• Skip to main content
  • Skip to footer

Jim Harris

  • About & Books ▼
    • Blindsided
    • The Learning Paradox
    • The 100 Best Companies to Work for in Canada
  • Speaking & Consulting ▼
    • Disruptive Innovation Speaker
    • Digital Transformation Speaker
    • Jim Harris – Virtual Keynote Speaker
    • Blockchain Speaker
    • Vuca Speaker
    • Business Speaker
    • Leadership Speaking
    • Disruptive Innovation Info
  • Videos & Media ▼
    • Articles
    • Technology
    • News
    • Testimonials
  • Contact Jim

sustainability

Pre-empting the energy shockwave

March 26, 2012 By Jim Harris

The inevitable long-term rise of energy prices poses a serious risk to corporate profitability. A Deloitte study, released at the World Economic Forum in Davos in 2009, showed that even modest 3.5 per cent year-over-year increases in energy and resource input costs could wipe out the profitability of a vast number of North American firms.

To put 3.5 per cent increases into perspective: The price of oil was $10 a barrel in 1999 and ran up to $147 in 2008 – that represented a 40% annual compounded increase.

wef_sustainability

Jeff Rubin, the former chief economist of CIBC World Markets, predicts oil will hit $225 a barrel in 2012. Heightened tensions with Iran, the fourth largest oil producing country worldwide, could be the catalyst for the run up in oil prices.

A risk for Canadian manufacturers is that the Canadian dollar has become a petro dollar. When the price of oil rose to $147 a barrel, the Canadian dollar hit its highest point in decades against the U.S. dollar. And that in turn hit Canadian exporters hard.

How can exporters mitigate the risk of a high Canadian dollar? One way is by becoming more energy efficient, lowering the cost of production. Another, of course, is through hedging against a rising Canadian dollar through currency swaps.

Energy efficiency is a powerful profit driver and risk mitigation strategy. Walmart is spending $500 million a year on fuel and energy efficiency projects with paybacks of four years or less. During the recession, the company’s sustainability spending didn’t decrease by once cent. Why? Because it’s about increasing profit and mitigating risk.

Walmart’s sustainability focus, which began in 2005, is now driving more than $500 million to the bottom line every year. Given that the company works on three per cent net profits, it would require $16.5 billion of top line sales to achieve the same profitability. So Walmart has become a fiscal convert to going green.

Sears Canada just completed a $4.5 million LED lighting retrofit. The project has a 13-month payback. Where, in a down market, can you get a one year payback?

Electricity prices in Ontario will be rising significantly in the near term: Simply applying the HST to electricity will drive up the price.

In North American, a staggering 23 per cent of electricity is used simply for lighting, and this consumption can be reduced by more than 85 per cent using LEDs. Lighting retrofits for companies typically have a pay back of one year.

Remember the Y2K crisis? Companies worked feverishly to re-write old mainframe software that ran their operations. But there were a limited number of COBOL programmers with the depth of knowledge required to solve the problem. Their average hourly rates spiked as demand for their specialized services rose as the year 2000 approached.

There will be a similar stampede through a very narrow opening when the price of oil spikes. Companies beginning to focus on energy and fuel efficiency once oil hits $225 a barrel will have to pay significant premiums for bona fide energy efficiency experts – or they will hire Johnny-come-lately contractors who don’t have the necessary depth of knowledge or experience to achieve the promised savings. Either way, those who are late to the game will pay for it.

Every Chief Risk Officer and CFO who is not aggressively pursuing energy and fuel efficiency is not fulfilling their mandate of increasing profit and mitigating risk.

Filed Under: Authored Articles, News Tagged With: energy costs, energy efficiency, fuel efficiency, risk management, sears canada, sustainability, Wal-Mart

How economics drive green adoption more than guilt

July 6, 2011 By Jim Harris

The Globe and Mail’s Leading Thinkers series on Corporate Responsibility video features Jim talking on why economics is a far greater driver of sustainability than guilt. See http://bit.ly/ltG909
Two videos that follow it are:
1) Energy efficiency mitigates the risk of rising energy prices http://bit.ly/l9h1iF
2) Shifting the debate from cutting carbon to cutting cost http://bit.ly/jdtpQW

Filed Under: Magazine Articles Tagged With: Corporate Responsibility, Economics, Globe and Mail, Green, jim harris, Leading Thinkers, sustainability

Getting employees involved is key to sustainability

December 11, 2009 By Jim Harris

So far, I have focused on why companies should go green; the compelling economic and marketing forces driving organizations to adopt sustainability initiatives. This is one strategy on how to go green.

Read more: http://bit.ly/6Fhs8w

Filed Under: Magazine Articles Tagged With: Adam Werbach, Lee Scott, PSP, sustainability, Wal-Mart

Sustainability can be driven by profitability

November 27, 2009 By Jim Harris

A small minority of environmentalists believe profit and sustainability should never appear in the same sentence. Once in a while I get an email from an environmentalist, criticizing my focus in these columns on how going green is the best thing ever for the bottom line.

Read more: http://bit.ly/e9YLWr

Filed Under: Magazine Articles Tagged With: environmentalist, loblaw, plastic bags, profitability, sustainability, toronto

Retail Giant finds its Green Religion

October 19, 2009 By Jim Harris

Wal-Mart launched its sustainability initiatives in 2005. I attended a quarterly sustainability meeting led by then-CEO Lee Scott in Bentonville, Ark., at the company’s headquarters.

Read more: http://bit.ly/8fO19U

Filed Under: Magazine Articles Tagged With: environment, going green, sustainability, Wal-Mart

Intel to open LEED certified building in Israel

June 12, 2009 By Jim Harris

Intel in Haifa

By: Jordana Levine

After much debate and analysis, Intel is preparing to open its first green-registered building.[1]  The research and development building in Haifa, Israel will cost $600,000 of green investments, which will be paid off in just three years.[2]

The building will follow the Leadership in Energy and Environmental (LEED) rating system, which is a voluntary, consensus-based standard to develop sustainable and efficient buildings.[3]  The Intel building is receiving the LEED certification for a variety of technologies that the building is being outfitted with; it will have an environmentally friendly construction process with green materials, natural lighting via an internal patio that distributes light from an atrium, efficient electricity and air conditioning and an irrigation system that uses recycled water only.[4]  It is set to open in early in 2010.[5]

Intel hopes that the building in Haifa will lead to more LEED certified office buildings and, ultimately, to Intel’s first LEED certified Fab.  A Fab is a semiconductor fabrication plant, meaning it is a factory that fabricates designs for other companies to use as well.[6]

Although Intel has reduced its overall needs for freshwater in the long run, the corporation’s water consumption actually rose by four percent between 2007 and 2008.  Intel says this increase is probably because of production growth and the complexity of its new manufacturing processes, which require more water.[7]  Although some countries can withstand this strain on their freshwater supply, it could be detrimental to Israel’s fragile water supply, which has to be monitored carefully as it is.

Overall, Intel cut its greenhouse gas emission by 27 percent in 2008, and the company’s Corporate Responsibility Report aims to decrease its carbon footprint by 20 percent from 2007 until 2012.  Intel is a strong supporter of green power, having bought over 1 billion kWh of green power each year to fulfill 47 percent of the company’s electricity needs; Intel also built the first solar installations.[8]

In 2009, Intel will invest more than $5 million on over 30 projects to save a minimum of 30 million kWh of electricity each year.  The corporation has already targeted energy efficiency and conservation since 2001, saving Intel more than $50 million and 500 million kWh.[9]

1  Kloosterman, Karin.  “Intel Makes a Green Debut in Haifa, Israel.”  TreeHugger.  8 Dec 2006.  http://www.treehugger.com/files/2006/12/intel_makes_a_g.php
2  Solomon, Stephen.  “Intel Saves Air and Money.” Scientific American – Earth 3.0: 18.5, 2008.
3  Kloosterman, Karin.  “Intel Makes a Green Debut.”
4  “Intel’s First Green Building.”  http://www.intel.com/cd/corporate/europe/emea/eng/339775.htm
5  “Intel Cuts Emissions by 27% in 2008.”  Environmental Leader.  21 May 2009.  http://www.environmentalleader.com/2009/05/21/intel-cuts-emissions-by-27-in-2008/
6  “Intel’s First Green Building.”
7  “Intel Cuts Emissions.”
8  “Intel Cuts Emissions.”
9  Ibid.

Filed Under: Magazine Articles Tagged With: building, Electricity, energy efficiency, Fab, Greenhouse Gases, investment, LEED, sustainability, water

  • « Go to Previous Page
  • Go to page 1
  • Go to page 2

Footer

Jim Harris
Focusing on disruptive innovation, digital transformation, strategic planning with executive teams and boards & leadership.


#1 International Bestselling Author, Management Consultant, Keynote Speaker and Strategic Planning Facilitator.
Boost the bottom line of your business with expert advice from CURRENT Organization, a professional innovation consultant based business in Toronto, Ontario.
  • LinkedIn Icon
  • Twitter
  • You-Tube Icon
  • Facebook Icon

Copyright © 2022 · News Pro On Genesis Framework · Privacy Policy WordPress · Log in