Club of Amsterdam Journal, March 2021, Issue 230 CONTENT Lead Article Why the EU’s proposed carbon border levy is an important test for global action on climate change By Neil Kellard Article 01 The Triple-Challenge of Feeding the World By Patrick Crehan The Future Now Show Food Strategies with Christophe Pelletier Article 02 Solve Fake News with Digital Identity By Niels van den Bergh News about the Future > Osmotex Steriliser > Aerogel that turns air into drinking water Article 03 Chronicle from the Future By Rosana Agudo Recommended Book The Grand Biocentric Design: How Life Creates Reality By Robert Lanza, Matej Pavsic and Bob Berman Article 04 Tim Berners-Lee’s plan to save the internet: give us back control of our data By Pieter Verdegem Climate Change Success Story District Heating and Cooling in Greater Copenhagen Futurist Portrait Rom Krupp Technology Futurist, Speaker & Entrepreneur Club of Amsterdam Search Submit your article Contact Subscribe
Content Q&A with Frank Lekanne Deprez About the future of Education & Learning News about the Future Report about ‘the future of the European Knowledge Society Center for the Minds Recommended Book Round Table: Jelle Feringa Upcoming Events Club of Amsterdam SearchSubmit your articleContactSubscribe Q&A with Frank Lekanne Deprez Frank Lekanne Deprez, Director, ZeroSpace Advies Club of Amsterdam: In your practice you combine working at a university with working as a consultant. If you look 10-15 years ahead, how should universities change to meet the demand of business?Frank Lekanne Deprez: Learning in the agricultural economy focused on children between 7 and 14 years of age. Churches and other institutions were the ‘owners’ of the educational process. The amount and type of education was sufficient to last all the years of a working life. During the industrial economy, education was government led, and the age range of the formal student population was between 5 and 22. In the knowledge economy, education / training / learning is almost ubiquitous for all people at all ages. It’s about life broad learning, which refers to “the attitude that learning should not comprise a narrow sector of life, but rather life to its fullest extent” (Larsson, 2000). A job for life is replaced by ‘a life full of jobs”! Universities in the Knowledge Economy will be doing what they are designed to do: support life broad learning! Looking 10 -15 years ahead, people will probably have Personal Learning Accounts and Learning Portfolio’s. People decide where to go for their formal and non-formal learning challenges and experiences. Do they need just-in-time learning (on-line learning)? The challenge for the universities is to support the knowledge worker – anytime, anyway, anywhere – in his/her cycle of formal and non-formal learning requirements. Education & learning are prerequisites for a good functioning knowledge economy. What should in particular Small and Medium-sized Enterprises (SME’s : 20 – 250 people ) do to stay competitive in a knowledge economy?Frank Lekanne Deprez: Small companies have to increase their learning power to stay alive and kicking. In these type of companies you are either working or you are out of the ‘loop’, taking a course. Today people say, ‘I’m working’, and what they are doing is quickly answering e-mails and voicemails. In SME’s learning must become just that – ‘I’m working’. Formal learning (education) and non-formal learning (work, leisure time) experiences have to be considered as two sides of the same coin. SME’s often fail to integrate new information and knowledge into their ‘memory system’. Their absorptive capacity – the ability to recognize the value of new external knowledge, assimilate it, and apply it to commercial ends – is low. Currently government controls most educational institutions in Europe. Should government control continue or should education be left to market forces?Frank Lekanne Deprez: Formal education will be government – driven (investment in human capital). Non-formal education (workplace/daily life) will increasingly be market – driven (investment in intellectual capital). Once attention is focused on workplace learning and leisure time learning as an important source of knowledge and experience that will drive the innovative capabilities and growth potential of companies, both government and the market place become part of a shared learning community using their resources for common advantage. Frank Lekanne Deprez speaks at our Club of Amsterdam Event aboutthe future of Education & Learning on Wednesday, February 18, 18:30-22:15! About the future of Education & Learning Incubating ‘Real Time Learning’by Tom Bentley, Demos, Matthew Horne, Demos & NCSLReal time learning aims to be a knowledge generating and knowledge sharing set of processes and relationships which can help to meet the context-specific needs of practitioners working in school to school networks and the wider needs of a larger scale national programme aiming to improve attainment outcomes, meet some of the objectives of an ambitious national reform programme, and help to provide policy-makers with lessons about what constitutes effective, capacity-building intervention. The conceptual framework has been built on a synthesis of the principles of collaborative practitioner enquiry, action research and emergent forms of ‘knowledge management’. It is not designed to meet the conventional requirements of large scale academic research, but to be complementary to, and to draw on, the forms of knowledge which such research generates. Making a European Area of Lifelong Learning a Realityby EC, Directorate-General for Education and CultureThe Feira European Council in June 2000 asked the Member States, the Council and the Commission, within their areas of competence, to “identify coherent strategies and practical measures with a view to fostering lifelong learning for all”. This mandate confirms lifelong learning as a key element of the strategy, devised at Lisbon, to make Europe the most competitive and dynamic knowledge-based society in the world. News about the Future IBM Text-to-Speech Research“Text-to-speech (TTS) is the generation of synthesized speech from text. Our goal is to make sythesized speech as intelligible, natural and pleasant to listen to as human speech and have it communicate just as meaningfully. We have developed a novel TTS system, built on IBM’s work in data-driven methodologies for speech recognition. Unlike many others, our system obtains its parameters through completely automated training on a few hours of speech data, which is acquired by recording a specially prepared script. During synthesis very small segments of recorded human speech are concatenated together to produce the synthesized speech.” ENERGY Smithsonian Environmental Research Center (SERC)SERC is dedicated to increasing knowledge of the biological and physical processes that sustain life on earth. SERC’s interdisciplinary research applies long-term studies to examine the ecological questions about landscapes of linked ecosystems, especially those impacted by human activities. SERC scientists use an experimental approach to discover mechanisms regulating the structure and dynamics of the environment. Several studies focus on the effects of increasing concentrations of atmospheric carbon dioxide (CO2) caused by fossil fuel combustion and forest clearing. Increased CO2 contributes to the “greenhouse effect,” the trapping of heat in the atmosphere. Global warming causes increases in sea level and changes in weather patterns. This threatens destruction of coastal areas, alteration of natural ecosystems, and widespread disruption of agriculture. Report about ‘the future of the European Knowledge Society’ Report: the future of the European Knowledge Society The Club of Amsterdam organised a conference about ‘the future of the European Knowledge Society’ on January 28, 2004. This report will give you a brief summary of the topics and the discussion between the panel and the participants of the Club of Amsterdam. The participants of the event filled out a questionnaire; you can find the results in the report. Centre for the Mind Paul Scherrer Institute – PSI General Energy Research Department (ENE)Research at PSI comprises all aspects of human energy use, with the ultimate goal of promoting development towards a sustainable energy supply system. Technologies are being advanced for the utilization of renewable energy sources, low-loss energy storage, efficient conversion, and low emission energy use. Experimental and model-based assessment of these emissions forms the basis of a comprehensive assessment of economic, ecological and environmental consequences, for both present and future energy supply systems. Electrochemistry Laboratory (ECL)The Electrochemistry Laboratory is part of the General Energy Research Department at the Paul Scherrer Institute. It is dedicated to modern aspects of electrochemical energy storage and conversion. Micro- and Nanostructuring Technology: Nano Imprint LithographyNano Imprint Lithography (Hot Embossing Lithography) is a novel technique for the fabrication of nanostructures on large surfaces. The method is based on the excellent replication fidelity obtained with polymers and combines thermo-plastic molding with common pattern transfer methods. Once a solid stamp with a nanorelief on the surface is fabricated it can be used for the replication of many identical surface patterns. It therefore circumvents many limitations of conventional optical lithography. Center for Radiopharmaceutical ScienceOur VisionTo create smart radioactive drugs – radiodiagnostics/therapeutics to target metastatic diseasesTo visualize molecular functions of brain and tumors with PET-radioligands Laboratory for AstrophysicsOur Laboratory is involved in experimental, observational, and theoretical astrophysics, in the building of space harware components, as well as in the development of cryogenic detectors. Major projects developed or being developed include contributions to the XMM-Newton, Hessi, Integral, GWST-MIRI space observatories. Recommended Book Innovation, Competence Building and Social Cohesion in Europe: Towards a Learning Societyby Pedro Conceicao (Editor), Manuel V. Heitor (Editor), Bengt-Ake Lundvall (Editor) It is almost universally accepted that we are moving increasingly towards an information society, where knowledge and learning are the new currency of power. This book seeks to challenge this axiom by looking in more detail at the subtle relationships between knowledge and social development. The editors are at pains to differentiate the process of knowledge creation from the simple accumulation of knowledge. The original contributions within this book are aimed at capturing new socio-economic trends and finding policy strategies promoting the learning society in Europe through joint efforts and integrated actions on innovation, competence building and social cohesion. Innovation, Competence Building and Social Cohesion in Europe will be of special interest to researchers and scholars of science and innovation and technical change. Its policy recommendations will ensure that the book will also appeal to social scientists of education policy. Supporter of the Club of Amsterdam event about ‘the future of Education & Learning’ on Wednesday, February 18, 2004 is: The Club of Amsterdam Round Table: Jelle Feringa Jelle Feringa, EZCT, a network dedicated to critical research Other than globalization another radical societal phenomena is occurring, having equally radically implications on life; the phantomisation of society. Invariably we deal with phantom-systems; those however abstract have radical implications on daily life. Economy by no doubt is the greatest, most implying of these systems. How global and grotesque this system is, its influence resonates in each of our lives. A phantom aspect is that when the economy is slow (what is that ‘is slow?’), the cause is most likely far from our empirical perception. By phantom-system I don’t aim for those systems that are incomprehensible, but those that fall out of empirical reach. When someone’s credit card is duplicated on the other end of the world, and the account cleaned out, you’re likely to receive another form of empathy, than if you would have been robbed from your physical money. If your library goes up in flames, or if your record collection is stolen, people are much more likely to sympathize with you than when your hard drive cracks up. The greater part of the infrastructure facilitating these phantom-systems is never disclosed to most persons: from telephony servers to internet backbones, the servers running banks & stock exchanges up to the source code of the system running most home-computers (until this week that is… [click here]) Perhaps the most important societal phantomisation is the lack of causation in the profession one performs, and the reason one survives, nearly a lack of primitivism one might argue. The abstraction allowing this is at the instigation of economy. I wonder if this implies for a cultural norm: does it imply a certain superiority over there where a relation between action and survival can be deduced. Club of Amsterdam Events 2003/2004 October 28, 2003 the future of Food & Biotech November 27, 2003 the future of the Media & Entertainment Industry January 28, 2004 the future of the European Knowledge Society February 18, 2004 the future of Education & Learning March 31, 2004 the future of Energy – the Hydrogen Economy? April 28, 2004 the future of Healthcare & Technology May 19, 2004 the future of Architecture June 23, 2004 the future of Culture & Religion
Christophe PelletierThe Food FuturistCanada We must produce better and smarter. The same is true for consumption. We can’t succeed the future if we don’t all contribute to improvements.Over-consumption is the forgotten food waste. It doesn’t end in garbage, but in fat. In rich countries, food consumption is twice the actual nutrition needs. This means a waste of 50%.Sustainability is at least as much about morals and behaviour as it is about technology. We need to shift thinking from always more to always enough. – Christophe Pelletier Keywords: Climate Change / USA – Europe / Consumption / Education / Innovation / Global Situation – Example India Credits Christophe Pelletierhttps://hfgfoodfuturist.com The Future Now Showhttps://clubofamsterdam.com/the-future-now-show/
by Rosana Agudo. Vision & Life Coach In the year 2020, “The Year of the Great Pause”, human beings, in search of Unity in Diversity as the main global aspiration, found that the planetary crisis, the COVID 19 virus, not only affected human beings without distinction of race, gender, social class… but also made us aware that it was a virus that affected the HUMAN BEING, not as a plural concept, but as the unity we represent, as the species that represents the mind, the thought on the planet, the HUMAN archetype. That of which the great Masters speak to us, “The Only Son of God”, “The One”, “The Buddha” ……. That year, we discovered that we represent the One, who we are, because we are not really separated. We understood that everything the Human Being had created is the representation of what it is, the step-by-step narration of its existence, the need to tear away the veil of ignorance and fear and to discover what we are and what we represent in the world of the reality we live. Our cells remembered their immortality and ceased the insanity of destroying their host, the body of the human being, instead they began spreading their discovery of light and the mutation of the human began to become conscious. We realized that if we were able to understand, retrospectively, our evolution as a species, if we had become aware of this, and had accepted it as a reality, we were at the historical point where it was important to help our evolution in a voluntary way, it was the great Adventure of Our Time, and we were going to participate. In the year 2020, “The Year of the Great Pause”, the Human Being became aware that the global crisis was due to a great planetary evolutionary crisis, led by the thinking species. The entire planet was preparing to offer the necessary resources to that species and a critical mass of humans was able to see and understood that the contagion not only served in terms of disease, but was also necessary for the transmission of confidence and certainty. Great pressure on the different forms of human unity, on the means of production, agriculture, energy… spread and created great confusion; these were the years of “post-truth” due to the great differences among social classes and fear of the future, of the new. Little by little, the binary dimension of our mind opened up and diversity stopped being a theoretical concept of the binary, contradictory and dual thinking mind. The disruptive went viral and gave way to a great surge of creativity and made the species support each other and understand themselves as responsible partners in a new form of planetary association. Diet was one of the first changes experienced. The body of the more evolved Human Being could no longer digest certain foods, depending on which, and especially those of animal origin. Non-exploitation began to include not only fellow human beings but also other evolving species; collaboration was the key. On the other hand, Democracy, having regressed towards “Democracism”, took a step forward and diverse national confederations began to be established. Nationalisms ended and Unity in Diversity emerged. The Ideals of Liberty, Equality and Fraternity finally acquired their broadest and deepest spiritual dimension. A new Human organization, more in line with the aspiration of a more evolved being, was gradually installed. In short, these were very difficult and complex times for understanding and implementing, mainly because the mind we were accustomed to for working, thinking and therefore building our reality, no longer served us, we could only make versions of the known, versions that quickly became useless vanished like sand between the fingers. Only the certainty of our Unity as cells of the great ONE, the Human Being, the Only Begotten, helped us to move forward, with iron will. The seed of our continuity in life without limit, as creators in time and space, in this body made of time, like everything created, everything we can comprehend and understand, that seed was already buried in fertile soil and brought forth wonderful human beings. These, equipped with Strength, Clarity and Beauty, were pioneers, great sculptors of reality, gave unexpected, multidimensional forms to all matter. They created the symphony of the World in which all species had their own score and we played together, at first a little distorted, but then in a majestic way. We, the children of those pioneers, little by little we were building the societies of Unified Consciousness once we were acquiring consciousness of our temporal matter in its form, but knowing that our primordial substance, pure consciousness vibrating, is eternal, infinite, multi-diverse, all vibration …… All this came in that Year of the Great Pause, and for those who heard, the Great Adventure of Our Time began, it began to come true. Time became Art, because we understood that this, our body is made of Time, and Consciousness. rosanaagudo@gmail.com Rosana Agudo. © Mayo 2020
with Ferananda Ibarra DDOs move organizations from business as usual to a rethinking of the very place of people’s development in organizational life. What if a company did everything in their power for people to overcome their internal barriers to change? to transcend their blindspots and see errors as opportunities as personal growth? Welcome to the world of Deliberately Developmental Organizations (DDOs). Credits Ferananda IbarraChief-Harmony Officer, Unified Field Corporation for the brand JustOne OrganicsMaui, Hawaii You find more by Ferananda here Felix B Boppfounder & former chairman, Club of AmsterdamProducer of The Future Now Show
7 JUNE 2018 – OLUMIDE – RESEARCH DEVELOPMENT Written by Dr Peter Cochrane. “Anti-intellectualism has been a constant thread winding its way through our political and cultural life, nurtured by the false notion that democracy means that ‘my ignorance is just as good as your knowledge.” For most people it is hard to think of truth as a dynamic property and they naturally seek absolutes as reassurances of their particular belief system, political or other persuasions. This contrasts strongly with science and the scientific method where we continually test and probe our ‘expensively’ established truths to make sure they remain accurate and pertinent. One example is our planet: which has variously been considered to be flat and round before we proved it spheroidal; only to later discover it an oblate sphere, and more recently a dynamic oblate sphere. How come? It is entirely down to the accuracy and sensitivity of our instrumentation and their platforms of observation. History tells us that every society has advanced or collapsed by its ability to establish and maintain vital and applicable truths. As far as we aware; our modern world is pre-eminent in systematically establishing a strong web of related truths binding governmental, legal, economic, commercial and scientific systems. Here the value of continual cross-checking and calibration is axiomatic and beyond dispute, but is all now under significant threat. “Today: porn starts tell the truth and presidents lie “ Only three decades truth was a necessary quality at all levels of society. Indeed, we stored and curated these vital components in our libraries, publications and news media. Fact checking and information cross-checking was seen as a must at every level. But the strength and value of all our achievements in this regard are being questioned and attacked. Proven facts, knowledge, wisdom and expertise are now readily derided by those predisposed to conspiracy theories and the lies of others. The Flat Earth Society is back supporting its views with pseudo science, distortions, lies and ignorance on a grand scale. Apparently global warming is a political conspiracy and the moon landings were staged on a movie set, and there is data and photographic evidence to prove it all. And this is just the start of a very long list of ignorances challenging very expensive and hard won knowledge, and being championed by the poorly educated and politically/religiously motivated. Surprisingly, a large swathe of humanity appears to be prepared to listen, follow and support. Sadly, the internet and social networks have given everyone a voice and a means of publicity in the worst possible way. The scale of this has rendered the establishing any truth no longer easy or straightforward, and in some cases it is tending toward the impossible! For sure people cannot solve this problem, and for many, perpetuating it is to their advantage, but there looks to be a technology solutions based upon ‘Truth Engines’ that might test every political statement as it is made whilst purging the internet of all falsehoods and misconceptions. This they could do relentlessly 24x7x365 like an information vacuum cleaner that preserves the correct and destroys the rest! Most of the components to realise such a mechanism exist along with many of the necessary conceptual technologies and techniques. The principle progression follows the following path in the context of news reports: 1) A plagiarism checker searches through the 100 and 1000s of posted reports, articles and blogs on a specific topic to identify the primary sources. 2) The likely veracity and error bounds for each original source can then be established by looking back over decades (if necessary/available) of previous reports to characterise the progression from initial to final report over a given time. 3) So a source might report a terrorist incident with hundreds injured and dead identifying a known group which might become more accurate with time as the official numbers are established. Even later the actual terrorist group may be identified or they may identify themselves. By aggregating such reports from many events we can establish long term statistical trends as to the accuracy with time. 4) By repeating (1-3) many thousands of time all the key news sources and media outlets can be allocated a truth weighting factor in a mathematical descriptor of the whole field. 5) This same process (1-4) can be repeated for all organisations and individuals on a vast scale as it can be automated to track down and identify falsehoods and lies by source. Beyond this basic engine there are many refinements possible including inference correlations and fact projection analysis to identify the many strains, paths and filament connecting truths, untruths, lies and conjectures. Not every lie may be deliberate, it may be derived from carelessness, naivety and a lack of fact and veracity checking. Like the law, we have to presume innocent unless proven guilty, and one error does not prove consistency, and so we too have to cross-check…automatically of course!
By Tom Bosschaert, Director, Except Integrated Sustainability Jan 27, 2014 The land we grow our food on, water that flows through it, animals and plants living in this environment, and the oceans – the birthplace of life. This, and more, is our natural capital; the value represented by our ecosystems, species, and everything in between that we rely on to persist on this planet. All of our natural systems are declining fast, and this threatens our future. It puts at risk the continuation of any business with a complex supply chain, and jeopardizes the resource availability of any nation. The Natural Capital (NC) movement attempts to halt and reverse this trend by embedding the value of natural systems into economic systems. This article talks about how Natural Capital works, what the pitfalls and opportunities of such a system are, and how we can accelerate implementation in government and business. While there is debate about NC as a concept, it is one of the few answers we have. Organizations around the world are moving to implement it because of rapidly increasing ecological destruction. But there is much to be done, and progress is slow. There are opportunities to accelerate and improve Natural Capital based on innovative systems solutions for business and policy alike. Solutions that not only conserve nature but puts the front runners of NC in a position of significant advantage, both in business and policy. Why Natural Capital? The concept of Natural Capital has been around for more than a century and is not without controversy. Debate about its ethical foundations has been going on for decades, raising ethical questions without clear answers, but the global decline of nature pressures us for action. Nature currently has limited economic value, causing it to be regularly sacrificed. This ‘tragedy of the commons‘ plagues conservation efforts and the debate has delayed solutions resulting in preventable losses. At the 2013 World Forum on Natural Capital in Edinburgh, organized by the Scottish Wildlife Trust, most policy and business representatives agreed it’s time to take action, putting the ethical discussion to the background. Barry Gardiner, UK shadow minister for the environment, said it most poignantly: “We use nature because it gives us value, and we destroy it because it’s free. Nature should be given the rightful value it deserves, it’s the only real way we can safeguard our natural resources for the future.” Because NC is one of the few tools that allows direct action to be taken, the message is to implement it as fast as we can. How can we do this? The challenge can be summarized as follows; what mechanisms can we use to make natural capital work, how to value nature in all its facets, and how to create an advantage for policy and business for rapid implementation. What mechanisms make Natural Capital work? The solution supported by the largest NGO’s introduces national NC profit and loss balance sheets in each country and company, and tracks this balance as is done with finance. These balance sheets express Natural Capital both in terms of quantity and quality of resources (amounts of forests, water, biodiversity, etc), and, where possible, as currency. For every asset that disappears from the balance sheet, something else needs to be brought back. This functions to increase awareness and transparency about the state of our natural resources, and improves their management. When successful, Natural Capital Accounting (NCA) injects a balancing system for our planet’s physical limits to growth into an economy currently aimed at capitalizing on limitless growth. Implementing Natural Capital is not without risk, as demonstrated by the carbon credit scheme that often creates perverse incentives, shifting damage from one place to another due to incomplete valuation. To prevent this, NCA needs to take into account the full spectrum of value we recognise today, and leave room for values that appear in the future. Values that cannot be expressed in a monetary equivalent need to appear on the balance sheets in their qualitative form. It will not be possible to account for all value, but this should not hold us back. As Professor Dieter Helm explained at the forum in Edinburgh: “We do not need to be entirely correct in our assessment of Natural Capital. Even if we’re only 80% or even 50% in the ballpark, that’s at least better than the value of zero we have currently. We need to act, now, to prevent further losses to an already marginalized system, regardless of not being able to accurately value Natural Capital.” How do we value nature? This is undoubtedly the greatest challenge of Natural Capital as a concept. What value does a tree have? Ask a hundred scientists and economists and you will get a hundred different answers. In order for NC to work, we need to agree on a basis of valuation. A tree is worth more than just the price of its wood, as it provides a home to many animals, it acts as shade in summer, it buffers and filters rainwater, it cleans the air, and it also supplies a number of other ecosystem services. It may also be valuable in other terms, for example culturally, and for its role in the ecosystem as a whole. Therefore, the value of a tree in its entirety isn’t the same as the price for its wood in the store, and can be expressed in a different manner, for example in liters of water buffered and filtered, its contribution to biodiversity and well being, and so on. Quite a few studies have attempted to account for some of these values and converted them into currency. Research conducted by Johnson and Wardle gave the Canadian Boreal forest a value of US$ 3.7 trillion for all of its ecosystem services and carbon sequestration. Another study from 1997 by Costanza et. al put a pricetag of US$ 33 trillion on the world’s biosphere’s ecosystem services. These and other studies give starting points for value estimation, while there are certainly large gaps to cover. To find and fill these gaps, a more inclusive framework to assess value is necessary. SiD as a structure for value The Symbiosis in Development (SiD) systems analysis framework is such a tool. It can be used to assess the full spectrum of value for any given subject, including the relational values of the system as a whole. Its flexible structure allows room for future discovery while providing clarity to start valuing with limited insight today. Using SiD the value of the tree can be seen on three ‘scales’: the object (direct physical) value, the value of its network (services and relations), and its systemic value as a whole. The first being the easiest to assess, and the last the hardest but having the most impact. Combining these three scales results in a estimation of the tree’s Natural Capital value. This diagram is a simplified example of the structure of SiD’s value assessment when applied to a tree. Using SiD, there are opportunities for other values to join the party, such as transparency, diversity, health, and wellbeing. SiD reserves room for these values, allowing them to be slotted in once research makes them available. Because it is a universal framework, it works for other measurements as well, allowing it to be inclusive of other movements such as social justice or poverty alleviation and stand stronger together. This flexibility prevents the system becoming solidified once adopted, preventing perverse incentives that occur when real value and value in the system are dissonant (an issue that plagues carbon trading). Tracking the flexibility of the Natural Capital system is therefore essential. Giving Natural Capital teeth There are frameworks for valuation, which can be filled in using existing research. Then incentives are needed for organizations to implement them. Using systemic innovation strategies, the most effective approaches can be explored. As a trial, a small interdisciplinary team at Except, a sustainability strategy firm, held a short systems exploration session and came up with a few approaches. It was discovered that effective solutions are those that make Natural Capital a base economic requirement for growth, rooting it into the core of the economy. One approach is to create a secondary currency backed by Natural Capital rather than gold. This means Natural Capital is not expressed in Dollars, Euros or Yen, but in its own currency, for example called the GreenBack. This currency is purely digital, relying on similar technology as BitCoin, and coupled to the balance sheets of nations, capturing both qualitative and quantitative values in separate indicators. When demand for this GreenBack goes up, a direct increase in demand for Natural Capital results. This creates a natural marketplace where the only way to grow wealth is to grow Natural Capital. This currency thus couples economic growth to its necessary precursor: the resources our planet needs to sustain economic growth. Solutions like these accelerate the implementation of Natural Capital, but both business and government have their own challenges. What are the opportunities for countries and companies to implement NC? Opportunities to accelerate NCA in policy “In 50 years’ time we will look back and say that our governments were economically illiterate. They simply did not understand the true value of the most important service providers on our planet. We will marvel that they failed to capture and make explicit the value of Natural Capital and ecosystem services in their national accounts.” – Barry Gardiner, MP Several projects researching the role of NC in policy are underway, for example TEEB, a global research project through the European Union. But progress is slow, hampered by lack of oversight, tools for valuation, accessible knowledge databases, and stakeholder awareness. These challenges can be more effectively solved with innovative systems-thinking than traditional approaches, saving resources and time. And time is of the essence here. One way to speed up the process is to apply distributed innovation mechanisms, such as crowd-solutioning and serious gaming. These approaches have managed to resolve in weeks highly complex problems such as unraveling the secrets of protein folding, which previously took teams of scientists many years. If strategies such as these were to be applied to the issues that hold back Natural Capital, solutions could be implemented at a much faster rate, and Natural Capital Accounting could be in place in many countries within the next decade. But, Natural Capital can only be effective if it’s adopted voluntarily by both government and business. Enforcement takes too long and the stick causes loopholes, while the carrot accelerates the process. Why would a profit driven company be interested to implement and invest in Natural Capital? Advantages of embedding NCA in business At first sight, business may not seem to have an interest in Natural Capital or Natural Capital Accounting, as it does not directly lead to profit. But there are several reasons why this is not only advantageous, but critical to the survival of business today and tomorrow. In complex supply chains, change comes quickly and strikes hard. Most companies rely on one or more natural resources somewhere in their supply chain, yet may not be aware of where and how. Tracking NC is essential to ensure continued business in the short and long term. If a sizeable business is not tracking this, it is not conducting proper risk management. In addition, business can use NC to find valuable ecosystems services while improving CSR performance at the same time. For example, companies have found bio-based alternatives to artificial or fossil resources that save money and provide long term sourcing security. It is also good for businesses to be ahead of the curve when it comes to issues that governments will eventually demand. Waiting to be forced into something through regulation risks costly solutions being enforced. Also, being one of the first to start NC accounting has its perks. It allows an organization to shape the conversation, be more opportunistic with investments, and get public recognition for leading the good fight. This has been shown by Puma, which started publishing the first Environmental Profit & Loss Account (EPLA) under direction of their holding company Kering, and already tracked 145 million in environmental impacts in 2010. This resulted in positive press globally, several companies following suit, and creating a catch-up game for everyone else. Lastly, insurance companies are becoming interested in Natural Capital Accounting. After all, threats to resources that a company relies on are threats to the company, and insurance will go up or become unavailable. And it is not just insurance firms. Standards & Poor’s, one of the Big-Three credit rating firms, is investigating Natural Capital Accounting as a new input for the same reasons, directly affecting a company’s credit rating. That should be reason enough for the big players out there to start moving. Making it happen There are many reasons to start implementing NC as fast as possible. A structured and systemic approach is critical to make it succeed. This is why solutions like SiD exist. We call on the front runners of NC to aim higher and gain the advantage of using innovative systems tools and implementation strategies, such as natural currencies, crowd-solutioning and systemic risk assessment. The front runners in policy, business, and NGOs should be brought together to collectively accelerate the process and support each other. It is in our joint interest to do so. We have the tools, expertise, and manpower to do this, so let’s make Natural Capital accounting a reality within a few years, and gain huge benefits for each organization and society alike. Media & Downloads Systemic value of a tree
with Harish Shah Harish Shah talks about X Reality – immersive technologies that can merge the physical and virtual worlds. By 2022, the XR market is expected to reach $209 billion, which is eight times what it is today. This tremendous growth could mean the realities of our 2030 lives are beyond our imagination’s ability to grasp. (Forbes) Credits Harish Shah, SingaporeStratserv Consultancy http://www.stratservconsultancy.com