by: Joel Makower
For those of us unable to attend the recent VIP fest known as the World Economic Forum, there are serviceable summaries of the sessions. Among those worth noting:
- Global Risks 2006: Environment and the Bottom Line, in which "participants sought to tackle concern for the environment as a bottom-line issue."
- How Much Water Do We "Eat"?, focusing on "one of the world's largest sources of potential conflict."
- The State of the World – Climate Change, on the goal of becoming "'carbon-neutral' in the way the world lives."
- Energy 2006: A New Nuclear Calculus, on nuclear energy growing clout around the world as a viable and affordable source of energy.
- Breakthrough Ideas for 2006: China as a Green Lab, on China's potential to tip the scales toward, or against, a greener world.
Included in these terse but well-written summaries are the voices of a rich lode of notables, including many well-known in the sustainable-business arena: Worldwatch founder Lester Brown, Yale professor Dan Esty, primatologist Jane Goodall, RMI's Amory Lovins, architect Bill McDonough, New Yorker writer James Surowiecki, UNEP's Klaus Töpfer, and many others.
Original Post: http://makower.typepad.com/joel_makower/2006/02/sustainable_bus.html