Aspects of green business development.
Draghici, Anca ; Izvercianu, Monica ; Barglazan, Diana 等
1. INTRODUCTION--THE CORPORATE ENVIRONMENTALISM EVOLUTION
As corporations move into the first decade of the new millennium,
many expect them to work toward a full integration of economic and
environmental goals by incorporating those goals in new products and
resources as they are designed and built. The evolution of corporate
environmentalism can be summarized as in the following:
1960--Industrial environmentalism--internal problem solving;
1970--Regulatory compliance--compliance with government
regulations;
1980--Social responsibility--impact reduction and protection of
reputation;
1990--Strategic environmentalism--recycling and waste reduction;
2000--Sustainable environmentalism--integration of business goals
and environmental goals.
Environmentalism is becoming a strategic issue and is being
incorporated at the insurance liability, process and product design, and
competitive strategy levels. Corporations seek managers and engineers
who knows the environmental implications of the job, not an
environmental specialist who knows the implications of environmental
management marketing and human resources. These managers and engineers
will be called on to integrate environmental issues with physical design
and process factors (Lyon & Maxwell, 2004).
2. THE RELATION BETWEEN GREEN FIRMS AND COMPETITIVENESS
Companies operate in the world of dynamic competition. They are
constantly creating innovative solutions to concerns raised by customers
and regulators while responding creatively to competitive pressures and
actions (Porter, 2001). Based on a reference research, we propose five
attributes that reflect a company's commitment to invest in
pollution prevention and green products: green consumers--a green firm
invests in understanding the green demands of its customers and the
market niches for green products; technology investment--a green firm
invests in technology to prevent and clean up the pollution that its
facilities generate; materials choice--a green firm is willing to
increase product costs a small amount--approximately 5 %--to prevent
toxic discharges; redesign--a green firm is willing to invest a portion
of its product revenues--again, 5 % seems reasonable--toward a redesign
that lowers pollution; sustainability--a green firm attempts to lower
its use of resources to leave more for future generations.
In an increasingly competitive marketplace, firms must be able to
benefit from their green actions. Often, companies can attain
productivity increases from an innovation that simultaneously uses fewer
resources and emits less waste. When environmental factors are
internalized within a firm's business strategy, the firm can strive
to generate positive organizational and technological benefits that
accrue privately to the firm, thus, increasing its competitive advantage
(Cunha & Putnik, 2005).
Companies are addressing the concept of pollution (waste)
prevention and resource input reduction or materials substitution.
Companies view as attractive the idea of moving toward high quality by
means of reducing defects. In the same way defects can be reduced by
quality product and process design. Many companies are using innovations
to command price premiums for "green" products. Few companies
have fully analyzed the true cost of wastes, toxicity, and resource use.
As they trace the full cost up and down the supply chain they will find
opportunities to reduce costs and environmental effects.
The first step is pollution prevention (Christmann, 2000).
Pollution prevention focuses on reducing or eliminating waste before it
is created. Pollution prevention pays off with reduced costs and better
processes. Product stewardship focuses on all environmental impacts
associated with a products life cycle. Step 3 is concerned with the
design for environment, which is a method for making products easier to
recover, reuse or recycle. Step 4 is concerned with clean technology,
which focuses on creating technologies that are less impacting and more
sustainable.
In addition, ten principles of sustainable business practices are
essential for modern companies' green business: protect the
biosphere and biodiversity through reducing pollution; promote
sustainable use of natural resources; reduce waste; conserve energy;
reduce environmental, health, and safety risks; design safe products and
services; restore environmental damage; inform the public of
environmental conditions; ensure management commitment; self-audit
annually. This is a summary of the Coalition for Environmentally
Responsible Economics (CERES) principles endorsed in 1992 by several
leading global corporations (www.ceres.com).
3. THE GREEN BUSINESSES CONSULTANCY IN ROMANIA
According with statistics data, Europeans attach an overwhelming
importance to protect the environment. During a research conducted at
the end of 2007 by the European Commission in all EU member states (a
special Eurobarometer on the environment), almost all the respondents
(citizens of the EU) said that environment protection is very important
to them (64%) or fairly important (32%). In total, 96% of European
citizens believe environmental issues are important to them (European
Commission, Special Eurobarometer, March 2008, p.11). Respondents who
say that environmental protection is very important outnumber those who
say it is fairly important in every country except Finland. There are
very few people who belive that environmental protection is not
important: the highest number of respondens were recorded in Austria and
Romania (8% both), while in most European countries this percentage was
less than 3%. Europeans tend to see environmental protection as a joint
responsibility: 90% of them agree that the primary responsibility should
lie with the biggest polluters, while 86% believe that they, as
individuals, can play a role in protecting the environment in their
countries. The most realistic interpretation that can be offer is that
Europeans think that everybody can do something to protect the
environment but they are still more inclined to support the
"polluter pays principle", based on the idea that different
actors should be held responsible in proportion to the environmental
damage they cause.
In order to help companies transform their businesses into green
businesses, and, by doing so, to reach eco-efficiency, innovative forms
of training and/or consultancy systems were conceived and realized in
the last year in Romania, started by a national initiative in the West
part of the country. A good example in the field is the eco-design
platform developed in Austria (www.ecodesign.at)--a web platform that
offer: general information for product ecological design; courses;
references; legislation and other links to service suppliers; examples
of good practices; events; e-learning in ecological design; on-line
questionnaire for a convenient optimization strategy identification for
products, based on a checklist. The platform was developed by a
consortium in which one of the main partners is the Technical University
of Wien. Other examples of good practice can be found in: Holland
(www.greenfacts.org), a web portal for non-specialists general
information on health and environment; Australia
(www.ecobusiness.com.au), web portal with information for sustainable
business change, mainly information regarding capabilities, projects,
examples of good practices; Columbia (www.tecnesoft.net), a company
portal that offer training and consultancy in the field of information
technology; Greece (Kritikou Y, et. al., User Profile Modeling in the
context of web-based learning management systems, Journal of Network and
Computer Applications, vol 12/6, 2007), with an e-learning platform
development modality, based on a requirement and user behavior model;
Romania (www.advancedelearning.com), where Siveco Romania has developed
and implemented AeL, an universal e-learning platform for schools (480
beneficiaries), business environment and administration (general and
specific elements for general qualification).
Started from these minimal, but representative reasons, Politehnica
University of Timisoara, in Romania launched an initiative--the
WEBT&C project developed since 2008 aiming at developing
multidisciplinary integrative researches that will offer an
effectiveness, innovative system not only for training (based on web
methods, tools and videoconferences), but also, for consultancy
dedicated to the business environment with impact on competitiveness and
sustainable development assurance. This objective can be achieved by
building an integrated platform (web portal type) for managerial
training and consultancy, adapted to the needs expressed by the
companies (and identified by the project partners), for favorable
strategies and policies elaboration, in the context of ecological
modernization, as well as for the creation/implementation of the
organizational culture focused on the environment preservation (in the
terms of eco-efficiency and environment responsibility).
The ideas behind the project are: to develop frameworks to
understand how organizations can strike a balance between business and
environmental objectives while managing complex stakeholder relationships, and to build strategies to gain competitive advantage
through environmentally sustainable practices, including product and
process innovation and sustainable supply chain management.
The main objectives of the project are the following:
(1) The development of a partnership between different research
entities (universities, a company and a research institute), to unroll
multidisciplinary research activities and for the innovative mechanisms
creation for the results implementation in the real business
environment;
(2) The creation of an integrative, innovative and effectiveness
system (virtual centre for formative and informative associated with a
web portal, correlated with a collaborative learning system using
(videoconference and an interactive tool for products/processes
eco-efficiency on-line evaluation) for support processes with the
business environment destination;
(3) National and international visibility growth for the project
team and the research results, through publications (scientific papers
published in national/ international conferences proceedings and
national/ international journals) and through the implication in the
European association EMIRAcle (www.vrl-kcip.org) activities for
participation in the FP7 or other European projects.
4. CONCLUSION
There is a clear trend of adding an ecological dimension to any
business that wants to be competitive. Especially in Europe, environment
protection is seen as extremely important, and the main actors
responsible for it are considered to be the companies. Eco-efficiency is
a component of the companies' efficiency, whose importance is
continuously growing. Soon, eco-efficiency will be just as important as
the economic efficiency, for every company trying to stay competitive on
a global market, in the long-run. There are several examples of
successfully promoting eco-efficiency among companies, in different
countries (Michelsen, 2006).
Since 2008, Politehnica University of Timisoara, together with 5
other partners, is creating a web platform meant to encourage Romanian
companies to transform their business into a green one. We strongly
believe such a platform is needed in Romania because while Romanians are
thinking just as the other Europeans, that environment protection is
extremely important, and the companies are the first actors who should
assume responsibility for it, in our country the level of information in
the field of environment is the lowest in all the European Union.
Therefore the project is filling up (partially) a very large gap that
currently exists between what Romanians know and what they want and need
to know in order to act responsively in the field of environment
policies (Draghici, 2008).
5. REFERRING
Christmann, P. (2000). Effects of "Best Practices" of
Environmental Management on Cost Advantage: The Role of Complementary
Assets, The Academy of Management Journal, Vol. 43, No. 4 (August,
2000), ISSN 00014273, 663-680.
Cunha, M., M. & Putnik, G., D. (Eds.) (2005). Advanced
Technology for Business Integration: Social, Managerial and
Organizational Dimension, Idea Group Publishing, ISBN 1-59904-048-4.
Kritikou Y, et. al. (2007). User Profile Modeling in the Context of
Web-Based Learning Management Systems, Journal of Network and Computer
Applications, vol 12/6, 35-42.
Lyon, Th. & Maxwell, J. (2004). Corporate Environmentalism and
Public Policy, ISBN-13 9780521603768, Cambridge University Press.
Michelsen O, et. al (2006). Eco-efficiency in Extended Supply
Chains, in Journal of Environmental Management, Volume 79, Issue 3, May
2006, 290-297
Porter, M. E. (Ed.) (2001). Competitive Strategy. Techniques for
Analyzing Industries and Competitors. ISBN 9780684841489, New York: Free
Press.