winston came to lunch – and I enjoyed it immensely. First met him when we were both members of an HP Advisory Board, then flagged his latest book, The Big Pivot, as my top sustainable business book of 2014 in a piece I did for strategy + business. Failed to get him on a bus back to town at Barnes Pond, because they only take TfL cards now. So drove him up across Hammersmith Bridge, in a car that refused to work yesterday, needing yet another new battery. I love the Volvo V70, which must be around 15 years old now, albeit with just 45,000 miles on the clock, but there’s a gremlin in it, somewhere.

Another highlight of the week was re-reading Lionel Davidson’s stunning novel, Kolymsky Heights, first published in 1994. I must have read it around that time, though it seems to me that it was much longer ago. One of those books that continues to suffuse your brain when you’ve finished. Not surprised to see that Philip Pulman, another of my favourite authors, considered it the best thriller he had read.

Next, Philip Kerr’s latest, The Lady from Zagreb. Love his Bernie Gunther novels: have read them all. rarely read novels a second time, but could imagine reading them all a second time round. Inescapably, some of that era in my mind while in Leverkusen this week.

World Green Economy Summit, take 2

John Elkington · 23 April 2015 · Leave a Comment

View from my bedroom window, including Burj Khalifa
View from my bedroom window, including Burj Khalifa
Dinner on Day 1
Dinner on Day 1
Snapshot from taxi window on way back to hotel
Snapshot from taxi window on way back to hotel
Burj Khalifa at speed through sunroof
Burj Khalifa at speed through sunroof
Ready for our first session
Ready for our first session
Take your seats
Take your seats
Eithne Treanor, André Schneider, Sten de Wit and me
Eithne Treanor, André Schneider, Sten de Wit and me
Sort of ditto
Sort of ditto
Our add-on ceremony continues ...
Our add-on ceremony continues …
And here's what they're shooting ...
And here’s what they’re shooting …
A slight end-of-term feeling
A slight end-of-term feeling

I flew in to Dubai a couple of days back for the second World Green Economy Summit, invited by André Schneder of World Capital – who I first met last year in Verbier.

André chaired the first session today, where I spoke alongside Raphaël Domjan, of Solar Planet, who I had first heard of when he sailed his solar vessel, PlanetSolar, around the world. Titled ‘Green Development Visionaries,’ this was a highly enjoyable session. It was followed by a panel discussion on south-south partnerships. again chaired by André. My co-panellists this time were Edem Bakhshish of the UN Office for South-South Cooperation, Amal-Lee Amin of E3G, Lars Josefsson who chairs the World Economic Forum Global Advisory Council on De-carbonizing Energy, and Martin Hiller of REEEP (Renewable Energy & Energy Efficiency Partnership).

Having coined the term ‘green growth’ back in 1986 (SustainAbility was originally tag-lined ‘The Green Growth Company’), and having published The Green Capitalists in 1987 (with Tom Burke, now part of E3G, as a co-author), I have been fascinated to see how the whole field has evolved. But it was truly weird to go up to the 68th floor in the J.W. Marriot hotel with Sten de Witt of TNO, to down a glass or two of Malbec, and in his case beer, and to then see ‘sustainability’ so prominently featured among the cocktails. Not really sure what to make of that …

Meanwhile, Huffington Post published my latest blog today on the B Corporation movement.

Cocktails with Purpose, with a dash of Sustainability, apparently
Cocktails with Purpose, with a dash of Sustainability, apparently
The sun sets, as seen from the Vault on the 68th floor
The sun sets, as seen from the Vault on the 68th floor

 

Defining Beauty

John Elkington · 14 April 2015 · Leave a Comment

Asian art, Asian fans
Asian art, Asian fans
Probably my favourite doming
Probably my favourite doming
6-ton Lion of Knidos
6-ton Lion of Knidos
Portico
Portico
One of my favourite local artworks, downstairs at Tea & Tattle
One of my favourite local artworks, downstairs at Tea & Tattle
On the windowsill at 2BP when I got back
On the windowsill at 2BP when I got back

Fascinating visit with Elaine to the British Museum to see the Defining Beauty exhibition. One of the most engaging I have seen there, with some of the carving totally mind-boggling in its sophistication. But, at the same time, a slight sense that the exhibits had rained in from the surface above. Nice to be able to do it both on a membership card and relatively late in the day, which meant that it wasn’t like viewing art objects from inside a can of sardines.

Futerrans, Another TEST and a Ghost Bike

John Elkington · 10 April 2015 · Leave a Comment

Bliss by Mount Pleasant
Bliss by Mount Pleasant
XXX
I do too, now and then: on a wall in Futerra offices
Shoes
Shoes: Natalya, Sam and Soli
Arriving at Imperial College for The Ecological Sequestration Trust session
Arriving at Imperial College for The Ecological Sequestration Trust session
Have always been an aerospace fan: inside Imperial College
Have always been an aerospace fan: inside Imperial College
Ghost bike around the corner from the Volans office
Ghost bike around the corner from the Volans office

Across with Sam to see Futerra near Mount Pleasant, where we had a wonderful session with Soli (Townsend) and Natalya (Sverjensky). Then back to imperial College, where I had a Trustees session with Peter Head and The Ecological Sequestration Trust (TEST). I seem to have come full circle, with my first proper job, from 1974 to 1978, having been with another TEST, John Roberts’ Transport & Environment Studies.

On the way back to Volans, I passed the new ghost bike nearby. Have been sorely conflicted since my last accident, incurred avoiding a Russian family in Oxford Street. My elbow is still giving me a fair amount of grief six months later, but I miss the experience of open-air London and the incidental exercise. Was also depressed to hear that my favourite bike shop in London, Holdsworth‘s in Putney, had closed some time back. But have a sense that I will get back into the fray at some point …

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

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