ABSTRACT

Business-as-usual, it is widely accepted, will exceed the Earth's carrying capacity in an alarmingly short space of time. In simple terms, we need to learn to use the world's rapidly depleting resources in a significantly more efficient manner. Practical and readily adopted solutions are needed now. Eco-efficiency-or "produce more with less" – is achieved when goods and services satisfy human needs, increase the quality of life at competitive prices and when environmental impacts and resource intensity are decreased to a degree that keeps them within the limits of Earth's expected carrying capacity. Eco-efficiency – a term first proposed by the World Business Council for Sustainable Development in 1992 – is a management approach that allows businesses to carry out environmental protection measures from a market-oriented point of view, with the aim of illustrating that ecology and the economy do not need to be a contradiction. Indeed, eco-efficiency has been portrayed as a win-win-for both business and the environment. 

This book, which developed out of two conferences on eco-efficiency held in Düsseldorf in 1998 and 2001, is edited by Ernst Ulrich von Weizsäcker and his team from the Wuppertal Institute for Climate, Environment and Energy, one of the world's leading research programmes on resource productivity. The aim is not simply to explain the past and present of eco-efficiency but to look forward to and encourage a future where the comprehensive take-up of the concept by business, government and consumers could lead to innovation on a grand scale and the possibility of a giant leap beyond towards overall sustainability. 

There have been considerable achievements to date. The Dow Jones Sustainability Index, which aims to list the most sustainable corporations for investors, includes companies such as BASF, Climatex, Henkel and Matushita/Panasonic (all represented in this book), who are implementing eco-efficiency measures. A number of political initiatives have also been formed. In December 2001, the German government suggested a National Sustainability Strategy to measure Germany's sustainable development. While this not yet an accepted political target or even law, it shows that politics is moving toward binding targets for increasing efficiency. 

Eco-Efficiency and Beyond collects together the leading thinkers on the topic and aims to illustrate not only that the concept should be part of every business strategy but that it is a key trigger for innovation. Innovation cuts through paradoxes. It is the creation of solutions to conflicting demands. Flying in a vacuum gave us rockets and satellites; switching electrons through insulators gave us Silicon Valley and the digital age. Sustainable development presents a similar field of paradoxical innovation forces: i.e. provide affordable products and services for the growing unmet needs of the world population while reducing environmental impacts. 

This book is the definitive collection on eco-efficiency and will be required reading for business, government, NGOs and academicians.

chapter |2 pages

Companies in a globalised world

chapter 3|1 pages

The next sources of innovation

chapter |2 pages

Tomorrow’s markets

chapter |1 pages

Eco-efficiency triggers innovation

chapter |2 pages

Case study

DuPont: ‘zero’ targets driving innovation

chapter |1 pages

All-out innovation

chapter |1 pages

The dialogue paper

chapter |5 pages

Energy and climate change

chapter 8|3 pages

Launching the ISS Sustainable Development

chapter |1 pages

Sustainable Trade and Innovation Centre

chapter 9|9 pages

Sustainable business development

chapter |1 pages

The value of transparency and reporting

chapter |3 pages

The approach of evaluation and scoring

The scorecard’s structure and rationale

chapter |1 pages

Guidelines for using the scorecard

chapter |2 pages

The process of evaluation

chapter |1 pages

The business case

chapter |4 pages

The future

chapter |16 pages

What is material flow cost accounting?

chapter |11 pages

Products of service—technical nutrients

chapter 17|1 pages

4 Conclusion

chapter |2 pages

Lending

chapter |5 pages

Financing concepts and the sustainability model

Environmental considerations are key factors in granting loans

chapter |5 pages

Pressure by employees

chapter |1 pages

Impact of disclosure rules: UK example

chapter |2 pages

Conclusions and next steps

chapter |8 pages

Bibliography

chapter |6 pages

Author biographies

chapter |4 pages

List of abbreviations

chapter |2 pages

Useful websites