Showing posts with label grade. Show all posts
Showing posts with label grade. Show all posts

Sustainability Development Metrics: Indices, Approaches and Frameworks

Sustainability development metrics are aggregate measures that extend the concept of value beyond gross Domestic product (GDP). Commonly referred to as sustainability development indicators (SDI), these are measures of sustainability go beyond the generic concept.

Sustainability indicators, indices and reporting systems are of growing importance in both the public and private sectors. SDIs are seen as useful in a wide range of settings, by a wide range of actors this includes international and intergovernmental bodies; national governments and government departments; economic sectors; administrators of geographic or ecological regions; communities; nongovernmental organizations; and the private sector.

Here are some of the most prominent indices:

Human Development Index (HDI) of the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP);

The Ecological footprint of Global Footprint Network

The Environmental Sustainability Index (ESI)

Environmental Performance Index (EPI) reported under the World Economic Forum (WEF)

Genuine Progress Index (GPI) calculated at the national or sub-national level.

The Global Reporting Initiative Index

The Energy, Emergy and Sustainability Index (SI)

Environmental Sustainability Index

The Lempert-Nguyen indicator

Here is a listing of different approaches:

The Natural Step approach

The Ecological footprint approach

The Anthropological-cultural approach

The Circles of Sustainability approach

World Business Council for Sustainable Development approach

The Life-cycle assessment approach

Sustainable enterprise approach

Sustainable livelihoods approach

Development sustainability" approaches

Here are some other sustainability metric frameworks:

The International Institute for Sustainable Development sample policy framework

The Sustainability dashboard

UN Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO) types of sustainability

The Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO) has identified considerations for technical cooperation that affect three types of sustainability:

Institutional sustainability.
Economic and financial sustainability.
Ecological sustainability.

Some ecologists have emphasized a fourth type of sustainability:

Energetic sustainability.

One ancillary measure that is gaining growing support is the green GDP that would factor the cost of pollution and natural capital depletion.

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New Sustainability Metrics from KoAnn Skrzyniarz

Businesses are extending their metrics beyond the measurement of profit to other forms of value of creation. The new sustainability imperatives demands that we include new metrics. In response to both consumers and supply chain pressures businesses are under pressure to provide metrics that measure their sustainability efforts. While these metrics measure more than just profit, they are closely tied to financial performance and creating a competitive advantage.

Here are five new metrics from KoAnn Skrzyniarz. She is the originator of sustainable brands and Sustainable Life Media. She is one of the world's leading innovators in sustainability metrics. She explores ways of measuring new forms of environmental and social value.

Sustainable Life Media measures what they call a “wellbeing economy” -- or "WeFirst" capitalism, an economy whose measures of success would support and encourage rather than impede business innovation that generates broader societal benefit and the creation of shared value.

Such value can be understood as poverty elimination, collaboration, and environmental restoration and maintenance. Their efforts are premised on the goal of finding ways to grow revenues from sustainable activities that decouple growth from impact and deliver shared benefit to society in all sorts of creative ways.

As explored in a Forbes article by Sarah McKinney, Skrzyniarz champions better collaboration, and standardization through the use of key metrics as a way to help companies on their sustainability journeys.

Here are five new metrics:

1. Life Cycle Assessment is a technique used to assess environmental impacts associated with all the stages of a product’s life from-cradle-to-grave (i.e., from raw material extraction through materials processing, manufacture, distribution, use, repair and maintenance, and disposal or recycling).

2. ISO 14000 is a family of standards related to environmental management that exists to help organizations (a) minimize how their operations negatively affect the environment (i.e., cause adverse changes to air, water, or land), (b) comply with applicable laws, regulations, and other environmentally oriented requirements, and (c) continually improve in the above.

3. The Higg Index is an apparel and footwear industry self-assessment standard for assessing environmental and social sustainability throughout the supply chain. Launched in 2012, it was developed by the Sustainable Apparel Coalition.

4. B Corporation Certification is a private certification issued to for-profit companies by B Lab, a United States-based non-profit organization. To be granted and to preserve certification, companies must receive a minimum score on an online assessment for “social and environmental performance”, satisfy the requirement that the company integrate B Lab commitments to stakeholders into company governing documents, and pay an annual fee.

5. STARS is a transparent, self-reporting framework for colleges and universities to measure their sustainability performance, created by the organization AASHE.

Sustainability metrics are still young and we can expect a whole range of new measurements of value going forward. This will include measurements that gauge replenishing our natural resources, supporting the economic stability of local economies and encouraging the health and wellness of society.

Related
Sustainability Development Metrics: Indices, Approaches and Frameworks
e-book - Metrics for Environmental Health and Sustainability
KoAnn Skrzyniarz: A Leader in Sustainable Brand Innovation
White Paper - Redefining Value: The New Metrics of Sustainable Business
Evolving Metrics for Corporate Sustainability: Beyond Waste, Water and Energy
Is Sustainability Still Possible?
Ten Sources of Green Supply Chain Information
PPR Home's Sustainability Journey: Innovative Metrics Shed Light

Event - New Metrics 14 Conference

The fourth annual New Metrics ’14 conference will take place September 24-26 in Boston, Massachusetts. In 2011 Sustainable Brands launched its first “New Metrics” conference, initially partnering with Wharton’s IGEL program to host the conference. This year they are collaborating with MIT’s Sloan School of Business to bring together an audience of 300 brand leaders to be in dialogue with 60+ thought leaders from well-respected brands, NGOs and think tanks who will speak about how they’re working to create a path toward smarter, more accurate and more inclusive business metrics.

As explained by KoAnn Skrzyniarz, "Profit, revenue and margin growth will tell you plenty about the success of your business, but in today’s economy, they won’t provide insight into how business is positioned to operate against the broader trends that are influencing longer-term survival. Updating business models and metrics that enable social, economic and environmental resiliency in the 21st century will ensure the ability to thrive for the long term."

For more information and to register click here.

Related
Sustainability Development Metrics: Indices, Approaches and Frameworks
New Sustainability Metrics from KoAnn Skrzyniarz
e-book - Metrics for Environmental Health and Sustainability
KoAnn Skrzyniarz: A Leader in Sustainable Brand Innovation
White Paper - Redefining Value: The New Metrics of Sustainable Business
Evolving Metrics for Corporate Sustainability: Beyond Waste, Water and Energy
Is Sustainability Still Possible?
Ten Sources of Green Supply Chain Information
PPR Home's Sustainability Journey: Innovative Metrics Shed Light

e-book - Metrics for Environmental Health and Sustainability

Effective operational metrics are an essential part of benchmarking and measuring progress. This e-book helps you to select the appropriate metrics across environment health and safety, sustainability, quality and more. Produced by LNS Research, in conjunction with MESA International, this e-book contains the detailed findings of the five-month, 2013-2014 Manufacturing Metrics that Matter research project.

This information-packed eBook answers many of the questions on business leaders’ minds today, including:

  • Which metrics are being used to best understand operational improvements today? 
  • How does technology support and impact metrics programs and performance? 
  • Which metrics are being utilized as part of role-based dashboards? 
  • What are the best practices I can learn from market leaders?

To download the e-book click here.

Related
Sustainability Development Metrics: Indices, Approaches and Frameworks
New Sustainability Metrics from KoAnn Skrzyniarz
KoAnn Skrzyniarz: A Leader in Sustainable Brand Innovation
White Paper - Redefining Value: The New Metrics of Sustainable Business
Evolving Metrics for Corporate Sustainability: Beyond Waste, Water and Energy
Is Sustainability Still Possible?
Ten Sources of Green Supply Chain Information
PPR Home's Sustainability Journey: Innovative Metrics Shed Light

Event - The Future of Capitalism: New Metrics, New Models, New Outcomes

This TSSS Event will take place on Tuesday, March 4th and a follow up webinar will be aired on Thursday, March 20th. The event will be hosted by Mark Anielski, a leading expert on the emerging metric of well-being (the new bottom line). The followup webinar will dive deeper into the issues. The Future of Capitalism: New Metrics, New Models, New Outcomes by Mark Anielski will ask the question, "Are you ready to compete in an economic system that rewards shared values, well being and inclusive prosperity?"

For more information click here.

Related
Sustainability Development Metrics: Indices, Approaches and Frameworks
New Sustainability Metrics from KoAnn Skrzyniarz
KoAnn Skrzyniarz: A Leader in Sustainable Brand Innovation
White Paper - Redefining Value: The New Metrics of Sustainable Business
Evolving Metrics for Corporate Sustainability: Beyond Waste, Water and Energy
Is Sustainability Still Possible?
Ten Sources of Green Supply Chain Information
PPR Home's Sustainability Journey: Innovative Metrics Shed Light

Event - The Future of Capitalism: New Metrics, New Models, New Outcomes

The Future of Capitalism will take place on Tuesday, March 4, 2014 from 4:30 pm to 7:30 pm, at Loyalty One, 438 University Ave., 12th Floor, Toronto, Canada. This event is subtitled, "New Metrics, New Models, New Outcomes." It will address strategies for the new economy and competing in an economic system that rewards shared values, well being and inclusive prosperity. Attendees at this event will hear from Mark Anielski, one of the world's leading experts on the emerging metric of well-being...the new bottom line.

Anielski is the author of "The Economics of Happiness:Building Genuine Wealth" and advisor to the Prime Minister of Bhutan, will share with us how progressive companies are getting ahead of the curve and optimizing their most important assets - trust and relational capital.

Two important questions

1.Has Capitalism lost its way?
2. Can it survive or will it be replaced?

What will be covered

What's wrong with Capitalism? Does it have a future?
What we can learn from Bhutan - the happiest country in the world
Why was the topic of Inclusive Prosperity so prominent at Davos
How companies like PUMA and Unilever are positioning themselves for the future by expanding their metrics to include well-being
How progressive companies are optimizing their most important assets: trust and relational capital

Agenda

4:30 – 5:00 pm: Registration, snacks and networking
5:00 – 5:10 pm: Introductions and special announcements
5:10 – 5:40 pm: Presentation by Mark Anielski, author of “The Economics of Happiness”
5:40 – 6:00 pm: Small group discussion/brainstorming
6:00: – 6:40 pm: Groups report back to main audience and general Q and A
6:40 – 7:30 pm: Networking and snacks

Space is limited and registration closes February 27.

Related
Sustainability Development Metrics: Indices, Approaches and Frameworks
New Sustainability Metrics from KoAnn Skrzyniarz
KoAnn Skrzyniarz: A Leader in Sustainable Brand Innovation
White Paper - Redefining Value: The New Metrics of Sustainable Business
Evolving Metrics for Corporate Sustainability: Beyond Waste, Water and Energy
Is Sustainability Still Possible?
Ten Sources of Green Supply Chain Information
PPR Home's Sustainability Journey: Innovative Metrics Shed Light

Best Green Colleges: Sierra's Cool Schools 2012 (Video)

Best Green Colleges: Princeton Review 2013 (Video)

House Lawmakers Oppose New Car Ratings

Dozens of House lawmakers are opposed to the Obama administration's plan to put letter grades on the window stickers of new cars and trucks that rate a vehicle's fuel efficiency.

Although Republican resistance to the White House is common, legislators are resisting the new car rating system despite the fact that these changes will make it easier for consumers to compare vehicular emissions and save money on gas.

The stickers have not been updated in three decades and the government wants the letter ratings to reflect new technologies and account for emissions affecting the environment. The Obama administration said in August it was considering adding grades ranging from A+ for the most fuel-efficient to D for the least fuel-efficient to the stickers. Under the letter grade proposal, an average vehicle would receive a B- on fuel efficiency and greenhouse gas emissions.

On December 8, Fifty-three House members sent a letter to the Environmental Protection Agency and the Transportation Department indicating that a proposal to add letter grades to the stickers was biased in favor of electric and hybrid cars and would hurt sales of sport utility vehicles and trucks. The letter was signed by 17 Democrats and 36 Republicans.

These lawmakers object to the fact that the plan favors low emission electric cars and plug-in hybrid electric vehicles. They support an alternative that would maintain the current label's focus on the miles per gallon rating so as not to highlight the emissions of combustion engine powered cars.


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America's New Car Ratings: Consumer Concerns and Marketing

Whether the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) uses a rating system that is based on letters or numbers, for the American consumer, environmental concerns are trumped by concerns about price and concerns about US dependence on foreign oil.

Jack Gillis, director of public affairs for the Consumer Federation of America, said both of EPA's proposed labels are an improvement over the current label, for the American consumer, he concedes that money is still an important concern.

Sticker price is not the only economic concern, annual fuel costs are also important to consumers and therefore important in the marketing of new vehicles.

Concerns about dependence on foreign oil is another priority for American consumers. Gillis said that the CFA's research shows that "concern about our dependence on foreign oil seem to have a greater impact on consumer attitudes than environmental concerns."

According to David Champion, the head of automotive testing for the influential Consumer Reports magazine, credibility will be a critical factor in marketing the new electric cars and building a market for the next generation of electric vehicles.

While some consumers may opt for the new car technology for emotional reasons, the mainstream market has more practical concerns. “It’s going to be a very difficult numbers game for consumers” to decide if the economics justify turning to electric propulsion, Champion said.


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