Introducing Sustainable Development in the Financial Services Sector - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 41
About This Presentation
Title:

Introducing Sustainable Development in the Financial Services Sector

Description:

Space Ship. Space Ship. Congratulations! ... Space Ship. Disaster Strikes! Systems thinking. Systems thinking. Systems thinking ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:35
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 42
Provided by: aha92
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Introducing Sustainable Development in the Financial Services Sector


1
Introducing Sustainable Development in the
Financial Services Sector
  • A PP4SD Programme

2
PP4SD
  • Working with professionals to integrate
    sustainable development learning into continuing
    professional development
  • Partnership approach
  • Managed by the Environment Agency, the
    Institution of Environmental Sciences, The
    Natural Step and RSPB

3
Introduction
  • Course Objectives
  • help participants understand how social and
    environmental considerations will have an
    increasing impact on the activities of the
    Financial Services Sector
  • give participants an understanding of this new
    business reality and the associated risks and
    opportunities
  • provide delegates with tools to respond
    positively to this developing agenda

4
Introduction
  • Course design
  • to be challenging
  • to be interactive
  • to stimulate discussion and debate
  • to be fun

5
Space Ship
6
Space Ship
  • Congratulations!
  • You are going away for a long weekend in space
    with everything provided think the Paris Ritz
    in space.

7
Space Ship
  • Your Task
  • in teams, decide on the 10 items that you will
    take on this special weekend.
  • Food, water and spacesuits provided

8
Space Ship
Disaster Strikes!
9
Systems thinking
10
Systems thinking
11
Systems thinking
12
The Business Funnel
Increasing costs
Customer Requirements
Shareholder Pressure
Protecting brand value
Legislation
Employee expectation
Risk Management
NGO pressure
13
The reality
World population actual and projections
Sources UN median projection 2025
Politics of the Real World
14
The reality
  • Global consumption of water is doubling every 20
    years
  • 10 used by people
  • 65 used by industrial agriculture
  • 25 used by industry
  • 1 billion people already suffer from a shortage
    of fresh water
  • If everyone adopted a western lifestyle we would
    need five earths to support us!

15
The reality
  • The 20 of people living in the rich countries
    consume 80 of the world resources
  • The top 1 of households have more wealth than
    the entire bottom 95

16
How has business responded?
  • Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR)
  • winning businesses of the 21st century should
    not only add value to themselves but to the rest
    of society as well
  • David Irwin - Encouraging Responsible Business

17
How has business responded?
  • 94 of company executives believe that the
    development of a CSR strategy can deliver real
    business benefits. (Source Ernst Young survey)
  • 1 out of 3 international sales executives think
    social responsibility initiatives will increase
    sales. (Source Hill Knowltons
    Corporate Reputation Watch)
  • 86 of investors believe that social and
    environmental risk management improves a
    companys market value in the long term.

    (Source CSR Europe/Taylor Nelson Sofres)

18
How has business responded?
  • 73 of top European business leaders believe that
    sustained social/environmental engagement can
    significantly improve profitability
  • (Source Business in the Community's FastForward
    Research)
  • 27 of consumers across 25 countries have
    punished companies for being socially
    irresponsible and another 21 have considered
    doing so
  • (Source Environics International's Annual CSR
    Monitor)
  • 80 of employees would not work for an
    organisation with values they didn't believe in
  • (Source Work Foundation, 'Corporate Nirvana)

19
How has business responded?
  • 60 of banks are now publishing declarations on
    environment (or included as part of financial
    reports)
  • 59 of banks have an environmental policy
  • Steady growth of financial products geared to the
    environment
  • Sustainable Finance and Banking Marcel Jeucken

20
How has business responded?
  • UNEP Agreement on the financial sector
  • Financial Organisations Review and Guidance on
    the Environment (FORGE)
  • ICC Business Charter for SD
  • The London Principles

21
(No Transcript)
22
(No Transcript)
23
Case Study Review
  • Review good practice examples of how some
    organisations have responded to this agenda.

24
Case Study Review
  • Process
  • Read case study and prepare feedback containing
    the following
  • Background on the company 10
  • What they say they have done 30
  • What can we learn from the case 60

25
Case Study Review
  • What are the common positive elements?
  • What are the areas for improvement?
  • 3. What is appropriate for your own business
    context?

26
The 5 Capitals
  • Background
  • Natural Capitalism (Amory Lovins, Paul Hawken,
    L.Hunter Lovins)
  • http//www.natcap.org/
  • Project Sigma
  • The 5 Capitals
  • http//www.projectsigma.com/

27
The 5 Capitals
  • Natural Capital
  • Human Capital
  • Social Capital
  • Manufactured Capital
  • Financial Capital

28
Natural Capital
  • What does it mean?
  • the natural resources (energy and matter) and
    processes needed by businesses to produce
    products and deliver services
  • Why is it important?
  • everything will draw on or impact on the natural
    environment in some way

29
Human Capital
  • What does it mean?
  • the health, knowledge, skills, intellectual
    outputs, motivation and capacity for
    relationships
  • Why is it important?
  • businesses depend on individuals to be motivated
    and skilled to be successful

30
Social Capital
  • What does it mean?
  • value added to a business from human
    relationships, partnerships and co-operation
  • Why is it important?
  • economies rely on social interactions to achieve
    their objectives

31
Manufactured Capital
  • What does it mean?
  • material goods and infrastructure which
    contribute to production or service provision
    (tools, technology)
  • Why is it important?
  • important that how things are developed /
    delivered is sustainable - using innovation

32
Financial Capital
  • What does it mean?
  • productive value of the other capitals which
    exist in a form of currency which can be owned or
    traded
  • Why is it important?
  • this is the traditional and primary measure of
    business performance.

33
Mapping Exercise
  • Draw a systems diagram for a product, mapping
    inputs and outputs and highlighting impacts on
    the capitals.
  • See the following examples

34
Mapping Exercise
35
Mapping Exercise
36
Situational Exercise
37
Sphere of influence
Sphere of concern
Sphere of influence
38
Action Planning
39
Action Planning
  • Reflect on this course and identify 3 things that
    you can do/start doing to contribute to this
    agenda
  • write them down
  • talk them through with a colleague to ensure they
    are achievable but stretching
  • Have the colleague question and feedback what
    they have heard

40
Action Planning
  • Transfer the smarter targets to a postcard
  • Complete your name and address on the postcard
  • Give the postcard to the course facilitator

41
Evaluation and Close
  • Many thanks
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com