James Watson: Welcome from the chair

In this video, James Watson, Consulting Editor at the Economist Intelligence Unit, gives the welcoming address to open The Sustainable Business Summit 2011.

Profitable responsibility - Evan Thomas

As part of The Sustainable Business Summit 2011, Evan Thomas, Executive Vice-president at Manna Energy, explained how he embarked on a successful for-profit social enterprise, and how doing good can also be good business.

Giving people what they want

This panel, part of The Sustainable Business Summit, explored the relationship between digital communication and sustainable business, focusing on the rise of the concerned consumer and on the implications on the accountability of the digital age.

Greener Britain debate

In this video, a panel of experts looked at how exciting technological innovations are impacting the areas of emissions reduction, as developed countries strive to meet national and international climate change mitigation targets.

Sylvia Earle at The Economist's World Oceans Summit 2012

Sylvia Earle, Explorer-in-Residence, National Geographic Society on World Oceans Summit

CB Richard Ellis’s portfolio focus

Buildings account for around 40% of the world’s energy use. So for a real estate management company with a large, global portfolio of buildings, the focus of attention when it comes to energy reduction is outside its own operations.

To promote energy efficiency, CB Richard Ellis works closely with clients. “Our greatest opportunity is to influence people for whom we manage space or the corporations for whom we work,” says David Pogue, the company’s national director of sustainability for institutional and corporate services.

GE looks for treasure

When evaluating the rationale for identifying energy savings in industrial operations, Gretchen Hancock, General Electric’s project manager for corporate environmental programmes, suggests listening to the sounds a factory makes when it is not operational. “You hear compressed air leaking and you hear pumps running,” she says. If no revenue is being generated, those noises could also be described as the sound of money being wasted.

Saving the world’s seventh largest economy

These are the most challenging times in our history. With a thirst for higher living standards and the need to support a global population set to hit 9bn by mid-century, we are overwhelming nature.

Becoming socially sustainable

There is a growing argument that businesses should pay greater attention to their social impact

Valuing nature’s water infrastructure

Our economic growth agendas of today risk playing dice with poverty reduction and prosperity if water risks continue to go unrecognised, argues Mark Smith, director of the IUCN Global Water Programme.

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