Category Archives: comment

… on st georges day

Today being St Georges day I thought some typically english and traditional post would be in order, but that has relevance to our sector and the themes of sustainability.

I recently  heard a reading of Elliots East Coker, which may be a troubled peice of literature but the opening few lines stuck in my head:

In my beginning is my end. In succession
Houses rise and fall, crumble, are extended,
Are removed, destroyed, restored, or in their place
Is an open field, or a factory, or a by-pass.
Old stone to new building, old timber to new fires,
Old fires to ashes, and ashes to the earth
Which is already flesh, fur and faeces,
Bone of man and beast, cornstalk and leaf.
Houses live and die: there is a time for building
And a time for living and for generation
And a time for the wind to break the loosened pane
And to shake the wainscot where the field-mouse trots
And to shake the tattered arras woven with a silent motto

Simon Jenkins, along with commentors  on Comment is Free, has interesting views on this peice, not least on East Coker in Somerset  “Here the southern tip of England’s great limestone scar peters out round the rolling flanks of Ham Hill, whose stone is the colour of biscuit sprinkled with gold, able to trap sunlight in day and release it at dusk. Ham is the loveliest stone in England, rendering the Somerset/Dorset borders a magic place hovering at the end of the rainbow. The rainbow touches in particular the walls of East Coker”

earth day blues

Wear BLUE for Earth Day 2008 to VOTE for No Coal

Want to stop global warming? Wear BLUE for Earth Day 2008!

Join millions of people around the world who will be wearing BLUE to signify their vote for NO COAL.

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new sustainability forum

I really should promote Phil’s new sustainability forum at Building.  There is a danger of being awash with forums and blogs and comments, but the caliber of those registered so far gives this forum much promise.

Now trying to sort out the RSS feed from the forum into my igoogle homepage, and wondering how long before twittering tweets appear within the sustainability question section.

Good luck Phil and team …

Voom or Veggie ?

Sounds like it was fun at the climate-change conference at Yale University on Friday when California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger and Rajendra K. Pachauri, the head of the Nobel prize-winning Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, squared up on just how to tackle global warming.

Voom and technology says Arnie, Veggie and lifestyle change says Rajendra.

Just about sums it up – I hear the same arguments and dicussions in most sustainability events.  Not quite in the style of how Arnie put it though “environmentalists were no fun, like prohibitionists at a fraternity party”

Gary Braash

Following links from the Eco City 2008 site I have been browsing through the stunning environmental pictures of Gary Braash.  From his website:

Gary Braasch photographs environmental issues and conservation, nature, biodiversity, ecosystems, field science, and climate change in stock photos and assignments. Pictures of landscape, patterns, forests, Antarctica, the Arctic, global warming, cities and travel destinations are used by publications worldwide. Nature photos include flora and fauna, plants, animals, birds and insects. His photography grows from a deeply felt connection with nature and an ardent conservation ethic.

On landscape I see a resemblence to Galen Rowell but its the Cities and Environmental images that convey our impact on the earth.

profit from sustainability?

Is there profit to be made from sustainability is a question I am often asked at sustainability events, presentations and workshops. It has cropped up again today on publicity for the excellent Think 08 event next month.

In some ways the question misses the point on what sustainability is about – ie the triple bottom line of economic, social and environmental sustainability – where profit is a key element of economic sustainablity.

Within our industry if we could really move from lowest price thinking (ie meaning competition is on profit levels), start moving to ringfenced profits, then we can start to focus on the other two ‘bottom lines” with more vigour. Allowing real profits through the supply chain would have the same affect. Energies applied to trying to make a project profitable can be applied to environmental and social sustainability issues, whilst the project players remain economically sustainable.

Really tackling the 30% or so waste within our sector, (waste in time, costs, materials and most importantly management energy), would more than pay for sustainability improvements whilst allowing a profitable, viable and economically sustainable industry.  For example, recent on-site studies have shown the true costs of skips to be £1300 or so.  One medium size contractor I was working with recently used on average 12 skips a week across 20 projects.  Do the math, as they say!

I often quote Yvon Chouinard – a mountaineering and eco hero of mine – founder of Patagonia clothing, who says that “every time I have done the right thing for the planet I have made a profit…even if the right thing cost twice as much”. Of course it needs the appropriately correct organisational ethos in place to achieve this. (see Let My People Go Surfing: The Education of a Reluctant Businessman for inspiration)

Take a look this review extract of Let my people go surfing:

Yvon Chouinard is one of the most important business leaders around today because he’s made a values-lead business highly profitable. Any aspring business leader (and, more importantly, those already running businesses) should be forced to read this. It’s the future.

So yes, there is profit in sustainability – currently, we cannot see it for the barriers and blinkers within the baggage we carry.  We cannot fix todays problems with the same thinking that created the problems.

whats no longer impossible ?

Read an interesting post at Worldchanging this morning regarding what is now possible and even essential that was once thought impossible. The post asked the question on a generic sustainability level at a Green Festival event.

It got me thinking though – what in the built environment is now feasible, possible or down right essential that a few years ago was deemed impossible?

Answers on a postcard.

Time to get interactive – so a call to all fellow bloggers (Mel, Phil, Pam, Casey, Mark ) syndicated blogs ( eg Eco City and friends at  Byoblue) and all the hundreds of readers out there… whats your ‘was impossible’ story?

I will add mine to the end of the comments.

on bio fuels and RTFO

George Monbiot writing in todays Guardian

Biofuels are a crime against humanity …I am sorely tempted to write another column about biofuels. From this morning all sellers of transport fuel in the United Kingdom will be obliged to mix it with ethanol or biodiesel made from crops. The World Bank points out that “the grain required to fill the tank of a sports utility vehicle with ethanol … could feed one person for a year”. This year global stockpiles of cereals will decline by around 53m tonnes; this gives you a rough idea of the size of the hunger gap. The production of biofuels will consume almost 100m tonnes, which suggests that they are directly responsible for the current crisis.

So what does this mean for heating and CHP systems that are bio-fuel based? (eg Hanham Hall, and I would guess many of the other eco town and challenge proposals). Is it correct to provide capital grants to kick start more bio-energy building initiatives? I will let others comment on the technical issues … but from a ‘soul’ or a fit for planet approach this would appear to be a cul de sac with very dangerous consequences.

isite radar for 14 april

Phil has mentioned podcasts recently – just as I was to recommend the Guardian Environment Weekly podast. Listened to the last two on the car journey home last night, useful interviews with Brain Paddick and Ken Livingston. Next week plans an interview with Boris Johnson (all of whom are apparently standing for Mayor of London – or somewhere down south – on a green election !)  Also an item on Transition Towns – which Brian admits to not having heard of- and a useful round up of enviro news

Over at WorldChanging is an article on ZeroFootprint Cities – an initiative to to link the citizens of the world’s cities around software that combines an environmental footprint calculator, linked to social networking and business intelligence tools. The idea has the backing of Ken Livingston, chair of the C40 Cities Group

Also at WorldChanging: Intelligent Green Buildings Informative article  on linking intelligent buildings into a smart energy grid.

For a few days I  have been meaning to recommend heat monitors are a no brainer from Casey over at Carbonlimited.  Nice simple ideas like this are so important.

isite radar for april 08

On my radar today:

Low carbon uk

– a New Scientist / Arup online discussion forum

Your computer chip could warm your home

– a medium size data center could heat 70 homes

Ecotowns are not the answer to climate change or housing needs

Reducing the carbon footprint of the existing built environment must take priority. The government must focus its climate-change agenda on Britain’s cities precisely because they are the most prolific polluters. This should be a Guardian response against Simon Jenkins article crticising eco-homes – can no one be found to defend Eco Homes?

Companies will have to tell all on carbon emissions

All quoted companies will be forced to detail carbon emissions in their annual reports after the Government caved in to backbench pressure. What will this mean for construction and facilities management organisations?

Don’t blame the equipment

Can lessons be learned about training needs from the fiasco of Terminal 5’s opening?…the sophistication of the baggage-handling system – described by BAA as one of the most advanced in the world – surely emphasises messages about the importance of human capital.