3p Contributor: Jim Witkin

My professional experience over the past 20 years has taken me from Madison Avenue to Silicon Valley in various marketing research, marketing, business development and sales roles. I now work as a freelance environmental writer and researcher while pursuing an MBA in Sustainable Management at the Presidio Graduate School. I'm especially interested in the use of technology to address the issues of education, equality, environment, health, and economic development. You can keep tabs on me at Triple Pundit and the NY Times Green Inc blog, email me at jameswitkin@gmail.com, or find me typing away at the various coffee shops around Palo Alto.

Recent Articles

E-waste Offsets: A Good Idea but How Effective?

| Monday August 17th, 2009 | 2 Comments

ewaste-neurtral In response to the ever-expanding challenge of electronic waste (e-waste), most developed countries have enacted legislation that mandates the responsible disposal and safe handling of discarded electronics within their own borders. (Thankfully, the US is catching up with the rest of the developed world, state by state.) But what happens to your old TV, computer or cell phone after you drop it off at your local “green” recycler?

Sadly, and according to the latest estimates from the EPA, much of the e-waste handled by “responsible” recyclers will eventually make its way to the third world, where anything of value is extracted in ways hazardous to humans and the planet.  The reverse supply chain, as the recycling waste stream is known, is long and opaque with materials moving from handler to handler with little oversight.

The recently launched Ewaste Foundation thinks they have a better approach, by offering E-waste Certificates, which are essentially offsets to pay for responsible handling of e-waste material that ends up in developing countries. When you purchase a certificate through their website, they will move a corresponding amount of e-waste from a developing country and send it back to the EU or move it to one of their certified recyclers in country.

Sounds like a good idea, but for me it raises many of the same issues inherent in other forms of offsets, namely: verification (how to verify that the downstream recycling partner meets standards), additionality (some e-waste is recycled responsibly and doesn’t need to be “offset”), and incentives (we should be working instead on reducing the amount of electronics that enter the waste stream).

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GIIRS: A Bridge at the Intersection of Meaning and Money

| Friday August 14th, 2009 | 2 Comments

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Last Day for 30% Discount for Triple Pundit Readers

“A bridge is about to open up in the market at the intersection of money and meaning that will make things easier and safer for people who want to make their investments consistent with their values,” according to Kevin Jones, lead convener of the upcoming Social Capital Markets (SOCAP09) conference in San Francisco.

The bridge he’s referring to is GIIRS (for Global Impact Investing Rating System), a new investor system built through the collaboration of leading foundations, social investment funds, rating agencies and consultants. The demand for solid social investment opportunities is growing rapidly among high net worth investors, family offices and institutional wealth managers. GIIRS is expected to address this pent-up demand by letting these new style investors compare and measure the kind of social and environmental impact they can expect from their investments and donations.

The GIIRS rating system will be explained in more detail on September 2 at the SOCAP09 conference. The system is ready and has been in trials for a while. In fact, some of these large institutional investments could be announced at SOCAP09.

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Big Room’s Vision for Dot Eco: Let the Consumer Decide Who Is Green

| Monday August 10th, 2009 | 8 Comments

dotecologoNext year, ICANN, the group that coordinates the Internet’s system of unique identifiers, will expand the list of top level domain (TLD) names. Anyone can apply, but only one deserving applicant will be awarded the registry rights for the .eco domain. Triple Pundit has provided much coverage lately (here and here) on the efforts of Dot Eco LLC, an LA-based group, endorsed by eco-luminaries like Al Gore, to win the registry rights. But Dot Eco LLC is not the only game in town.

Enter Big Room, a Canadian company, with a different vision on how to make the .eco domain relevant. They have already created the largest, global database of eco labeling information available on the web, and they plan to expand this capability through their Dot Eco initiative if they are awarded the registry rights. In their approach, companies that apply for the .eco domain name will be required to provide comprehensive eco-information about their operations. Big Room will build a system to make this information available to anyone who wants it. Their emphasis is on transparency and disclosure, not deciding who is green and who isn’t.

I recently spoke with Trevor Bowden, a Big Room co-founder, about their Dot Eco initiative, who explained, “We are not going to take the position that we can judge who is green, especially as standards are constantly changing.  We will let the consumer decide.”

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Facebook Useful? Who Knew?

| Thursday August 6th, 2009 | 2 Comments

Intel and Facebook Team to Tap Unused PC Processor Power

IntelHaving just finished the “Who Has the Biggest Brain” Facebook app (and scoring just ahead of a sixth grader), I found myself wondering if all this social networking really served any useful purpose.  Just then I came across an Intel Corporation press release describing Progress Thru Processors, a volunteer application Intel has built on the Facebook platform that allows people to donate their PCs’ unused processor power to non-profit research projects.

Faceboookers can contribute their excess computational resources to Rosetta@home, Climateprediction.net or Africa@home. Rosetta@home uses the additional computing power to help find cures for cancer, HIV and Alzheimer’s. Climateprediction.net focuses on increasing our understanding of global climate change by predicting the Earth’s climate and testing the accuracy of climate models. Africa@home looks for optimal strategies to combat malaria by studying simulation models of disease transmission and the potential impact of new anti-malarial drugs and vaccines.

Nice to see the Intel Corporation is continuing to find innovative ways to tap the power of microprocessors for good causes. It’s proof once again that providing a means to collect together lots of individual contributions can have a far-reaching impact. And partnering with Facebook allows them to reach a huge swath of individuals, who like me, may have been looking for something useful to do there.

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Ricoh Tree-Planting Program Offers CSR Cautions

| Monday August 3rd, 2009 | 0 Comments

ricohBy so many measures, Ricoh, the Japanese office equipment-maker, is a leader in Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR). You can spend several hours on the Ricoh website reading about their numerous CSR initiatives, their environmentally friendly products and processes, as well as the many awards they have won over the past 20 years. The company places corporate citizenship at the core of their mission and makes the effort to integrate these core values through every part of their business. Well done.

But good intentions don’t always make for good results. The UK website BusinessGreen.com is reporting on one Ricoh CSR program that has seemed to miss its mark, raising the questions:  how do you decide which CSR initiatives are most appropriate for your business, how do you monitor the programs, how do you measure their effectiveness, and are good intentions enough?

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Experiential Marketing: Greening A High Impact Industry

| Monday July 27th, 2009 | 2 Comments

ignition Reduces the Footprint of Live Events

cokeAs traditional forms of advertising decline, companies are continually looking for new ways to connect with consumers. Many are turning to live events, known also as experiential marketing, as a way to bring their brands to life. Today’s experiential events have evolved from the days of flashy PR stunts to become designed emotive experiences intended to create a lasting emotional connection between a brand and its target market. All the research suggests these designed experiences are working. Good news for the brand; bad news for the planet. These events can also be huge energy hogs and environmental disasters as far as footprint (think NASCAR).

Thankfully, many brands that are concerned about their footprint are also demanding strict green guidelines for their live events, but it’s the job of experiential marketing firms like ignition to make sure these guidelines get implemented. The Atlanta-based ignition has worked with some big sponsors and events like: Live Earth, Coke, Delta Airlines, Nokia, Earthlink, the FIFA World Cup Trophy Tour, and the Olympic Torch Relay to name a few. The company incorporates varied conservation and offsetting practices across all of their campaigns, and they’re currently developing the first environmental standards for their industry.

I connected with ignition at the Sustainable Brands 09 conference, and later followed up with Mike Hersom, President, to learn more about the company and their efforts to develop green standards for the experiential marketing sector.

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PC Disruption: Virtual Desktops Provide Low Cost Computing

| Tuesday July 21st, 2009 | 2 Comments

SOCAP09 Sponsor nComputing Taps Unused Computer Resources
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Making better use of existing resources is one of the canons of Sustainability. And one of the greatest untapped resources happens to be sitting on your desk. A typical PC running standard office applications like email, word processing and web browsing uses less than 5% of it’s processing power, which means 95% of this resource is wasted.
SOCAP09 sponsor nComputing is harnessing this vast, untapped resource. The Silicon Valley-based company has developed a unique software solution based on virtualization technology that creates virtual independent desktops inside one Windows or Linux PC allowing a single PC to be shared by many users.
The nComputing solution can reduce computer deployment costs up to 75%, not to mention the huge savings in energy costs, and is attracting attention from businesses all over the world. But perhaps the most important beneficiaries of this disruptive technology are schools, non-profits and developing economies that can now obtain low cost computing solutions that were previously out of reach.

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Book Review: Andrew Winston’s Green Recovery

| Monday July 20th, 2009 | 0 Comments

Get Lean, Get Smart, and Emerge from the Downturn on Top
green recovery“Hunker down and play it safe” seems to be the mantra of many recession-battered companies, as they cut back on people, payrolls and purchases of non-essentials. Unfortunately, many of the green programs that may have gotten funded in good times are now finding themselves in this “non-essential” category. That’s exactly the wrong approach, argues Andrew Winston, the green business evangelist, in his new book Green Recovery, a follow-up to his 2006 Green to Gold.
In Green Recovery, Winston offers a compelling case for why the recession is the perfect time to use a green strategy to get lean, get smart and innovate your way forward. With success stories from industry leaders as examples – companies like Boeing, Disney, DuPont, Microsoft, Procter & Gamble, Toyota, and Wal-Mart – the book offers a four-point roadmap for using green initiatives to drive business performance during the downturn:

· Get lean: generate immediate bottom-line savings by reducing energy use and waste.
* Get smart: use value-chain data to cut costs, reduce risks, and focus innovation efforts.
* Get creative: pose heretical questions that force you to find solutions to tomorrow’s challenges today.
* Get engaged: give employees ownership of environmental goals and the tools to act on them.
I recently had a chance to speak with Andrew Winston about his work and his latest book.

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SOCAP09: Towards Triple Impact – Sustainable Ventures in Developing Countries

| Tuesday July 7th, 2009 | 0 Comments

The UNDP’s Growing Inclusive Markets Initiative Seeks to Build Viable Markets, Alleviate Poverty and Protect the Environment
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“About 2.6 billion people in the world living on less than $2 a day are trapped outside of the global economy, looking in with minimal access to formal markets,” according to the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP). Living on the margins deprives the poor of opportunities, while discouraging many companies from offering the basic goods and services – things like consumer products, banking and telecommunications – that would empower the poor and improve their lives.
Among the world’s poor, there is no lack of human resources – minds and muscles – to build successful markets, and certainly no shortage of demand for goods and services. What’s missing in many cases are basic market mechanisms. Market components like financial services, physical infrastructure, government policy and regulation, and market information are the basic building blocks that make markets work.
Building viable markets that include the poor as consumers, producers and employees is the focus of the UNDP’s Private Sector Division, and specifically their Growing Inclusive Markets (GIM) initiative. GIM serves as a platform to engage all the actors in the process of building more inclusive business models. It gathers relevant information, highlights good examples through case study research, develops practical operational strategies and creates space for dialogue.
At the upcoming Social Capital Markets conference (SOCAP09), GIM Programme Manager, Sahba Sobhani, will lead a panel discussion to highlight successful triple bottom line entrepreneurs from developing markets. I recently had the opportunity to sit down with Sahba Sobhani at the UNDP offices in New York to discuss the GIM initiative and their involvement with SOCAP09.

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SOCAP09: Obama’s Office of Social Innovation to Deliver Key Note

| Friday July 3rd, 2009 | 0 Comments

Early Registration (and 40% Discount) Ends July 8th
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This year’s SOCAP09 conference will offer three days (September 1-3) of rich content, over 100 speakers, and a special “unconference” day. In its second year, the Social Capital Markets conference brings together the broad ecosystem of capital (funds, foundations and individual investors) with for-profit and non-profit entrepreneurs using business to make a positive difference. And if you register before July 8th, you’ll receive a 40% discount from the full conference price. Use the code WEB40 to receive your special discount.

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