Ethical Pulse - from the Ethical Junction membership

Posts Tagged ‘careers’

Cotton On! A One Day Conference

Thursday, April 16th, 2009

Saturday 9th May 2009, World Fairtrade Day
Council House, College Green, Bristol

Cost
£12 full / £8 concessions, including lunch

how to book:
Tickets are sold as a product on the Bishopston Trading Company website. Please go to this link to make your booking > > >

A registration form and further details will be sent to you by email.

Programme

9.30 Registration and refreshments

10.00 Introduction and welcome

Key issues for the day – Lucy Siegle

10.15 Cotton Complexities -  David Hiatt, MD Howies

10.30 Main case study from Mali- Hannah Durrant, Oxfam

10.45 Small, local, sustainable – Carolyn Whitwell, Bishopston Trading

11.0 Coffee and refreshments

11.30 Workshop choice 1

  1.  Is Fairtrade enough? – Vanessa Parr (FT Foundation), Claire Durkin (BERR/DFID)
  2. Organic – myths and realities – Robin Maynard (Soil Association), Simon Ferrigno (PAN) and Damien san Filippo (Organic Exchange)
  3. From Plant to Product – Sam Mayer (Labour Behind the Label), Monica Philbrick (Traidcraft), Gillian Lipton (Monsoon)
  4. Ethical design – Abi Petit, (Gossypium), Chris Vandrill (Howies) and Tamsin Blanchard(Ethical Fashion forum), contributors

12.45 Lunch – Fairtrade, local and Organic buffet

1.30 Workshop choice 2

2.45 Coffee

3.0 Plenary debate with expert panel, chaired by Barbara Crowther, Fairtrade Foundation

3.50 Speed Actionning – like dating, but with positive action!

4.25 Evaluation and depart

How the recession is affecting environmental careers

Monday, April 13th, 2009

“This is the moment when we must come together to save this planet. Let
us resolve that we will not leave our children a world where the oceans
rise and famine spreads and terrible storms devastate our lands.”
President Barrack Obama spoke with
concern about the future of our planet calling for immediate action to
be taken to secure a sustainable future for the next generation. This
article identifies the impact the global recession is having on the
environmental industry and how environmental professionals may help to
bring us out of the current economic downturn.

The recession has been called the ‘downside of gloablisation’ as the crisis began in the United States, the most powerful nation in the world; a knock-on effect was seen in all the major economies. The collapse of global giants such as Lehman Brothers, Wachovia, Washington Mutual and other household names has seen the US unemployment figure rise to above 7%, with over 10 million Americans out of work.

Despite the obvious effect on many individuals one of the most unpredictable effects will be that of job losses across the globe.  The US saw 524,000 job cuts in December 2008 alone.

Across the UK we have also seen substantial job cuts and many environmental initiatives and developments ‘put on hold’ or abandoned. January saw Boris Johnson, Mayor of London of the Greater London Authority (GLA), cancelled the Green Homes Service, a scheme committed to insulation and renewable energy (such as wind power), in homes. This would have created many green roles in and around the London area. The GLA also announced a further £10 million project cut to the London Cycle Network Plus, which looked to improving the safety of cyclists and encouraging cycling in an effort to reduce carbon emissions.

The ‘restructuring’ City Hall project was put on hold with no less than 50 jobs being lost in the cost minimization process. Protests over potential redundancies have come from the Green Party, however these cuts look imminent and it is not only the GLA who are tightening their purse strings and consequentially trimming back their environmental spend.  

WRAP – Waste Resources Action Programme – is a government advisory body that provides resource efficiency advice for businesses and general households and is now to become the only body to deliver Government funded recycling and waste programmes. Businesses will feel an impact from this change as 30% of their funding is being cut from £59m to £43.2m alongside 31 redundancies made this year already and with the expansion, supposedly making it easier for businesses and individuals to access green advice and support, there may be additional job cuts, less services provided and a fall in the overall budget for WRAP.

The construction industry has been hit hard as the housing market has plummeted with 50,000 job losses in 2008 and more expected in 2009. A total of between 7.5% and 8% of the total workforce in the UK have lost their jobs in this market including a high number or environmental monitors, construction waste managers and land condition experts. The unseen effect here was that of the diminished cascade to the lower margin consultancies who support the various developments within construction and development, but for whom the previous abundance of work has dried up.

So how can we be positive about the environmental sector given all this gloom and doom?

In the current crisis it is hard to stay optimistic with only 21% of CEO’s confident their business will grow. The decrease in confidence has changed attitudes to do with the environment, now less than 1 in 10 CEO’s worry about diminishing natural resources and fail to put the issue high on the agenda. Sir Stuart Rose, M&S executive chairman, however insists that green remains high on the agenda. His Plan A is award winning and there is evidence showing that CSR is on an upturn as many more firms instigate their push towards the environment and energy improvements; RBS, Tarmac, Co-Op and Samsung are just some of the large corporates that see the crisis as an opportunity to focus on CSR and grow their business, establishing new positions in their markets above their competitors.

Allen & York Business Manager Joe Heppenstall said, “It is no longer the altruists that are telling people about their ‘Sustainable Strategy’ its becoming more and more common place in the boardroom. By no means is everything looking gloomy!”

Remaining optimistic is difficult but there is evidence that careers in the environmental sector are showing some elasticity and could drive new economic growth. Careers including ecologists, hydrologists, environmental chemists are expected to grow 25% over the next decade – basically jobs that are required and continue in demand when there is no extra discretionary money to spend.

Construction roles may have been reduced but this reduction is being counteracted by huge demand for climate change and carbon-reduction services as the Government introduces its’ low-carbon strategy to create a new green economy to pull us out of the recession and work towards a sustainable future.

Plans have been announced by the Mayor of London that 15,000 jobs could be created in an effort to cut energy and tackle climate change. Targets have been set in place of reducing London’s carbon emissions by 60%, contributing £600m to London’s economy by 2025 and being established as a low carbon hub. Green collar jobs would play an important role therefore employing green professionals would gain a company the best long-term value out of their investment.

The NHS announced a major campaign to reduce their carbon footprint, currently employing one and a half million people, in-house and contracted environmental professionals will lead the campaign. With low carbon targets to achieve and campaigns in place, the new global low carbon economy is worth £3 trillion employing 880,000 people in the UK.

The latter comes under the term the ‘green new deal’ which means spending money to stimulate the use of ‘green technology’ such as renewable energy and public transport to create jobs, environmental preservation and economic upturn.

The UN have been in talks proposing ‘a global green new deal’ to be presented at the G20 where economic stimuli of all countries are expected to devote billions of public spending to green projects. The US economic stimulus has amounted to more than $2,800 bn with around $430 bn (15%) going to be spent on green measures. The UK is only allocating £535 million (7%) of their economic stimulus which is said to be too small with MP’s suggesting the Treasury should spend £11 bn on green stimulus measures as this would lead to net job creation, cut emissions and improve energy security.

Greenpeace suggested that if £5 bn was invested in energy efficiency measures, 55,000 jobs could be created. Green job creation would range from the science behind clean energy systems to their physical installation including every function in between.

EU diplomats have viewed the election of President Barack Obama as the most positive change in the US as Obama commits the US to cut emissions 16% by 2020 and 80% by 2050. Obama also plans to spend billions of dollars on renewable energy. The Government in the UK has proposed for the creation of the Office for Renewable Energy Deployment to deliver targets of sourcing 15% of the UK’s energy by 2020. Governments are committing to energy efficiency projects as they are labour intensive creating construction sector jobs, which have been worst hit, energy sector jobs, reducing energy use, producing cost savings, a sustainable future and most importantly it is the best route to economic recovery.

Joe Heppenstall summed up the situation saying, “Lets face it, the US needs a boost and if building a better, bigger environmental industry is what Obama brings then good for them. In terms of the UK we have a great industry and for us it’s about how we adapt to these times in both the Public and Private Sector and what we can do to change in the face of the market conditions.”  He went on to say that “The consultants in the UK are some of the best in the world and have a habit of being able to switch strategy to meet demand through retraining, recruiting new skills and refocus on sectors that are very much alive. Similarly the blue chip organizations are recognizing that the green agenda will no away.”

The financial crisis has had large implications on the environment industry but at the same time created huge economic, social and environmental benefits likely to arise from combating climate change and pollution, generating many varied opportunities.

**ENDS**

Notes to the editor:

About Allen & York:
A&Y have established a market leading presence in Sustainable Environmental, Health & Safety, Planning and Energy by continually striving to be not just effective, but the best in their field. With worldwide experience of specialist recruitment knowledge, their results speak for themselves. Allen & York’s role is to take the hassle and uncertainty out of the recruitment process whilst at the same time freeing their client’s time to continue doing what they do best. As standard, Allen & York offer a bespoke, cost-effective service that is backed up by continuing commitment to ethical practice and professional excellence. www.allen-york.com

Retreat to Advance

Saturday, September 13th, 2008

A great opportunity to take time out to develop more confidence, energy and effectiveness in your business development

10% off for EJ Members until 20 October

We all know the amazing value of taking time out to think or plan away from the pressures of work – but we always put it off. How about a conference which offers the opportunity to learn and recharge in beautiful countryside?

Last year, Ethical Junction got involved in an extraordinary gathering for people to inspire and be inspired about moving from great ideas to great actions. Our experience made us see the idea of Strategic Awaydays in a new light. As a result, we’ve organized a special EJ discount for this year’s gathering because it so clearly advances ethical enterprise and lifestyle.

Walk Your Talk is a chance to take your business/organisation on an exceptional strategic retreat which is guaranteed to enrich and refresh both you and your work. Not only do you get the space to relax, think and plan, but you do so with around 60 other enthusiastic, energetic and inspiring people who are doing the same thing – entrepreneurs, execs, designers, artists, activists, inventors, investors and consultants.

The result is that the whole gathering acts like an expanded team which puts its energy into helping each other with advice, new ideas, partnership deals and more. It’s like having 60 talented colleagues show up in your organisation for three days. You set the agenda, you talk about what you need to talk about, and you get to meet people who share your interests and concerns.

We love figures, so we did some maths and reckon that by adding up the equivalent person hours and brain power brought to bear on a business, each day of retreat is worth about a month in the office.

So how does it work? Walk Your Talk is held in ‘Open Space’, a facilitated process in which there are no designated leaders. Instead, you steer your own course as the conference evolves, discussions deepen, and connections and realisations emerge. The dramatic Brecon Beacons provide the backdrop for three days of reflection and interaction in a warm and friendly environment, whether on strolls along the banks of the River Usk, or beside the fire with a drink. People learn by walking and talking, sharing passions, curiosities, hopes, expertise and questions. Drawing on each other’s wisdom and experience, everyone supports each other towards the creation of really good personal action plans to take back into their lives and work.

The Walk Your Talk team use a question designed to make it easier to find a common threads amongst a wide range of interests. This year it’s ‘Can we afford to work without heart?’ This question brings up lots of practical issues, like how to balance head and heart stuff, how to set a truly heart based culture and how to communicate it well.

As an Ethical Junction member, you’re entitled to 10% off the fee if you book by 20 October. Fees at individual and small business rates include accommodation, food, facilitation and all that brain power of your fellow guests. The only extras are your bar bill, and a supplement if you can’t bear the thought of sharing a twin room.

Walk Your Talk is at Buckland Hall in the Brecon Beacons from 16-19 November 2008. Full details are on www.walkyourtalk.net and to claim the EJ price, simply mention your membership in the ‘special requirements’ box of the on-line booking form and make your payment for the total shown, less 10%.

What people said about Walk Your Talk in 2007

“A wonderful clearing house of inspiration, wisdom, debate and motivation.”
Jason Elliott, Ethical Jobs

“An absolute must in a crowded diary. Although the thought of taking time out from the office caused some anxiety, the reality was worth every moment.”
Thea Allison, Brighton & Hove Business Community Partnership

“The most extraordinary experience where I felt alive, alert, and came home hopeful and zinging from head to toe. Nothing will ever be quite the same again and the only disadvantage has been that conferences with pre-arranged agendas now seem rather staid and stale.”
Anna Jenkins, Ethical Change

“It has value as a practitioners’ personal development space, allowing those engaged day to day in trying to make the world a better place to recharge, reconnect and refocus.”
Andy Middleton, TYF Group

Editorial: Say Yes To Wind!

Saturday, August 16th, 2008

If you think it’s difficult to get planning permission for your conservatory or outhouse, you should try building a wind farm!  Following protests in my local area against two proposed wind farms, which recently delayed the planning process days before the government unveiled its timely scheme to focus more heavily on renewable energy – in particular wind turbines – I decided it was high time to find out what all the controversy is about and pay a visit to one wind farm developer, Renewable Energy Systems.

Based just off the M25 at Kings Langley, I went on the company’s "energy trail" – designed mainly for school parties to visit but just as fascinating for adults.  Any cynicism you may have will vanish when you see that this environmentally focused organisation certainly does practice what it preaches – its headquarters are the world’s first commercial low-emissions office redevelopment and is self-sufficient, generating power for heat, light and hot water through its own flagship wind turbine as well as solar panels, biomass crops (elephant grass grown on-site is used to fuel the boiler), an underground heat store and natural groundwater cooling system, as well as a wild grass orchard, beehives and hornbeam trees around the office windows – an old-fashioned technique to create natural shade.

Unfortunately every onshore wind farm proposal attracts a group of local residents who feel compelled to continue to hinder the essential progress of society towards renewable energy in the face of horrifyingly diminishing fossil fuels (the current transport fuel crisis is unfortunately just the tip of the iceberg), and environmentally suspect alternatives such as nuclear power.  Such groups use clever tactics to encourage the planning inspector to scrutinize the developers’ credentials and wind speed statistics, threatening to take further legal action against the development whatever the inspector’s recommendations, which could ultimately end up in a protracted high court appeal.  And, by the way, all these proceedings cost money, which us as taxpayers are funding.

One criticism of protest groups is that wind farm developers’ motives are merely commercial – and that there isn’t enough wind to justify building a wind farm.  Renewable energy producers certainly are commercial enterprises and as such are highly unlikely to propose building a wind farm on a site which has little wind!  Wind speeds are indeed vitally important, and form the main initial investment in terms of time and money, in order to be absolutely certain that the site will produce enough energy to be commercially viable. Studies are conducted over several months and are therefore hardly undertaken on a whim. 

There are in fact very few opportunities in England for wind farm developments because of the density of population, housing and the landscape, and I was shown how technology is used in conjunction with planning restrictions to identify rare "pockets" of space suitable for wind speed testing, before a development is even proposed.  You may be interested to learn that although the RES onsite turbine does not benefit from the best wind speeds in Britain, it still produces excess energy because the offices are so energy-efficient.  This excess energy is fed back into the national grid and redistributed by Good Energy, one of the green electricity suppliers you can pick to supply your energy (and which has just won this year’s British Renewable Energy Company Award).

A wind turbine itself is a majestic, beautiful feat of engineering.  Standing tall and serene, its mechanism is simplicity itself – using schoolbook physics to take the natural wind around us to create precious, clean energy.  I stood right underneath the RES on-site turbine and the myth of how noisy they are is nothing short of propaganda.  I could only hear a slight "wicking" sound which was actually surprisingly calming, and only when I stood right underneath the turbine.  How do RES’s immediate neighbours feel about living so close to a wind turbine, I asked?  They love it, apparently, as do the residents of Lowestoft who have recently acquired a turbine of their own, which the local community have affectionately named "Gulliver". 

I was dismayed to learn that most wind farm developments in England are rejected due to protests by local groups. Success is greater in Scotland and Ireland, and the USA has positively embraced the beauty and simplicity of this truly clean and inexhaustible supply of energy production – one of the largest wind farms in the world in Texas boasts over 240 turbines.  Anyone who remembers the opening scenes of the film "Rain Man" will surely be left spellbound at the breathtaking vision of the army of windmills lining the road – surely more attractive and without the health risks of pylons, which are as much a part of our modern landscape as TV aerials and satellite dishes, which were all condemned as blots on the landscape when they first appeared on the scene, but at which we don’t bat an eyelid now. 

How ironic that the Planning Inspectorate itself – there to decide on complex planning issues but usually ending up as piggy in the middle between developers and the inevitable opposition they face – are in fact employed by our government, currently strenuously pontificating about its commitment to renewable energy and climate change policies.   Hardly anything to do with one of the main concerns always raised against wind farms – aesthetics, and yet this is one of the many spanners protest groups throw into the works.  But how relevant is this argument? 

Is a wind farm’s appearance as judged by a handful of people really more important than the distinct advantages of the energy produced (those pylons again)?  If that’s the case, what about nuclear power stations, hypermarkets, distribution centres, incineration plants, heavy industry and other commercial developments which are nowhere near as beneficial to the environment as a wind farm, and in some cases highly pollutive and disruptive to the local community.  When it comes to issues raised by protesters such as landscape and visual impacts, these are so subjective that unfortunately they are left to the planning inspector’s personal opinion – the outcome of which can hardly be said to be impartial.    

It can be hard for people – individuals and communities – to accept and embrace change, but for the sake of the future I do wish wind farm protesters and the powers they court would expand their fears of such changes to the environment around them as whole rather than just their own homes and villages.  Have you ever seen the film Mad Max?  The reality of no fossil fuels is nearly upon us – make no mistake about it!   Before protesting against a wind farm, I would encourage anyone to get up close and personal to a turbine and consider a trip to a wind farm, stand right underneath a turbine and see how precious electricity can be produced cleanly and sustainably, before forcing the rest of us to forego the opportunity of embracing wind energy for the benefit of ours and our children’s futures.

If you are pro-wind farm then you can make a big difference to the appeals process. Whilst a lot of protesters often speak out at public inquiries, it is just as important for wind farm supporters to find their voice.  Unfortunately it is more common to complain about something than encourage it – but you certainly can make a huge difference by helping the planning inspector make a balanced judgement.  For information on how you can support wind farm developments visit RES at http://www.res-ltd.com/ or Ethical Junction members The British Wind Energy Association (BWEA) at http://www.bwea.com/ Also see the Energy Saving Trust http://www.saveenergy.co.uk/, the Sustainable Development Commission http://ww.sd-commission.org.uk/ and The Carbon Trust http://www.carbontrust.org.uk/

We all have shares in our future, and by saying Yes to Wind we can help make it a lot brighter.

ENERGY FACTS

85% of the general public support renewable energy

81% of people support wind energy

Over 60% of people would be happy to live within 5km of a wind farm

There are 94 wind farms in the UK with 1,100 turbines

Turbines provide power up to 85% of the year

They are quick to build, easy and cheap to maintain and last for over 20 years

Currently renewable energy makes up just 3.2% of fuel in the UK

Aims are by 2020 for the UK to generate 20% of energy through renewable sources

14 nuclear power stations are to be taken out of service over the next 30 years.

 

By Lisa Jackson

Dragons’ Den Tycoon Advises Youth How To Get Ahead

Saturday, August 16th, 2008

Duncan Bannatyne, entrepreneur and Dragons’ Den tycoon, said:  ‘When I employ someone I look for initiative and drive; someone who is a self starter and can work well as part of a team.  Volunteering for a programme like Platform2 demonstrates these young people have the desire to do something extra with their lives and help others in the process.  These are qualities employers are looking for on a CV and show more about a person than their qualifications alone.’

Platform2 is a free global volunteering scheme funded by the Department for International Development (DFID) and run by Christian Aid, BUNAC and Islamic Relief.  Open to 18-25 year olds who wouldn’t otherwise have the opportunity to volunteer abroad, it offers the chance to spend 10 weeks living and working in a poor community in countries like Ghana, South Africa, Peru or India.

The scheme gives volunteers the chance to learn about development issues as part of a diverse team, experience new cultures and improve their practical, communication and organisational skills.

On their return to the UK, participants attend a three-day workshop where they devise interesting _and exciting ways of communicating what they have learnt about global issues with friends, family and their local community. They will continue to build on their life and employment skills by making videos, writing blogs and songs, organising talks, putting on exhibitions and getting local press coverage.

Zina Lewis, a Platform2 volunteer from London who has just returned from Ghana, said:  ‘It’s a life-changing experience…..It will be very helpful when it comes to getting jobs because it was quite character-building and shows a lot about you: that you’ve donated your time and gone to live with a group of people that you don’t know, Big Brother-style; that you’re a team player who can work with others and that you have social skills.’

Mark Vyner, Platform2 Head of Programme, said:  ‘Employers have told us that volunteering on a CV looks good – it shows someone has initiative, drive and will have a level of maturity above those coming straight from education. Platform2 offers all participants a great experience and will help them stand out from the crowd in the job market.’

For more information on how to apply for Platform2 visit www.myplatform2.com

 

The Lie of The Land

Tuesday, May 8th, 2007

A truly depressing documentary on Channel 4 the other night – The Lie of The Land. Quiet anger masked by unfailing politeness characterised a group of ordinary farmers as they watched, not just their livelihoods, but a whole way of life disappearing before their eyes. In the face of a twin assault from government bureaucracy (new regulations to ‘protect’ the environment means more red tape and less scope to manage the infinite variations that land and animals in the real world require) and city dwellers’ demand for ever cheaper food, their bewilderment was heart rending.

At root is a confused and, in many cases, irrational attitude to animals and the realities of rearing them for food. On the one hand we demand an end to fox hunting (a largely symbolic gesture in the face of the many other forms of animal abuse that we know nothing and apparently care less about); on the other, the way we have turned food into a commodity like anything else (to be produced ever more ‘efficiently’ and at ever lower cost) leads directly to the import of meat from countries where attitudes towards animals don’t bear inspection – while, at the same time, to the culling of healthy animals on our own farms because they have no economic value. The net result is that the day is not far off when Britain will no longer produce beef, pork, poultry or milk.

For those of us who eat meat and care about animal welfare, it really is time to reassess the choices we make on a daily basis. Are we going to be accomplices in the destruction of a centuries old way of life simply because supermarkets provide us with cheap food – with the end result that we will become dependent on other countries to feed us? Or are we going to face up to what it means to eat meat and attempt to understand the cycles of life and death that are implicit in its production? If we care about animals then the answer must be that we try and get closer to the people who actually rear them; and that means buying local produce from butchers and farm shops who know where their meat comes from and the conditions in which it was produced. If you know the farm your meat comes from, you can always go and visit …


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