Andy

Remit: inspire, share stories, stimulate, challenge, support, coach. Tools: experience of adventure, business, sustainability, enterprise, self-employment, creativity, success and failure Like: good conversation, wild places, slow food, cycling and surfing

New Year's Revolution

 

 

 

 

 

 

UK switch to low-carbon energy will cost £5,000 per person a year | Environment | guardian.co.uk. Prof David MacKay, the Cambridge based, straight talking energy academic, and author of the acclaimed ‘Without the hot air’ book on climate change, has released a 2050 carbon descent pathways calculator which shows that the additional, come-what-may cost of delivering a secure energy future will be around £100 per week, per household, for the next 40 or so years.

MacKay’s work begs the

important question  of ‘what’s going to give?’ if that much additional funding is needed. Seems to me that one of the most obvious steps is to accelerate the development of community-owned energy schemes that allow ISAs, pensions and other savings vehicles to be directly linked to local energy production, cutting out a) the overheads of the city, b) the compounded negative effects of short term thinking.

One thing’s for sure. We need to start planning for what a revolution in energy costs and supply would look like, even if it means that at a later date, we find – in a highly unlikely scenario – that we were OK all along. Failing to plan for a different future does bring the huge short term benefit of not needing to do anything now. It also brings the cost of increased impacts down the road. It’ll be on our watch.

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Wednesday, 28th December, 2011

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Buy an AK47 for someone you love this Christmas

Via Good.is, this video story is about social enterprise Fonderie47 who buy AK47s in Africa, decommission them and create jewellery from the parts.

With over millions of guns more than we need, there’s a long way to go. This is a good step in the

right direction.

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Wednesday, 23rd November, 2011

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Swarm speed

Swarmwise: What Is A Swarm? – Falkvinge on Infopolicy.

Here’s a great article that studies the way knowledge about swarms can be used to affect the way that organisations can harness awareness,

commitment and action to dramatically increase speed and effectiveness.

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Wednesday, 9th November, 2011

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Australian Senate passes carbon tax

 

 

 

 

Australian Senate passes carbon tax | Environment | guardian.co.uk.

Welsh girl Julia Gillard pushes through a brave piece of legislation against the odds, to give Australia a place at the leaders’ table, rather than the laggards’, as the world slowly faces up to the scale of change needed to make a real

difference.

Diolch yn fawr, Julia.

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Tuesday, 8th November, 2011

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Mission Zero: a tribute to Ray Anderson

 

 

 

Ray Anderson, sustainable business pioneer, dies aged 77 | Guardian Sustainable Business | guardian.co.uk.

John Elkington, Chair of Volans, co-founder of SustainAbility and creator of the ‘triple bottom line’, pays a moving tribute to Ray Anderson the driving force behind the transformation of Interface from being ‘just a carpet’ company to being, by head and shoulders, the best example of what the future of business needs to look like.

Ray’s energy was fired by pragmatism and passion as well as the need to make the profits that would continue to drive change.

Although Ray Anderson has passed, Mission Zero remains, and can be achieved in his memory.

Drive jobs, not cars

 

 

 

Streetsblog.net » Streets Built For Bikes and Pedestrians Also Yield More Jobs.

A study published in the US in June 2011 showed how designing streets around bike use generated more jobs per dollar than if the money was spent on building roads. Santa Cruz, California’s road focused project produced 5 jobs per $1m spent, whereas a bike focused project in Baltimore generated 15 for the same investment.

Getting common sense to become common practice has never been easier than is now, as costs and resource limitations become more evident.

Here’s a little Do. Send a link to your elected representative, suggesting that they can become heroes for creating jobs.

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Sunday, 10th July, 2011

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Shareable: The Gen Y Guide to Collaborative Consumption

Shareable report on an undercurrent of alternatives to mass consumerism is bubbling up through the concrete of old models that are past their sell by date. Grubly, Eat With Me and Housefed are the Airbnb for meals, diners can use them to find or host a meal in their neighbourhood, connect to others and avoid the need to be home alone. Local Harvest is a directory of CSAs and other sustainable food sources, and -Neighborhood Fruit helps people find or offer free fruit to your neighbors with a website and an iPhone app.

There’s some excitement in Do-land, with significant projects to develop CSAs and horticulture skills confirmed or launching soon, as well as an ambitious project to make Cardiff a Sustainable Food City.

via Shareable: The Gen Y Guide to Collaborative Consumption.

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Saturday, 9th July, 2011

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Serving the world

“We cannot of course save the world, because we do not have authority over its parts. We can serve the world though. This is everyone’s calling; to lead a life that helps.” Barry Lopez

The team at World Cafe have developed a well-respected, practical set of tools to help people bring communities of interest together through constructive conversations. Have a look at their Tool Kit for more resources and ideas.

Also, if these ideas are new to you, check out the practices of Open Space, which add value to conversations in a different, complimentary way.

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Monday, 4th July, 2011

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Afraid to make a difference?

It’s all too easy to forget about the power that fear has when it comes down to the Art of Do – the space we live in when we choose to make things happen rather than stay safe in the security of believing that if we do nothing, risk will disappear.

A few years ago, a swapped skills with a wonderful artist, John Skinner who, in sharing a lovely sketch from the comedian Eddie Izzard in which Mr Izzard describes the ‘Cycle of Style’ – a loop of fashion that starts with ‘looking like a dickhead’ before gradually moving to ‘average’ before heading around to ‘fashionable’, ‘groovy’ and ‘really hip and groovy’, before nudging back over the line to ‘looking like a dickhead’ – pointing out that the line between being a hero or a zero is micro-thin and anyone pushing the limits risks slipping over the line from time to time.

Here’s something strange: the worst thing that usually happens when we try something new or challenging, and fail, is that we get to look silly for a few days – nothing more, nothing worse. In most workplaces, death doesn’t stalk your mistakes, ready to pounce – it doesn’t need to to, as our fragile egos stop us doing anything new. We worry about the opinions of people who would rather we fail than succeed (else we make them look like losers). Looking silly now again is OK, and most people don’t notice anyway.

So here’s a Little Do. Next time you’re stuck, reflect on Seth Godin’s questions about which of these four are getting in the way:

  1. You don’t know what to do
  2. You don’t know how to do it
  3. You don’t have the authority or the resources to do it
  4. You’re afraid

As he says, ‘stuck is a state of mind’, and like it or not, we’re in charge of how we think.

via Seths Blog: Which of the four are getting in the way?.

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Saturday, 11th June, 2011

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Calling time on ‘I’ll start tomorrow’.

The largest ever annual emissions of carbon, published today in the Guardian, put mankind dangerously close a pathway that will lead to temperature rises of drastic scale.

Lord Nick Stern: ”These figures indicate that [emissions] are now close to being back on a ‘business as usual’ path. According to the [Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change's] projections, such a path … would mean around a 50% chance of a rise in global average temperature of more than 4C by 2100,” he said.

“Such warming would disrupt the lives and livelihoods of hundreds of millions of people across the planet, leading to widespread mass migration and conflict. That is a risk any sane person would seek to drastically reduce.”

Faith Birol, Chair of the International Energy Agency said disaster could yet be averted, if governments heed the warning. “If we have bold, decisive and urgent action, very soon, we still have a chance of succeeding,” he said.

Let’s call time on fear and procrastination, and the idea that it’ll all be OK is someone pulls it together. It’s time to kick into gear. Get the first 1% of your employees up to speed by the end of this year, and double it next. Douse them with innovation juice, then stand back. There will be some serious conversations about catalysing change at Fforest this year, sparked by the care, compassion and insight of 100 of the best people I’ll ever meet.

via Worst ever carbon emissions leave climate on the brink | Environment | The Guardian

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Sunday, 29th May, 2011

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