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Project Management and Eco Sustainability

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What's the biggest line item in your project budget? Ecosystem Services ... The Ecological Footprint Calculator. Ecological Footprints for Countries: ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Project Management and Eco Sustainability


1
Project Management and Eco Sustainability
  • Adopting a Systems View
  • Bruce Hagen
  • Senior Program Manager
  • Advance Fibre Communications
  • May 17, 2001

2
This is about the 3 Ps...
  • Perspective
  • Priorities
  • Pfundamentals

3
PfundamentalsWhat are the 2 most important
things in project management?
  • Project
  • Project Manager

4
Pfundamentals What is most important thing
Project Managers need to know about their project?
  • The Requirements

5
Pfundamentals What is a Project Managers most
important project?
  • Survival

6
Pfundamentals What is the Project Managers most
important requirement?
  • Her next breath

7
Pfundamentals and how does she meet that
requirement?
  • Racehorses!
  • (Resources)

8
Racehorses Whats the biggest line item in your
project budget?
  • Ecosystem Services

9
Global Ecosystem Servicesin Trillions of 1998
Dollars
  • 1.3 Atmospheric Regulation of Gases
  • 2.3 Assimilation, Processing of Waste
  • 17 Nutrient Flows
  • 2.8 Storage, Purification of Water
  • 12.6 Other (e.g. flood control, food
    production)
  • Source The Value of the Worlds Ecosystem
    Services and Natural Capital, Nature, May 15,
    1977

10
Local Ecosystem Services
  • Russian River Aquifer
  • Unique natural filtration, only light
    chlorination required before distribution
  • Gravel beds being strip mined for use in asphalt,
    concrete. Alternatives available.
  • Replacement cost (filtration plant, excluding
    operation costs) .5 billion
  • Supervisor Kerns, Cale, Smith, Kelly support
    continued mining
  • What would a good PM do?

11
Resources How do you monitor and control?
  • The Ecological Footprint Calculator

12
Ecological Footprints for Countries
Acres per person by country 30 United States 19
Canada 15 Germany, United Kingdom 9
Malaysia, Argentina 5 Columbia, Cuba, China 2
Nepal, Angola, Ethiopia 1 Bangladesh,
Eritrea
http//www.rprogress.org/resources/nip/ef/deficitt
able4_nations.html
13
Exploring Equity (Contd)
Total acres x for humans Total world
population

Acres per person
?
?
31 billion acres x .____ 6.1 billion people
Other species
Human use

?
Future
Acres/ person
http//www.math.berkeley.edu/galen//popclk.html
14
Exceeding Planetary Capacity
15
Our Project Is In Trouble
  • 9 out of 10 doctors agree
  • More killer storms, droughts
  • Sudden Oak Death Syndrome
  • Sea level in Petaluma

16
What does the good PM do?
  • Denial?
  • Despair?
  • Decisive action.
  • Dynamic leadership!

17
What does the good PM do?
  • Recognize and respond to the work on this
    critical path
  • Re-prioritize your tasks, de-scope other
    responsibilities
  • Adopt zero cost strategies
  • Get and stay informed

18
What does the good PM do?
  • Get and stay informed
  • Read Natural Capitalism
  • Use the Web (email me at bruce.hagen_at_iname.com
    for reference sites and email lists)
  • Take a TNS workshop (www.naturalstep.org)

19
What does the good PM do?
  • Walk the talk Reduce your footprint
  • Lifestyle changes, the joy of living lighter,
    simpler
  • Investments in sustainable living (solar panels
    versus Cisco stock)

20
What does the good PM do?
  • Change the Institutions
  • Get involved (or more involved) with groups
    pursuing sustainability
  • Re-invent your business, become a Natural
    Capitalist

21
The Natural Step
  • TNS Approach Science-Based Framework
  • Systems Thinking in Business Context
  • Origins in Sweden, by Dr. Karl Henrik-Robèrt
  • Scientifically validated
  • Applied to business in the U.S.

22
Basic Science Principles
  • Matter and energy cannot be created or disappear
  • Matter and energy tend to disperse
  • Quality can be expressed as the concentration and
    structure of matter
  • Plant cells are net producers of concentration
    and structure

http//www.naturalstep.org/what/what_science.html
23
System Condition 1 What We Take
  • Substances from the Earths crust must not
    systematically increase in nature

http//www.naturalstep.org/what/what_cond.html
24
System Condition 2 What We Make
  • Substances produced by society must not
    systematically increase in nature

25
System Condition 3 What We Maintain
  • The physical basis for the productivity and
    diversity of nature must not systematically be
    diminished

26
System Condition 4 What We Share
  • We must be fair and efficient in meeting basic
    human needs

27
TNS System ConditionsSummary
  • Substances from the Earths crust must not
    systematically increase in nature
  • Substances produced by society must not
    systematically increase in nature
  • The physical basis for the productivity and
    diversity of nature must not systematically be
    diminished
  • We must be fair and efficient in meeting basic
    human needs

28
The Funnel Analogy
Resource Availability
Margin for action
Human Impact
29
Thesis of Natural Capitalism
  • Within developed nations
  • 90-95 reduction of material and energy possible
  • Can maintain the same quality of service

30
Goals of Natural Capitalism
  • Account for everything (externalities, and
    itemize all cost-contributing components)
  • Do not spend assets

http//www.naturalcapitalism.org/
31
Natural Capitalism Strategies
  • Radical Resource Productivity
  • Dramatically increase the productivity of natural
    resources
  • Biomimicry
  • Shift to biologically inspired production models
  • Service and Flow Economy
  • Move to a solutions-based business model
  • Investing in Natural Capital
  • Reinvest in natural capital

32
Interface, Inc.
  • 1973 -- broad-loom carpet manufacturing company
    established by CEO Ray Anderson
  • 1994 external pressure on environmental record,
    formed task force
  • Spear in the chest Ecology of Commerce, by
    Paul Hawken

33
InterfaceTotal vs. Sustainable Sales
34
InterfaceRedesign of Commerce
http//216.1.140.49/us/company/sustainability/inte
rface_model.asp
35
Its okay to start small
36
Design
  • You cant be a leader over the next five years
    and not be totally into design.
  • Tom Peters

37
Standard Car Efficiency
  • Of the fuel a car consumes
  • 80 is lost at the engine (heat, exhaust)
  • Of the 20 of the energy that is delivered to the
    wheels
  • 95 moves the weight of the car
  • 5 moves the driver
  • 1 of the fuel consumed moves the driver

38
Opportunities for a New Design
  • Power loss
  • One third used for acceleration, and heats the
    brakes in stopping (energy loss)
  • One third heats the six tons of air the car
    pushes through each mile
  • One third heats tires and the road in rolling
    resistance.
  • Design with lighter materials, for aerodynamics,
    use efficient tires cuts power requirement in
    half

39
Elegant Design the Hypercar
http//www.hypercar.com/ http//www.rmi.org/sitep
ages/pid390.asp
40
  • There is a rapidly growing network of people in
    the world who see the world as it can be, not
    merely as it is. Natural Capitalism

41
  • The idea of Gaia-- our earth as a single living
    system-- needs no defense, only more
    defenders.

42
...like you.
Laurel Hagen, Lafferty Park overlooking Petaluma,
Pacific Ocean
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