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ENERGYBLOGGERS

Voices of Influence: Original and Guest Blog Posts from the Energy Sector

These blogs provide insight into the latest issues, challenges, advances and debate around Energy use, exploration, policy and innovation. Original and guest blog posts highlight differing perspectives and context.

3BL Blog

2010: Turning Over a New Leaf

What is the point of all your great efforts these past few years you may be asking? In 2009, it was enough to just hold on, keep your business or income afloat, and try to make it through each month. There wasn’t a whole lot of growing to do unless you were one of the firms that grabbed onto the government’s life line to be pulled out of the hole you put yourself in. For the rest of us, we are left to our own devices to pull ourselves out of the hole others left behind.

All the progress made in 2008 by motivated entrepreneurs and optimistic working folk was flushed down the old...

  • Read more about 2010: Turning Over a New Leaf
  • Monika Mitchell's blog

2009 in Review: Public Opinion on the Environment

When I looked back on mytweets for 2009, I found a lot on polls and surveys regarding public opinion on the environment. Much of it was conflicting, so it's not surprising that people are confused.

 
But when you look back at the data in total you have to come to the conclusion that it was not a particularly good year for environmental advocates in the arena of public opinion. The economic downturn pushed environmental issues further down the public priority list while belief in and concern about global warming declined despite the ubiquity of the subject in the news.
 
Considering how important this subject is to sustainability communications, I've added a section of links to this info on the sidebar and undertook a recap of the major polls on the subject from 2009:
 
On December 23, Quinnipiac University released a poll finding that "most voters say the U.S. should not sign a treaty promising to reduce greenhouse gases, or should not sign such a treaty unless other nations do the same."
 
  • Read more about 2009 in Review: Public Opinion on the Environment
  • Nathan Schock's blog

The Price of Freedom: 79%

A January 2010 Op-Ed in the Wall Street Journal accused a moderately progressive U.S. Congress of inadvertently creating a loan-sharking credit card interest rate. Congress enacted credit card reform to stop lender abuses. In retaliation, credit companies are finding ways to get around the new law. WSJ Opinion claimed that Congress’ attempt to rein in excessive credit card fees led the First Premier Bank of South Dakota to raise its rates from 9% to 79%.

...

  • Read more about The Price of Freedom: 79%
  • Monika Mitchell's blog

The Season of Hope

This is our winter of discontent. The jobless seek a pay check; the almost-homeless pray for a miracle; the indebted seek relief. Throughout the nation and across the globe, human beings are locked in the battle for survival. Yet despite our struggles, this last week signifies a new season of hope for humanity. 

Something miraculous happened on the way to the White House this holiday week. Sixty privileged and pampered U.S. senators dragged themselves out on Christmas Eve in the wee hours of the morning to push through historic health care reform.
 
Many...

  • Read more about The Season of Hope
  • Monika Mitchell's blog

The Consciousness of Greed

Greed is destructive, cruel, primal. Yet it is nothing new. It has existed since time immemorial.
Respected journals and periodicals report that “nothing” has changed over the past year on Wall Street since the financial collapse. Some make the staggering claim that it is back to “business as usual.” In other words, surprise of surprises, greed still exists - particularly in the world of money.
Yes, greed does exist and will continue to until a transformation of consciousness takes hold of us. In fact, in the last year of our “Lord”- the Money God that is - a lot has changed.
Firstly, there is a growing recognition of the part that unbridled greed played in the destruction of venerable old firms like Lehman Brothers and Bear Stearns within the financial industry itself. AIG and Merrill Lynch exist in some form or other, but limp along as lifeless shadows of their former greatness.
Contrary to popular belief, most people on the Street, from top levels of high finance through the middle and bottom layers too, know that their coworkers are responsible in large part for the capitulation of a once celebrated -now vilified-free market business model. Too little, too late, they lament. We should have seen it coming.
Along with this private acknowledgement is the conviction that it won’t happen again-not on their watch anyway.
Perhaps ironically, much of the Street feels similarly to the public in one major area: the government did not do its job to oversee and regulate the safety and protections of the marketplace.  This is undisputedly true.
  • Read more about The Consciousness of Greed
  • Monika Mitchell's blog

Believe in CSR? You’re in ‘Good’ Company in 2010

As 2009 and the decade of the 00’s come to an end, it is interesting to think about what will make a truly good company in the years to come. In the past, companies that made a profit, paid taxes, and provided employment were thought to be ‘good’ based on financial success alone. When they exceeded financial expectations, they were considered great. The higher the profits, the stronger the brand image became.

Then the economic crisis hit, along with the potential destabilization of the entire system, and the wisdom of pursuing profits at all costs turned out to have a price tag after all.

Now once again, times are changing. Post our entry into the Great Recession, a ‘good’ company has been redefined as one that adds value outside the realm of financial success. At the same time, social media has deconstructed the closed corporate culture, creating a transparency that provides consumers with an inside look at a company’s guiding principles.

The rise of Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) has taken hold, and consumers are increasingly choosing to support companies that hold dear their own values, rather than simply produce a profit.

Here is a current snapshot of Consumer Sentiment, courtesy of Tim Sanders in Saving the World at Work:

-65% of Americans are willing to switch to brands that are associated with a good cause if the price and quality are relatively equal

-Two thirds of recent college graduates surveyed claim that they will not work for a company with a poor reputation for social responsibility

-Almost half of all consumers say they use the Internet to figure out if the products they buy are socially responsible

  • Read more about Believe in CSR? You’re in ‘Good’ Company in 2010
  • Ann Charles's blog

The technology that could save the planet

What if the technology we need to curb climate change turns out to be not a solar panel, smart grid or electric car battery but social media powered by cellphones, laptops and online networks like Facebook?

As I prepare to leave today for the climate negotiations in Copenhagen, I’m struck by–actually, flooded, overwhelmed, swamped and dizzied by–the sheer volume of user-generated content coming out of Copenhagen, much of it created by people in their 20s and 30s. Groups like 350.org and the Youth Climate...

  • Read more about The technology that could save the planet
  • Marc Gunther's blog

The End of the Barking Dog

What’s your opinion on the purpose of corporate philanthropy?

Is it an example of the powerful partnership that can be created between business and nonprofits?

Or is it simply about writing a check – and checking a box?

I mentioned in an earlier post on The Changebase that I recently attended the 2009 Net Impact Conference at Cornell University, and...

  • Read more about The End of the Barking Dog
  • Ashley Jablow's blog

Do we need a list of corporate responsibility lists?

As usual the fast approaching end of the year is bringing forward the typical slew of "best of" lists, though with a end-of-decade twist that is pushing the list-maniacs out there into overdrive. Of course there are the usual cultural lists - best album of the decade, best book of the year, best media moments, etc - but even in our own little world of corporate responsibility there has been a growing number of "best of" lists seeking to garner a little attention from the trend spotters out there.

For example, fresh in our inbox today was a notice about "the 100 ethics blogs every business student should read" put together by an outfit called onlinecourses.org. It's an eclectic mix with a tendency towards the more scholarly corners of the blogosphere. Some that it lists, like the "brain ethics" blog, or "mindhacks" sound kind of intriguing, and will take the intrepid business ethics reader quite far away from their usual stamping grounds. They even give us a mention, which I guess is why they told us about the list.

Another list, which came out a little earlier in the year, but is still generating quite a bit of attention is Chris Jarvis's "51 Great Sites for Corporate Social Responsibility and Sustainability". Chris is a fellow Torontonian who writes his own blog on corporate volunteering called Realizing Your Worth, and also published the top 51 (why 51 Chris?!) with the business magazine Fast Company. It's a great list of blogs, resource pages, and a top 10 'must-have sites on CSR' .

  • Read more about Do we need a list of corporate responsibility lists?
  • Crane and Matten's blog

Curating Sustainable Solutions

As I have said in previous posts, managing the stream of green communications info online is not easy. My attempts thus far have been the Green Communicators list on Twitter and the Green Communications bundle on Google Reader. They're not perfect, but they're where I go to get the news I need.

But that's the large end of the funnel (see crude artwork to the left). Once you have identified the stream of information coming in (although you're never really done, the stream must be constantly managed), how do you present it on the other end? What does the small end of the funnel look like?

Let's put this another way. For the sake of the argument, pretend that my two lists above are the complete and best sources for information on green communications (I know that's a big stretch, but stay with me). Even with that stream of information gathered in two places, it still represents 49 feeds and 128 twitterers. That's a lot for anyone to wade through, which would explain why only 16 people have subscribed to the Google Reader bundle and 35 people are following the Twitter list.

  • Read more about Curating Sustainable Solutions
  • Nathan Schock's blog

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