The Ecology of Commerce outlines the environmentally destructive aspects of many If Hawken is right, and he’s got a good track record, the environmental. The ecology of commerce: a declaration of sustainability / Paul Hawkenst ed. p. cm. . human systems to create a sustainable method of commerce. As hard. Paul Hawken, co-founder of Smith & Hawken, is an active environmentalist, entrepreneur and writer. In The Ecology of Commerce, Hawken proposes that.
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The Ecology of Commerce: A Declaration of Sustainability by Paul Hawken
The fact that the title of this book, The Ecology of Commercereads like an oxymoron illustrates hawkenn wide the gap has become between the natural world and our commercial lives.
Business believes that if it doesn’t continue to grow and instead cuts back and retreats, it will destroy itself.
Ecologists believe that if business continues its unabated expansion it will destroy the world around it. In this eloquent and visionary book, Paul Hawken describes a third way, a path that is inherently sustainable and restorative but which uses many of the historically effective organizational and market techniques of free enterprise.
Central to Hawken’s argument are two basic facts: These facts both mean that businesspeople must dedicate themselves to transforming commerce to a restorative undertaking. They simply have no other choice as we are exceeding the carrying capacity of the planet — the maximum level of eclogy an ecosystem can sustain.
The Ecology of Commerce: A Declaration of Sustainability
Creating a restorative economy means rethinking the fundamental purpose of business, according to Hawken. It is not simply a means of making money or a system of making and selling things. Making money is, on its own terms, totally meaningless, an insufficient pursuit for the complex and decaying world we live it.
It is merely the result of the present commercial system’s design and use. Business has three basic issues to face, Hawken says: That is, the harmful way it exploits natural resources; the excessive amounts of toxins and pollutants it produces and the excessive energy it consumes in the process; and the extraordinary wastes it leaves behind.
We must develop a system of commerce that is patterned according to basic ecological o. In nature, waste equals food, all growth is driven by solar energy, and the overall well-being of the system depends on diversity and thrives of difference. An ecological model of commerce would imply that all waste has value to other modes of production so that hawlen is either reclaimed, reused, or recycled.
It would depend not on carbon but chiefly on hydrogen and the sun for its energy.
The Ecology of Commerce by Paul Hawken
And it would be highly varied and specific to time and place. Because the restorative economy, as Hawken envisions it, inverts ingrained beliefs about how business functions, it may produce unusual changes in the economy.
As he shows with numerous examples and practical recommendations, the restorative economy will be one in which some businesses get smaller but hire more people, where money can be made by selling the absence of a product or service for instance, where public utilities sell efficiency rather than additional powerand where profits increase when productivity is lowered.
The drive to develop a restorative economy must come from businesses themselves, Hawken insists, for “no other institution in the modern world is powerful enough to foster the necessary changes. What is needed are not new government bureaucracies or legislative mandates but incentives that will redefine the basis on which companies make decisions hawen from short-sighted commercial gain to long-view ecological and commercial sustainability.
Copyright by Scott London.