Green
Illustration: Eparama Tuibenau

Shades of Green

Managing Your Triple Green Bottom Line

With more and more companies and individuals pursuing green solutions in order to “save the world”, the question arises: How green are we?

METI's recent decision to treat biofuels as a source of greenhouse gases and require oil companies to cut emissions reveals that there is a gap between the Kyoto Protocol’s “definition of green” (where bioethanol and other biofuels are treated as zero-emission fuels) and our current reality where producing and transporting account for a considerable and increasing amount of emissions.

Therefore, a new trend is emerging in the business world--the triple green: Green energy, green recycling(nothing new here) and now green manufacturing.
The holy commandment is: “Clean and Green mass production, can you do it?”

Take the solar industry, for example. Every less gram of silicon means not only reduced expenditure on silane (a chemical compound), but also on water consumed in the process of etching the wafer slices.

That means a lower cost end product, which in turn increases the consumer’s adoption (due to the lower price) and a more friendly environmental approach overall--the ideal win-win scenario as we make steps towards global mass-production levels on renewable solutions.

But wait! Can the same concept be applicable in our own lives? How green are we? Or even who is greener: My neighbor who drives a hybrid car and is a vegetarian or my friend who rides a bicycle and is carnivore? Could we use the triple green approach in a personal level as well?

The answer is a resounding "Yes." Let’s take a moment to analyze our own triple green bottom line.

“Green energy” in this case would mean measuring and keep a track on our own carbon footprint, and there are websites to help calculate this. If we are doing well in this area, we would move to “green recycling” which would be much more than just putting the right garbage in the right trash-can every Monday through Saturday. In my definition, that would mean reflecting how good you are on reusing things and avoiding unnecessary buying. Do you really need that Avocado Slicer?

Last but not the least, would be the “green manufacturing” concept and again, my personal definition would be a bold approach more into the direction of how good are you in terms of transmitting your eco-values on a daily basis.

In the end, we (as evolving beings) must have as a minimum common goal: Bequeathing our children a better world than the one we inherited.
But before we start pointing fingers as a generation, we have to keep searching for solutions, and questioning each one of them in order to avoid "green blindness."

An Einstein quote illustrates well the importance of questioning:

"The important thing is not to stop questioning. Curiosity has its own reason for existing."

Hopefully, our questioning will bring better and true answers to our sustainable challenges in the future.


Other posts by Flavio Souza:

Comments

I would advise a certain degree of cynicism about "triple bottom line"
as many companies offering this are engaged in "greenwashing".

I have worked for some of Japan's largest corporations writing IR reports, and I can tell you that they employ lawyers and PR experts to sucessfully beautify the fact that they dump tonnes of chemicals into the rivers and oceans and the water table.

If you wish to collude in this beautification of pollution, fine.
"triple bottom line" is another facet of the hijacking of the environmental movement but people trying to cash in on the "eco" dollar.

I hear you there are lot`s of cashing on "eco" dollars going on globally (again questioning is key) however, "triple bottom line" should start with us as individuals in everything we do. Remember: "One's philosophy is not best expressed in collective words; it is expressed in the choices one makes ... and the choices we make are ultimately our responsibility".