Businesses encouraged to join sustainability programme
Press release from the Centre for Sustainable
Practice
July 4, 2012
Businesses encouraged to
join transformational sustainability
programme
Green growth thinking, leadership and opportunity are all part of the new ‘green growth economy’, and many businesses are already moving to more sustainable technologies and practices.
The Sustainable Practice 360 Programme helps organisations make the transition to greener operations, and has a new intake of businesses planned for October this year. The new cluster will include businesses from the Lakes District and Central Otago regions and the programme will be delivered through Otago Polytechnic’s Centre for Sustainable Practice.
Developed by Dr Barry Law and Chris Pickrill of The Sustainability Company, the Sustainable Practice360 Programme provides a set of connected and customised tools that allow businesses to collect data, identify issues and find the best ways of doing things – with transformational results.
“The
measure to manage approach allows people to assess exactly
what they’re working with in their business, what they can
change, how they can change it and where they can influence
others to make changes,” says Dr Law. “The current
global agenda is to establish better ways of conducting
business through green growth thinking, leadership,
sustainable practice and market opportunities. In this
context we show business how to change their behaviour
willingly and for good. We encourage businesses to take our
survey at www.thesustainabilitycompany.co.nz to
see just how they’re doing in this space – it’s quite
revealing.”
Throughout the 12 month programme of
education and implementation, businesses learn to reduce
their environmental footprint, establish higher levels of
social responsibility and achieve greater economic
efficiency.
Fluid Visual Communications Director, Tim Buckley, whose marketing, communications and design business is part of the original Sustainability360 cluster, says the programme has “changed our business.”
“It’s enabled us to align what we stand for with how we work and who we deal with. By understanding and working through this process, we’ve grown and improved our business. It’s deeply affected what we do and how we do it. Networks have opened up for us, we have driven better relationships right through our supply and delivery chain and, as a result, we are now more efficient and more capable than before,” he says.
The first workshop of the Sustainable Practice 360 Programme is to take place in Queenstown on Thursday 19 October. It costs $4000 plus GST or $2000 plus GST with a subsidy from New Zealand Trade and Enterprise for qualifying businesses.
The programme includes workshop participation for up to two staff members, up to five hours of one-on-one consultancy and a full set of customised tools for implementation.
Interested organisations are
encouraged to take the free survey at www.thesustainabilitycompany.co.nz to
see how their workplace shapes up.
ENDS