Quantifying the ROI of Sustainability
November 5, 2020

Utility Futility and the Carbon Paradox

It’s a classic case of climate policy paradox. Even as governments across the world are calling for a phase-out of fossil fuels, utilities are buying them up and going all out to sway local and national leaders away from carbon reforms.
September 22, 2020

Vertical Solar: PV Stands Tall

[The first in our 2-part series on vertical solar.] Upright solar innovations that are radically different from – and take up far less space than – garden-variety solar farms may well revolutionize the industry in the next few years. Some vertical panels can capture light far longer than horizontal ones, as they can continue to produce power even as the sun is low on the horizon. As with the image of humanoids learning to stand upright, vertical just might be the next step in the evolution of solar.
July 27, 2020

The Purpose and the Roller Coaster: An Interview with Andrew Gottlieb

[Adapted from a July 24, 2020 interview ] Recently, we spoke with Andrew Gottlieb, Founder of the purpose-driven online marketing and branding company No Typical Moments. The topic was Gottlieb’s other passion, a podcast series called The School for Humanity wherein he speaks with thinkers and strategists from all over the spectrum, with a focus on entrepreneurs and those working on sustainable projects. He shared some of what he's learned through interviewing so many interesting people. Here are the highlights.
July 2, 2020

Cyclones: They’ll Be Coming Around Again…

It’s highly anomalous that a major cyclone just made landfall on the West Coast of India, in June, within spitting distance of Mumbai. So, what’s up with this? Is it random chance? Nope. According to scientists, it’s just your friendly neighborhood climate change.
June 22, 2020

Who Do We Choose to Be?

Some moments are so terrible and so clear that they spur change and demand action. The murder of George Floyd at the hands of officers of the Minneapolis Police Department is one of those moments. Justice and equity are simply fundamental values, part of the definition of the world we want. And we need to bring them to life through action.
March 25, 2020

COVID-19 and the Bankrupting of Nature

We were warned, by Bill Gates and others, that we were unprepared for the next pandemic. Why did we fail to heed these prophetic warnings? Hubris: in this case, the presumption that humans control nature and not the other way around. The response to this crisis makes it clear that countries, sufficiently motivated, can unleash the full range of human knowledge and expertise to solve problems. The trick that has eluded us is convincing lawmakers and citizens that the climate emergency rivals that of this pandemic.
March 11, 2020

Close is Good…and Not Just in Horseshoes!

‘Close’ is – famously – only good in horseshoes. However, I’ve done enough valuation to know that hitting close to the mark on the right target – to paraphrase the late mathematician John Tukey – is better than a bullseye on the wrong one. There is value in approximate answers, as long as they're answering the right questions.
February 29, 2020

Blame! The Worm Will Turn in 2020

In a world where many live in scarcity, one commodity – blame – is always in available in abundance. We expect climate-change blame to be in overdrive before 2020 is done, with activists, governments, and deniers alike howling for relief.
February 28, 2020

Science Based Targets: The Consequences of Delay

We’ve developed a tool to help companies select science-based targets and plan for their achievement. It also demonstrates the value of starting quickly. Every year of delay comes with significant cost. You'll have to go faster and may run into the organizational equivalent of getting pulled over for speeding.
Science Based Targets: The Consequences of Delay
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