Friday, 30 March 2012

Vital signs for 2012

WorldWatch Institute published a report tracking key trends in the environment, agriculture, energy, society, and the economy in 2012. The main trends are:

"From organic farming to high-speed rail to wind power, Vital Signs 2012 documents 24 trends that are shaping our future in concise analysis and clear tables and graphs. This nineteenth volume of the Worldwatch Institute series demonstrates that despite a number of positive developments, much remains to be done to get the planet on a more sustainable track. Findings from this collection include:

Global energy intensity rose 1.35 percent in 2010—a rare exception to a long-term positive trend that saw energy intensity drop by just over 20 percent from 1981 to 2010.

In 2010, global oil consumption reached an all-time high of 87.4 million barrels. At 37 percent of primary energy use, it remains the largest single source of energy, though its share has declined for 11 consecutive years.

Fossil fuel consumption subsidies fell 44 percent in 2009, to $312 billion—reflecting changes in international energy prices rather than a change in policies.

Continuing its rapid ascent, installed global wind power capacity increased 24 percent to 197,000 megawattsin 2010—nine times as much as a decade ago.

Solar photovoltaic generating capacity grew even faster. The 16,700 megawatts that were newly installed in 2010 surpasses the total PV capacity that was in place in 2008.

The production of passenger cars and light trucks reached a new peak in 2010, surging from 60 million to 74.7 million.

High-speed rail lines expanded from 10,700 kilometers in 2009 to almost 17,000 kilometers in 2011. High-speed trips accounted for 7 percent of all rail passenger travel in 2010.

Global biofuel production increased by 17 percent in 2010 to reach an all-time high of 105 billion liters. Rising portions of the U.S. corn harvest and Brazil’s sugarcane production are turned into ethanol—giving rise to fears of increasing food and fuel trade-offs.

Organic farming methods were used on 37.2 million hectares worldwide in 2009. This represents a 150 percent increase since 2000, yet the organic area amounts to just 0.85 percent of global agricultural land.

Per capita meat consumption in the developing world doubled to 32 kilograms over the past quarter-century, but this is still far below consumption levels in the industrial world.

Fish farming has increased some 50-fold since the 1950s and now accounts for 40 percent of total fish catch.

The number of overweight people age 15 or older worldwide jumped 25 percent since 2002, to 1.93 billion."

New mechanisms for social contracting, cooperation and control

A very interesting and relevant article from Economist on new ways of social contracting, cooperation and control that are being developed to enable alternative models of value provision through social innovation in a world of austerity or perhaps in a world of alternative wealth.

Thursday, 29 March 2012

New business models in Collaborative Consumption

An interesting presentation from Rachel Botsman from March 2012 event at Nesta on New business models in Collaborative Consumption. It largerly demonstrates the role of the Internet in enabling new ways of creating services and providing access to products that have already being produced and often sold to final consumers, but the use time of which is very low. Thus these models utlise what Rachel calls indling capacity of products, e.g. cars, DIY tools, etc.

Sunday, 25 March 2012

European Consumer Day 2012

On March 15 European Consumer Day 2012 - Sustainable consumption in a time of crisis -  was held in Copenhagen. It demonstrated that companies still have hard time defining what sustainable consumption means for their business models and future operations and that formal institutions for leading consumer protection and sustainable consumption issues are stuck in defining sustainable consumption as a matter of eco-labelling. This is the progress we have reached in 20 years since Rio World Summit in 1992. Presentations from the workshop can be found here.

Monday, 12 March 2012

Sharing movement

How big can it be and what does it mean for mainstream businesses?

A new report from Latitude on Sharing