A shift in sustainable development: Understanding biodiversity net gain, hydrology, ecology, and landscape
by Helena Preston
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This article was written by Cory Skuldt, of recent SLR acqusition Corporate Citizenship. Corporate Citizenship provides ESG strategy, reporting, social and environmental impact and other sustainability consulting services to multi-national companies. Visit the Corporate Citizenship website to learn more.
While sustainability leaders have been steadily advancing circularity strategies, progress on fully implementing circularity at scale has not yet met expectations, invoking increasing concern about “pilot-washing” and a failure to execute.
Like greenwashing, pilot-washing refers to a company implying greater significance of sustainability-related activities than their impact actually warrants. The expectation from increasingly well-informed consumers and other stakeholders is that not only does a company demonstrate that it’s moving in the right direction, but that it’s demonstrating a rate of progress in line with the urgency of our environmental and social crises.
When the Ellen MacArthur Foundation launched the first economic report on circularity nearly a decade ago (in 2012 at the Davos World Economic Forum), it shone a spotlight on this challenge. Since then, circularity research, pilots and investment have been a focus for the responsible business community, but many argue the progress has not been fast enough to scale. A fully circular economy requires a massive shift in technologies, business models, designs and customer engagement strategies, that do take time to develop and refine – but a decade later, we should see more strong performance on circularity overall (beyond a pilot), and circular solutions that are accessible to more companies.
In our work with clients over the past year, we’ve found opportunities to harness circularity and embed it into a core ESG (and core business) strategy that drives value for the company. For example, through a materiality assessment with an intermediate packaging supplier, we uncovered silos that were preventing full execution of a potential competitive advantage. By better articulating the circular economy opportunity, and connecting those elements – both within the company and in how they connect to various customer roles – they could a) become the only company in the industry offering a fully closed-loop solution to its customers and b) decrease its own costs (along with customer costs) in the process of doing so. A regional leader said:
“I’m realising that if we invest in building these connections, we’ll be the only company that could go to [global petrochemical customer] and say – ‘Every drum I sell you, I’ll come take it back, I’ll regrind it into your new drum. Your recycled content will come from your own output in a fully closed-loop solution, and we’ll increase recycled content over time while reducing your costs per use.’”
Another leader pointed out that existing capabilities, initially developed purely in response to cost drivers and customer demand, could be reframed and refined to cement a leadership position on circularity, despite the company being fairly new to focused sustainability efforts:
“I’m starting to see that our ability to provide reconditioning services across our entire industrial product range is a phenomenal opportunity that we’re not taking full advantage of.”
Leaders saw that these opportunities for efficiency, growth and customer loyalty require “commitment from the customer, and a lot of communication”, representing a common challenge: while we continue to advance circular technologies – from recycling process to resale platforms to artificially intelligent material sorting – the real hurdles are in change management. To go from linear to circular, a business must rethink its fundamental mental models, calling into question:
This type of change, at its heart, is a leadership challenge – not an economic or technological one. When we work with clients who are ready to engage with that challenge – whether by making a bold commitment to circularity targets at scale, or just by dipping their toes in the water for the first time with a pilot that will truly be expanded when successful – we see an accelerated path to sustainability leadership. A few more examples in our recent client work:
If you are interested in how your company might accelerate progress on sustainability, please reach out today to discuss how we can embed circular strategies and impact measurement into a targeted area of your business, or your overall approach to ESG. In addition to the core services you’ll find on our website, we develop custom interactive training on circularity, and will support your teams on strategy, product development, business model innovation, and more.
We typically include a guest contributor article. This month, we suggest a few recent conversations we’ve conducted on resources and strategies related to scaling circularity:
by Helena Preston
by Ida Bailey
by Peter Polanowski, Megan Leahy Wright, Armin Buijs