Worldisgreen Links 08/08/2008

  • tags: food, miles, WiGLinks

    • With petrol prices tripling food transport costs within a matter of years, the “food miles” factor was inexplicably linked to climate change, the CSIRO’s Mark Howden said.
    • The phrase referred to how far food had travelled from farm to dinner table. The further it travelled, the more emissions produced but environmental consultant Andrew Campbell said “politically correct” sometimes did more harm than good.

      The logic was that more emissions were produced if a chicken farmer drove a small amount of produce to sell to shoppers, who had all driven individually, in comparison to large supermarkets shipping stock from overseas.

  • tags: WiGLinks

Worldisgreen Links 08/06/2008

  • tags: india, energy, solar, WiGLinks

    • The advanced industrialized economies were lucky to have had their development fuelled by cheap fossil energy. Today’s developing economies have a much tougher challenge. It was a very short window of opportunity which opened just about 150 years ago and is likely to close in the next 40 years, by when the known reserves will be depleted at current levels of consumption.

      All told, 200 years is a very brief interlude considering thousands of years of human civilization and hopefully hundreds of thousands of years yet to come. At some time in the distant future, they will look back and remark that the age of fossil fuel was a short inflection point, a point at which humanity passed through the bottleneck of dependency on oil from the ground. Before that point, humanity’s primary source of energy was the sun, and so it will be after that point.

  • tags: solar, economics, WiGLinks

    • A new era for solar power is approaching. Long derided as uneconomic, it is gaining ground as technologies improve and the cost of traditional energy sources rises. Within three to seven years, unsubsidized solar power could cost no more to end customers in many markets, such as California and Italy, than electricity generated by fossil fuels or by renewable alternatives to solar. By 2020, global installed solar capacity could be 20 to 40 times its level today.
  • tags: WiGLinks

    • god will provide by Kalense Kid.
  • tags: india, mba, carbon, WiGLinks

    • After the Indian
      Institute of Management, Lucknow (IIML), it is now the turn of IIM Ahmedabad to
      launch a programme on environmental management strategies with special focus on
      carbon markets, a market in which India is now the second largest seller in the
      world.

Worldisgreen Links 08/05/2008

Worldisgreen Links 08/03/2008

Worldisgreen Links 08/02/2008

The Value Add Ladder

A couple of days back I was disccusing with a friend of mine about the coal industry in the context of the Australian emissions scheme. What will happen to these guys when they compete with countries like India and China which do not have a emissions scheme.

Will they be a endangered species? I am not sure.

The important thing about the emissions scheme is that it is for the “common good” and not for any particular entity. However, it is a bigger issue than that.

Schumpeter was famous for his explanation of the “creative destruction” process. Drucker explains (Free Reg) it the best.

“We must learn how to make existing companies capable of innovation where innovation means the systematic sloughing off of yesterday.”

In a way, this is the essence of capitalism. I gave another analogy. Hinduism has the trioka of gods at the top of the pyramid. Brahma (the creator), Vishnu (the preserver) and Shiva (the destroyer). The three Gods would participate in the cycle of life.

The same is true for companies and industries. This is the same as the movement from an agrarian society to a manufacturing and then a services society. Past industries changed or died. We are at the same stage in history.

This quote from Voltaire will be helpful.

History never repeats itself, man does.

The point is that the coal industry has an option and that is value addition.

Tom Peters in his ebook rant, “PSF is Everything” talks about the value addition ladder.

Raw materials, Goods, Services, Solutions, Experiences, Dreams and Lovemarks.

Well, lovemarks will be really tough for the coal industry but they can move from Raw materials to Solutions. Can they provide carbon capture technology with the coal they sell? That would be great. Australia already has a high quality coal. The opportunities with a co2 capture mechanism will be immense.

That is one example and I am not expert in this industry. However, there is an opportunity to tap into the value add ladder.