By Daniel Dudek
BEIJING, April 10 -- For much of the 20th century,
Asia was dominated by the geopolitical tides of war. The 21st century is
seemingly peaceful but no less marked by a desperate struggle - the battle to
protect our livelihoods and future by halting the uneconomic war on the
environment.
We see this struggle reflected in headlines from Bali
and Bangkok and news of retreating glaciers and extreme weather. We know that
the major challenge facing Asia is to deepen economic development to share its
benefits more widely with the many people remaining in poverty.
However, we also know that this cannot be
accomplished without radically reforming the strategy of development at all
costs to development that includes protecting the environment, the basis for
most people's livelihood and well-being. The pressure of population and politics
demand this progress.
The situation that we have come to is quite
understandable. Governments have been eager to have the benefits of economic
development for their people. Companies have been eager to acquire profits for
their owners.
In their eagerness, no one particularly stopped to
ask whether this bargain could be sustained or whether the environmental price
might be too high. Most often the costs were perceived to accrue in some distant
future long after today's beneficiaries have left the scene.
But this process has been going on long enough that
people are starting to see the environmental results. Those future damages have
arrived in today's reality.
Based on this rising awareness of the damage of
uncontrolled development, governments are now requiring more than just new
factories and new jobs, they also are beginning to be serious about requiring
companies to control pollution of all kinds.
What is emerging is a new legal regime both national
and international, previously absent, which forces responsibility on enterprises
to reduce their environmental impact or face serious financial consequences.
Shareholders are increasingly pressing companies to
improve their environmental performance in order to improve competitiveness.
They are also worried about potential environmental liabilities that could crush
their profits.
Customers in this globalized world are also
increasingly aware that unrealistically low prices may also come with
unrealistically high environmental damage and low quality. We are witnessing a
global convergence of consensus on the imperative of sustainability.
Almost everywhere you turn these days, there is a
meeting, a conference, a magazine or newspaper article about the greening of
business. Take Wal-Mart for example. The multinational giant has announced that
it will slash its greenhouse gas emissions and yet still strive for pedal to the
metal growth. Others have been at this business much longer.
Last year, a group of companies with instantly
recognizable global logos representing more than $2 trillion in market
capitalization banded together with several environmental NGOs to call on the
Bush administration and Congress to enact sweeping climate legislation.
What gives here? More than $100 per barrel oil is one
thing, another is the slow but inexorable crawl to national legislation
curtailing such emissions by the United States.
Europe has reaffirmed that it will continue its
leadership on green house gas (GHG) control and require deeper cuts from its
industries. Scientists continue to warn of the dangers of a changing climate and
reports of its effects pour in continually.
China has adopted a new and more activist stance at
the international negotiations and at home reducing energy intensity is a
serious new national priority. There is also change in the air from consumers
who no longer think bigger is better. Right now, efficient is beautiful.
Building a green Asia will require more than the
currently fashionable rhetoric. It will require a genuine shift in fundamentals.
The tidal waves of foreign investment sweeping Asia have grown accustomed to
current circumstances.
We all know about the "China price" and the market
power wielded by large multinational corporations.
Changing the channel will require a concerted effort
by governments to convince domestic and foreign partners that the rules and
expectations have changed.
The first step is to rigorously enforce current
environmental laws and regulations no matter who owns the offending facility.
Killing a few chickens to scare the monkeys will go a long way to getting the
message out.
The next step is to reward those who excel
environmentally to accelerate the transformation from brown to green.
Governments can use their own procurement policies to show multinational
procurement officers how they expect them to do business in their country.
The race for global market share will be determined
not by corporate officers repeating a green mantra but by showcasing green
performance and innovative products. As in basketball, we need to watch their
feet, not their mouth.
As the biggest player at the table, China needs to
show the way. The nation has already begun construction of some of the
foundation.
The recent reform of the water pollution control law
includes heavy penalties for noncompliance. The national priority on
environmental protection was given a further boost by the creation of the new
Ministry of Environmental Protection (MEP). MEP already has a green company
program. There are serious environmental targets in the 11th five-year plan.
However, these pieces still remain to be forged into
an integrated strategy that aligns business and government interests at all
levels in a search for environmental excellence. To grasp the markets of the
future, China needs to get enterprises to lift their focus from the immediate
path they are taking toward the direction of a market-driven green future.
Coordinating policies across ministries for a single
unified powerful set of incentives will get their attention. These incentives
need to be focused on both today's and tomorrow's environmental problems if they
are to succeed in driving marketable innovations.
Companies need to recognize that the new
environmentalism sweeping Asia is no less serious then its forerunners in Europe
and North America where environmental values are now mainstream. Already we see
previously revered global brands being taken to task for environmental missteps
outside their home territories. This is no fad. It is here to stay.
When you take a close look at those companies that
excel environmentally, it is usually a company that has learned the hard way
from a serious environmental disaster in its past.
It need not take matriculation from the school of
hard knocks to get the message. The vision starts from the top. CEOs need to
dedicate their companies to excellence - especially environmental excellence.
They need to establish corporate incentives for
environmental performance equal to those for financial performance. They need to
create a culture of compliance and an expectation of constant improvement.
We are moving out of the era of fast easy profits
into a more demanding competitive market place.
Buyers are going to ask more than just the price and
delivery schedule. They are going to demand detailed information about how and
where the products were produced. They are going to require environmental
compliance and performance certifications backed by sanctions for false
submissions.
There will be a movement to use purchasing power for
environmental good by guiding contracts to suppliers that can demonstrate
environmental excellence.
Governments will also act to reinforce these trends.
In many developed nations, the globalization of the world economy has stirred
real political discontent which is easily reflected in the speeches of
presidential candidates.
The economic miracle created by the WTO is
increasingly thought of as an environmental nightmare by some. Governments will
respond to these perceptions and trade from nations viewed as pollution havens
will be the target.
This need not be the case. Together we can harness
the energy of this new green wave to protect the welfare of the people to create
prospects for a healthy and secure life. But it will require serious effort to
build and use effective environmental tools. The people of the region are ready
to move beyond talk.
The author is chief economist of the Environmental
Defense, a US-based non-governmental organization
(Source: China Daily)