Feb 28, 2007

KKR and Texas Pacific Takeover of TXU

In the largest private equity takeover in history, environmental concerns play a major role.

An Inconvenient Truth wins two Oscars; Conscious capitalism the next megatrend; Citigroup publishes climate report

"An Inconvenient Truth," the big-screen adaptation of former U.S. Vice President Al Gore's slide-show lecture about the perils of global warming, won Academy Awards on Sunday for documentary feature and best song. Great job, Al Gore - What's next? I think that Hollywood will wote democratic this year.

Patricia Aberdene is considered one of the leadind mega-trend predicters in the world. In the year 1982 she predicted the transformation intoa new information age, and in the 1990 she wrote about jumping further into a technology based and web- based reality. In her latest "Megatrend" book, in 2002, she predicts the step towards a conscious capitalism. According to Aberdene traditional capitalism " business as usual", has proven to be destructive to humanity, environment and society at large. She points out that the next megatrend in business is competitive advantage based on corporate responsibility, where social and environmental performance will define the winners and loosers. Get her book on Amazon on http://www.amazon.com/Megatrends-2010-Rise-Conscious-Capitalism/dp/1571744568
If Aberdene's predictions once again prove to be true, ethically consciouss consumers will be mainstream, and businesses will compete to be the most responsible company.

Citigroup has published a massive climate report. It is filled with physics, climate science and graps, but one section provides extremely interesting information: The behavioral implications of climate change on corporations. the section is split into four parts: how climate change affects consumers; litigants; investors; and corporations. Here are some best shots:


Consumer behavior

  • Consumers in the two countries responsible for the most emissions of GHGs (USA & China) care least about the issue
  • On average European consumers would only pay up to 5% premium price on a climate friendly product
  • Historically, consumers have anyway had great power in pushing through more environmentally sound solutions: Remember CFCs (used in aerosol sprays) and the Tuna Boycotts? Consequently, consumer products businesses are starting to adapt their products for clime-conscious consumers.

Litigant behavior

  • If corporations do anyway not care about what consumers think, then they might care of the actions of litigants. There are at least two very interesting trials coming up in the U.S. this year: First, the supreme Court is set to rule on the federal regulation of GHG emissions (the question is whether GHGs are pollution, and whether Environmental Protection Agency EPA should have the mandate to regulate them). Second, the Alliance of automobile Manufacturers against the California Air Resources Board and its efforts to reduce GHG emissions from passenger vehicles in California.

Investor behavior

  • Carbon disclosure Project, a coalition of institutional investors representing more than $US 31 trillion in assets, has, for the past several years, been requesting information perfaining to GHG emissions from large multinational companies. 72% of the global FT500 companies responded to the request in 2006 (up from 47% in 2003).
  • Climate-related shareholder resolutions that were filed with U.S. companies tripled in 2004-2005 the number of 2000-2001
  • SRI (Socially Responsible Investing) funds in the U.S. rose in 2005 to 2,29 $ trillion, so that nearly one out of ten dollars under professional management was involved in SRI.

Corporate behavior

  • Consumers, litigants, and investors all affect corporate behavior
  • From corporate perspective, climate-friendly policies have five distinct advantages: They may lower costs trough energy-efficiency; They enhance corporate reputation and brand; They may yield a 'first-mover' advantage; they may lead to expanded market potential for new products; they institutionalize a climate-friendly mentality and keep management alert to climate related opportunities and risks.
  • In 2006 McKinsey survey, 28% of executives in 116 countries cited environmental issues, including climate change, as one of the issues likely to have the most impact on shareholder value over the next five years.

Feb 27, 2007

Reminder: Net Impact träff för alla medlemmar nästa torsdag, 1.3, kl. 17.30 i Mr. Don (tidigare Cupla) på Runebergsgatan, ett stenkast från Hanken mot Tölö torg. Välkommen!

Tanken är att träffas tillsammans med alla intressade Net Impact medlemmar över ett stop öl, och bolla med idéer, växla tankar och saftiga CSR nyheter, och lägga ramar för framtida verksamhet för Net Impact.

Potentiell agenda, t.ex.
* Vad har hänt inom CSR i Finland och i världen, nyheter & annat
* Framtida program för Net Impact: Deltagande i konferanser i Finland och utomlands, ordnandet av seminarier, paneler, företagsbesök, "aktivistdag" på Hanken, Green Drinks, samarbete med Kauppis Sustainable Business Club, samarbete med privata sektorn, utvecklandet av vår blogg, you name it. Idéer, önskemål?
* Vem tar sustainability kurser på Hanken/Kauppis/TKK? Vem skriver skolarbete/prosemi/gradu om CSR? Vem har haft coola jobb, praktik eller annat inom sustainability - CSR området? Vem har läst bra böcker om ämnet, eller hittat bra websidor?

Anmäl gärna per epost i fall du är på väg på träffen till netimpacthanken (at) shs.fi.

William Wilberforce - A Visionary

BBC 4 radio show "In Our Time" showcases the life of William Wilberforce (1759-1833). Wilberforce was in the great minority of 18th century Londoners who could address the British parliament; he chose to use that platform to demand the abolition of slave trade. Wilberforce inspired many future visionaries, including Dr Martin Luther King.

"It is always difficult to employ historical imagination," Melvyn Bragg says, it is easy for people to go around and say "of course the slave trade should've been abolished," but we must try and picture what it was like for this man in the 18th century,

"facing a parliament which was completely entrenched in the notion that slavery was necessary and a good thing and inevitable and in some cases God commanded. It must have taken enormous guts, fearing great failure, to stand up and address the parliament at that time in this measured, reasoned, but underneath it, passionate and convinced way."
Historical imagination is hard.

But what about foresight? Is it easier? On what issues?

What issues might future citizens in the year 2207 consider the "slave trades" of our time?

2-Year Study of Polar Changes Commences

Scientists from more than 60 countries. $350 million budget. Over 120 research projects.

The latest IPCC (Intergovernment Panel on Climate Change) report excluded estimates of changes in the Greenland ice sheet, because polar melting it is not well understood, at least not well enough to be used as the basis of a scientific report. This is about to change, as a new two-year polar study commences. The New York Times reports on the study here.

The effort is called "The International Polar Year". (The projects, as said, will actually take two years, from March 2007 to March 2009.) What will the scientists be doing? According to the Times,

They will use gliding underwater robots, giant icebreaking ships, satellites and other technologies to explore polar climate, biology, geology and ocean chemistry, and they will undertake physics and astronomy studies that can be done only at the poles.

Here's something else interesting: the Times' environment reporter Revkin traveling in the Arctic. The sites links to short video clips from his arctic journeys. One video included sounds of oil exploration that Revkin had recorded in the Northern Alaskan tundra.

Feb 26, 2007

Carbon Offset

Here's a new article from the Guardian about companies who deal in carbon offsets.

What are carbon offsets? The basic idea is that if you are responsible for emitting carbon (e.g. you take a flight to France), you can buy a service or a slice of a service that offsets the damage done: this could come in the form of tree planting, sewage clean up in a less-developed country, or directly in the form of a carbon permit.

How much does carbon offset cost? It depends on the service you're using and on how much carbon your flight emits. If you fly from Finland to France, you won't have to offset as much (it's voluntary though) as you would if you were flying to Honduras.

By buying carbon offsets, you'll be supporting renewable energies, environmental clean up services, reforestation efforts and other anti climate change measures. The schemes aren't without critics but the point is to be doing good to offset the "bad."

Who is in this business? The article talks about companies who sell carbon offset services. Each of the carbon offset firms (here are some companies in this business) gives a different number of tonnes of CO2 emitted for the same flight; as a result, the offset cost can vary ten-fold, according to the article.

How much does it cost? That depends on the number of tonnes of carbon that one is responsible for emitting (or is assumed to) and the market price for a tonne of carbon. There is no standard number of tonnes of carbon emitted per flight of X kilometers; each carbon offset firm calculates it differently. The market price for carbon, however, is quoted (and very difficult to locate, still!) somewhere on the EU Emissions Trading Scheme website. Carbon isn't like pork bellies or crude oil, though. A while back when doing research, a website with over-the-counter secondary market prices for tonnes of carbon popped up, but unfortunately the URL got misplaced. Must go through a few emails to find it, since I did forward to someone. Anyway, like the "truth is out there", carbon prices are out there somewhere, too... only both are seemingly hard to find at times...

Feb 25, 2007

Can Markets Cut Carbon?

Two of the largest market-based initiatives to cut carbon dioxide emissions are the EU ETS (EU Emissions Trading Scheme) and the RGGI (Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative; in the Northeastern United States.) The EU is talking about a common European energy policy. US corporations are working with environmental groups.

What is the role of carbon trading (cap and trade) in cutting emissions? This article explores some basics and links to a number of great sites. Could carbon trading curb emissions by placing a price on carbon? How will it work globally?

Feb 24, 2007

Permaculture: From Observation to Application of Nature's Patterns

Permaculture is a lifestyle ethic and a design system that is based on sustainability concepts and nature's patterns. According to the permaculture philosophy, food production, community design and land use could be reorganized based on ecological design. Some researchers have found that many pre-Colombian peoples in the Amazon basin emulated natural design in their communities.

What does permaculture mean? Specific examples could include maximizing the use of trees and perennial plants; using chickens in weed control; and making sure that agricultural workers are treated fairly. A basic question that permaculturists might want to answer is, How can we profit from our land resources in ways that keep that land productive -- and how do we do it without exploiting people?

From Australia to the United States, local citizen groups concerned about resource dependency and environmental degradation are making a concerted effort to undo and redo current consumption and living patterns.

Where does CSR fit into the picture? Permaculture has spawned a monster of a word, "ecologinomic", to represent ecology-economic ethics in land use. Perhaps systems ecology and sustainable living philosophies could rub off on corporations going forward, particularly on agricultural and chemical giants that have been accused of dubious business practices in recent years.

Feb 23, 2007

Gold Mining on Papua New Guinea - a destructive business at the cost of local environment and an ancient culture















The report by CorpWatch about gold mining on Papua New Guinea is just devastating. It is in every way the stereotype of how everything goes wrong in extractives business. It grasps in a single article what it means for a pacific island with one of the richest eco-systems in the world, with inhabitants living in ancient culture and without cash economy, to be envaded by a western mining giant that only wants the gold. The result is total destruction of the ecosystem that is home to hundreds of unique species, a total clash of local people with the mining company resulting in deaths and armed forces, destruction of the ancient culture and a jump within one generation from stone-age to cash economy.

I just keep asking myself - how can this happen? The worst thing is perhaps that the gold mining company, Canadian Barrick Gold, tried to approach the project with good stakeholder dialogue and fair compensation to local people and landowners. However, in the end, they dramatically failed to treat the island in a fair way as greed for more gold took over the project.

Can it be that no matter how great CSR programs, stakeholder inclusion and dialogue, and fair compensations plans, an extractives industry where a foreign company is extracting natural resources from somebody else's land is incrementally doomed to failure? Why is it that even if environmental damage and lost of land area is accounted for in modern extractives projects, nobody still takes into account the cultural loss and the inevitable conflict that arises from the confrontation of a Western company with ancient cultures living without cash in traditional ways?

Check out the full report on http://corpwatch.org/article.php?id=14381

Feb 22, 2007

Net Impact träff för alla medlemmar nästa torsdag, 1.3, kl. 17.30 i Mr. Don (tidigare Cupla) på Runebergsgatan, ett stenkast från Hanken mot Tölö torg. Välkommen!

Tanken är att träffas tillsammans med alla intressade Net Impact medlemmar över ett stop öl, och bolla med idéer, växla tankar och saftiga CSR nyheter, och lägga ramar för framtida verksamhet för Net Impact.

Vi har massor med roliga idéer, och tar mer än gärna emot ännu flera.

Potentiell agenda, t.ex.
* Vad har hänt inom CSR i Finland och i världen, nyheter & annat
* Framtida program för Net Impact: Deltagande i konferanser i Finland och utomlands, ordnandet av seminarier, paneler, företagsbesök, "aktivistdag" på Hanken, Green Drinks, samarbete med Kauppis Sustainable Business Club, samarbete med privata sektorn, utvecklandet av vår blogg, you name it. Idéer, önskemål?
* Vem tar sustainability kurser på Hanken/Kauppis/TKK? Vem skriver skolarbete/prosemi/gradu om CSR? Vem har haft coola jobb, praktik eller annat inom sustainability - CSR området? Vem har läst bra böcker om ämnet, eller hittat bra websidor?

Net Impacts mission är att skapa en ny global generation av innovativa & ansvarsfulla ledare, som har både kunskap och ledarskap för att göra en ändring mot mera hållbar affärsverksamhet. Det händer just nu mera än någonsin på den här fronten överallt i världen - var med i ändringen!

Anmäl gärna per epost i fall du är på väg på träffen till netimpacthanken (at) shs.fi.

Diamonds Are Forever

In response to Johanna's post Tuesday, here's Kanye West addressing the same issue.

Feb 20, 2007

Have you already seen the movie Blood Diamond? It is definitely worth checking out.

According to Helsingin Sanomat (17.2.2007) the diamond industry started defending their business already before the movie came out. The diamond-giant De Beers reported loss in sales for the first time in six years after the premier of the Blood Diamond. De Beers claims anyway that the movie has not have any effect on its sales. In Internet bloggs worried boy-friends are asking how to fulfill the wish of girlfriend: Please, do not buy me a blood diamont. Even though there are some cerficiations that aim to assure ethical diamond sourcing, and for example De Beers describes in its 150-page long brand new CSR report numerous processes for assurance of ethical business behaviour, how can a consumer really know?

Here is what CSR wire notes about diamonds and ethics:

Your Valentine Deserves Cleaner Gold and Diamonds Top US jewelry retailers sign the Golden Rules of the No Dirty Gold campaign, and De Beers reports progress on sustainability issues such as conflict diamonds and black economic empowerment.Valentine's Day and jewelry gifting go hand-in-hand, but recent exposure about the social and environmental impact associated with jewelry such as the Blood Diamond movie have raised concern.

This week, the No Dirty Gold campaign coordinated by Oxfam America and Earthworks announced a major breakthrough that will make jewelry made with "cleaner" (more socially and environmentally responsible) gold available. Of the top ten US jewelry retailers, seven--including Wal-Mart and QVC--have signed onto the Golden Rules criteria for more socially and environmentally responsible mining. However, highly visible retailer Target remains a laggard in declining to sign on.

Also this week, diamond company De Beers released its Report to Stakeholders, covering for the first time its sustainability practices on issues such as conflict diamonds, HIV/AIDS, human rights, indigenous peoples, and climate change. The report follows the new Global Reporting Initiative G3 Sustainability Reporting Guidelines, as well as summarizing progress with respect to both the UN Global Compact and the UN Millennium Development Goals. De Beers also announced an agreement with the South Africa Department of Minerals and Energy to spin off its Namaqualand Mines into an independent diamond mining company, after community consultation. The new company seeks to enact black economic empowerment and promote a sustainable diamond mining industry in South Africa.

Australia To Ban Conventional Light Bulbs?

Australia may become the first country to ban conventional light bulbs and require consumers to purchase fluorescent bulbs instead.

California has been planning the same initiative for some time now.

Policy Tipping Point in the US?

Climate change policy shift in the US is featured as the top story on today's CSRwire.com. Reuters reports that policy is approaching a tipping point.

In the Guardian, scientists warn it may be too late to save the ice caps.

Feb 16, 2007

Report urges US government to curb television violence

The American media regulator FCC has published a report suggesting ways in which the US congress could craft a law against (excessive) violence on television.

Psychological research suggests that children who watch violent TV material become more aggressive and less sensitive to other people's pain. What about adults?

The new report, which is of interest to American broadcasting corporations and production companies, suggests ways to curb television violence -- ways in which the first amendment ("free speech", thus far used to defend media companies) won't be violated.

Global leaders reach climate change agreement (The Guardian, 16 Feb 2007)

"Leading world politicians and industrialists have reached a new, non-binding agreement at a meeting in the United States on tackling climate change.

Delegates agreed that developing countries will have to face targets for cutting greenhouse gas emissions as well as rich countries.

The non-binding meeting in Washington of the G8+5 Climate Change Dialogue also agreed that a limit should be decided for maximum acceptable carbon dioxide levels in the atmosphere, the NBC reported. A global market should be formed to cap and trade carbon dioxide emissions, they also said."

Feb 15, 2007

Astroturfing

"Astroturf" is artificial grass. Astroturfing describes "formal PR campaigns that seek the create the impression of being spontaneous, grassroots behavior."

Care2.com, a green networking site, sends out frequent environmental newsletters with a mix of topics. One of them recently had a headline that linked to an article titled "Global warming is not due to human contribution of carbon dioxide." It was so provocative that I followed the link; in fact, it might have been more persuasive had it been more subtle. The link brought the reader to a full-length article at Canadafreepress.com written by Dr Tim Ball, Chairman of the Natural Resources Stewardship Project and a consultant and former climatology professor at the University of Winnipeg. His credentials sound impressive.

What is the Natural Resources Stewardship Project? It is apparently a group that has recently been exposed as being controlled by energy industry lobbyists. A short Wikipedia entry is here.

This would be an example of astroturfing.

Feb 14, 2007

Open Guest Lecture on February,19th, at Hanken:
Monday 19.2 12.30-14, room 309
Guest Lecturer: Eeva Simola, Finnwatch


Check out Finnwatch at www.finnwatch.org

Some interesting stuff from the website:

  • Clas Ohlsonin ja Bilteman myymä kodinelektroniikka sisältää aineita, jotka ovat vaarallisia laitteiden tekijöille ja kuluttajille. Ruotsissa vastikään tehdyissä laboratoriotesteissä on löydettiin korkeita ja kiellettyjä pitoisuuksia lyijyä ja erittäin myrkyllistä raskasmetallia kadmiumia. Korkeat lyijypitoisuudet ovat vaaraksi sekä luonnolle että ihmisille, jotka valmistavat tavaroita Kiinassa. SwedWatchin tuore raportti kertoo, että kummaltakin yritykseltä puuttuu toimiva vaarallisten aineiden valvontaohjelma.
  • Neste Oil pyrkii maailman johtavaksi biodieselin tuottajaksi. Se aikoo hankkia tarvittavan palmuöljyn parhailta malesialaisilta tuottajilta. Palmuöljyn nykyisellä tuotannolla on vakavia ympäristövaikutuksia. Kun biopolttoaineiden ja palmuöljyn kysyntä kasvavat, öljypalmuplantaaseja laajennetaan. Osa laajennuksista tapahtuu etenkin Indonesiassa sademetsiin tai turvemaille. Sademetsää raivataan polttaen, mikä lisää kasvihuonekaasupäästöjä ja metsäpaloriskiä. Useat uhanalaiset lajit menettävät elinympäristönsä, hiilinieluja katoaa ja ilmakehään vapautuu metaania. Rekkaralli yksilajisten plantaasien ja öljynpuristamojen välillä on tiuhaa. Euroopan unioni suurimpana ostajana on kaukana, joten myös kuljetuksista jää jalanjälki.

Feb 13, 2007

Go Aktivistit! Canberra/Tokio. Valaanpyynnin vastustajat ajavat japanilaisia valaanpyyntialuksia takaa Etelämerellä, australialainen ympäristöjärjestö Sea Shepherd kertoo. Aktivistit pyrkivät estämään pyynnin törmäämällä omalla aluksellaan japanilaislaivaan.
Japani isännöi tänään valaanpyyntiä harjoittavien maiden kokousta, joka ajaa kaupallisen valaanpyynnin sallimista. (HS 13.1.2007)

Miten USA:n taloudesta tehdään ympäristöystävällisempää? Projektissa "Turning the ship" http://www.turningtheship.com/ Harvardin yliopisto ja The Clark Group käyvät viiden viikon mittaista on-line keskustelua maailman suurimman talouden muuttamisesta vihreäksi. Webbisivu on vierailun arvoinen!

Carbon Disclosure Project on 225:n institutionaalisen sijoittajan liikkeellepanema kysely ilmastonmuutoksesta, hiilidioksidipäästöistä ja ilmastoriskeistä maailman 2000:lle suurimmalle yritykselle. Katso www.cdproject.net . Kiinnostavaa on että kolmasosa vastaaja-yrityksistä luokitteli antamansa tiedon salaiseksi - joten ko. tieto ei pääse vaikuttamaan maailmanlaajuisen sijoittajayhteison päätöksentekoon!

Feb 12, 2007

Ilmastonmuutoksesta iltapäivälehdessä

Ilta-Sanomat aloittelee ilmastonmuutoskampanjaa.

Feb 8, 2007

Warren Buffett on Life, Love, Family, Wealth and Value Investing

In a rare interview, Mr Buffett talks about his remarkable career and family. This documentary is about an hour long. Look for his investing tips (on Gillette: "Hair isn't going to stop growing on men's faces and twice as many women's legs"), his views on business ethics, his friends' interviews, and his lifelong love story.

Buffett still lives in the same house he bought in Omaha, Nebraska, in 1958. "It's dumb", he said in an interview, "to let possessions rule you". He has decided to donate most of his wealth to the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, combining the wealth of the world's richest and second richest men into one gigantic philantropic effort.

Buffett's children won't inherit any great wealth when he dies. Buffett has said, "There's no reason why future generations of little Buffetts should command society just because they came from the right womb. Where's the justice in that?"

Frankly, I find Buffett's commentary so unique, inspiring and powerful that I'll add one more citation from his Wikipedia page. I'm fully partial: I find this guy remarkable.

"I personally think that society is responsible for a very significant percentage of what I've earned. If you stick me down in the middle of Bangladesh or Peru or someplace, you find out how much this talent is going to produce in the wrong kind of soil... I work in a market system that happens to reward what I do very well - disproportionately well. Mike Tyson, too. If you can knock a guy out in 10 seconds and earn $10 million for it, this world will pay a lot for that. If you can bat .360, this world will pay a lot for that. If you're a marvelous teacher, this world won't pay a lot for it. If you are a terrific nurse, this world will not pay a lot for it. Now, am I going to try to come up with some comparable worth system that somehow (re)distributes that? No, I don't think you can do that. But I do think that when you're treated enormously well by this market system, where in effect the market system showers the ability to buy goods and services on you because of some peculiar talent - maybe your adenoids are a certain way, so you can sing and everybody will pay you enormous sums to be on television or whatever -I think society has a big claim on that." (Lowe 1997:164-165)
"I don't have a problem with guilt about money. The way I see it is that my money represents an enormous number of claim checks on society. It's like I have these little pieces of paper that I can turn into consumption. If I wanted to, I could hire 10,000 people to do nothing but paint my picture every day for the rest of my life. And the GNP would go up. But the utility of the product would be zilch, and I would be keeping those 10,000 people from doing AIDS research, or teaching, or nursing. I don't do that though. I don't use very many of those claim checks. There's nothing material I want very much. And I'm going to give virtually all of those claim checks to charity when my wife and I die." (Lowe 1997:165-166)

Feb 7, 2007

Wal-Mart Class Action Suit

According to Helsingin Sanomat, Wal-Mart faces a class action suit for gender discrimination. An American court accepted on Tuesday a historical suit involving millions of women who have worked for Wal-Mart after 1998. The suit alleges that Wal-Mart paid women lower wages and limited women's opportunities to advance into managerial positions.

In the clip, the CEO of Wal-Mart talks about sustainability issues at Wal-Mart. The interviewer is Charlie Rose, who doesn't exactly take a stand but leaves it up to the viewer to make up their own mind. More Charlie Rose interviews here; some of us know him as one of the most well regarded US talkshow hosts (he works for PBS, the Public Broadcasting Service.) GoogleVideo offers hour-long interviews with Al Gore, Noam Chomsky, artist Shirin Neshat (whose photos were up at EMMA in Espoo last fall!) and others on issues like climate change, alternative energy and human rights.



Here "High Cost of Low Price" producer-director Robert Greenwald and a Wal-Mart representative talk about the firm's labor practices.

Feb 6, 2007

WAL-MART: The High Cost of Low Price - Movie Night

Time for another movie event. Tomorrow (Wed) night in Casa at 18.00. A documentary about American superstore Wal-Mart will be shown.

Feb 5, 2007

Conservative Thinktank Offers Cash to Scientists

The Guardian reports that a conservative thinktank has offered $10,000 each to scientists and economists for disputing climate change.

The American Enterprise Institute (AEI)
is funded by oil giant ExxonMobil, whose ex-CEO is the vice chairman of the thinktank's board of trustees. According to the Guardian, the thinktank also has close ties to the Bush administration.

AEI sent letters to the science community offering payments for articles that emphasize the shortcomings of the IPCC report.

Feb 3, 2007

World Still Warming; Pageant Candidates Shedding Layers

In continuation of yesterday's entry, two things.

First, New York Times readers respond to the IPCC report on the newspaper's blog. Andrew Revkin, science journalist, readies to answer reader questions; you can still ask some and post your opinions. In the main article today, Revkin is interviewed in a podcast. Revkin is asked, "Should people think about changing where they live at this point?" He responds, with the New York area readership in mind, "Well, the timescales are such that" it isn't necessary right now. Revkin knows what he's talking about: he's one of the most read and respected popular science writers in the US. "And if you're wealthy enough" you can adjust later, he notes matter-of-factly.

He knows it all too well: most of the worst-affected regions are or will be those low-lying areas of the world that are extremely poor. What can a Bangladeshi family do?

When asked about how he feels about the future, Revkin says that he "goes to bed" a pessimist, but "wakes up" an optimist.

Elsewhere in the New York Times today, a columnist wonders if the IPCC report isn't in fact too optimistic. Climate science is advancing fast and we do not really understand the impact of melting glaciers or inland ice sheets. They weren't included in the IPCC measurements.

In the UK, the Guardian notes that "the scientists spoke cautiously, but the graphs said it all."

A tipping-point of public awareness was being reached. The time for talking, as the politicians kept saying yesterday, was over. Now it was time for action.

Although in saying this they were, of course, still just talking.

---

On a completely different note, in a not-so-unexpected turn of events, "public outrage" over the controversial catsuits of the pageant candidates forced the tour organizer to revert back to half nakedness.

You cannot but wonder about the intentions and purpose of some publications, tabloid or otherwise. First of all, on a day when the IPCC report comes out (it would make awesome headlines, guaranteed!), climate change in some of the most widely circulated newspapers is largely left out.

Second, the phrasing and wording in these articles about the Miss Finland pageant... Pageants have often been criticized for being demeaning meat markets. There are certainly interest groups out there that would gladly leave it so and continue business as usual.

Readers aren't dumb.

The tour organizer wants to keep the pageant classy, despite pressure to use the scantily clad young women as bait at various consumer functions. While parading on stage wearing next to nothing, the young women are subjected to a leering, staring public. The public are wearing down jackets, by the way. The organizer doesn't want to take that kind of advantage, so she comes up with new ideas. Some of the events take place in the evening, in dimly lit clubs or restaurants. (How many of us would go to Kaivohuone wearing only underwear? Right.)

To protect the women, the tour organizer has a brilliant idea: nobody defined what kind of underwear the women should wear! So she arranges for them to wear full body catsuits, which is categorized as lingerie.

That, however, isn't enough: an anonymous "public" demands a return to what "we" had before. Why do I think the "public" actually stands for the "media"?

The interesting thing is, the only citation or statement in Iltalehti's article comes from the representative of the lingerie company. Certainly not an example of investigative journalism.

What's more, the wording on the matter suggests that the pageant candidates do this quite willingly, leaving just enough room for doubt in the mind of some readers, I'm sure, that this whole scheme isn't exploitative at all. Who knows, maybe they really want to walk around in their underwear in a car center.

I'm still wondering if the women get paid for this or if they ought to be categorized as unpaid interns or temporary workers.

Missit paljastelivat MIESYLEISÖLLE
2.2.2007 23:58

Mitään ei jäänyt arvailujen varaan, kun missifinalistit esiintyivät alusasuissa. Miss Suomi -kilpailujen finalistit esittelivät rohkeaa alusasumuotia eilen Autotalo Pelttarissa Huittisissa. Autoliikkeeseen oli kerääntynyt valtavasti etenkin keski-ikäisiä miehiä, joille missit tarjosivat aimo annoksen silmänruokaa.

Yleisön kommentit muotishowsta olivat tyrmääviä, joten Miss Suomi -kiertueesta vastaava mallimamma Marjo Sjöroos joutui taipumaan vaatimusten edessä: missit laitettiin jälleen paljastaviin alusasuihin.

- Näin jatketaan päivänäytöksissä. Iltaisin misseillä pysyy trikoot alusasujen alla, vaikka minua heitettäisiin kananmunilla päähän. En halua, että humalaiset miehet koskettelevat missejä iltanäytöksissä, Marjo Sjöroos totesi.


All of this reminds me of an experience a year or two ago. JCDecaux, the French multinational billboard corporation put up a lingerie campaign that brought on huge criticism in Scandinavia. The campaign featured a headless torso of a woman, with the text "I like boobs" on it.

I mean, on her.

Always easier to objectify when you cut someone's head off. Now that's class.

At that time, I called the clothes manufacturer (no response there) and the local Helsinki transportation authority to express my disapproval as a consumer of transportation services. "It's annoying," I said.

The HKL PR person was very sympathetic, but she said there is nothing she or HKL could do. I was surprised. "You guys own the bus stops, though, don't you?" I asked. "What do you mean there's nothing you can do?" I thought it sounded kind of odd: they are Helsinki bus and tram stops and this is the Helsinki transportation authority, so how come?

"What do you mean you can't control what posters people put up?" I asked. She said that they are indeed HKL bus and tram stops, but as far as advertising goes, it isn't that simple. JCDecaux, the corporation, has bought or leased the advertising space and the company decides what kind of advertising to put up. JCDecaux, the overseas corporation, decides who greets you at the bus stop: a milk carton, a mascara or perhaps a pair of mammaries. The corporation is in charge of what our living environment looks like, because they have bought that space.

The lady at HKL engaged in a good and spirited half-hour conversation with me. It was good fun and she was sympathetic, but she apologized for not being able to do much else.

---

Some thoughts from a former Miss Finland here.

Yksi Miss Suomen keskeisistä tehtävistä on toimia esikuvana tytöille. Millä tavalla Miss Suomi on parempi esimerkki tytöille kuin esimerkiksi Naisasialiiton aktiivit?

- Missi on neutraalimpi esikuva nuorille tytöille kuin naisasialiiton aktiivit. Heillä on paljon enemmän negatiivisia asioita, joita he yrittävät tyrkyttää nuorille tytöille, kun ajavat vain naisten asioita.

- Naisasialiiton aktiivit nostavat esiin paljon huonoja juttuja, jotta he voisivat edistää heidän omaa"hyväänsä". Missin rooli on loppujen lopuksi yhteiskunnallisesti aika pieni. Hän on kaunis ja saa jotain kivoja liitetöitä, mutta ei ole poliittisesti vaikuttava, eikä kannusta teinityttöjä tietyn ideologian alle. Sen vuoksi missiin on turvallisempi samaistua kuin jonkin järjestön edustajaan.

It's always interesting to see someone take an institution and assume it is value neutral just because that institution doesn't talk about its politics.

Feb 2, 2007

Climate Report Out; New Miss Finland Candidates Out and About

The IPCC report is out and the original can be found here. It is a 21-page summary of the full report. Two more reports are coming out in April and May, respectively; they will include a list of recommendations for action. We know the local basics: recycle your biodegradables, drive less, fly less, switch off lights etc.

On a completely different note, for those who are into gender issues, this may make you smile. Or laugh. The Miss Finland pageant is in full swing, and pageants, though seemingly innocent, glam and old school, are actually a business, sometimes big business. For example, Donald Trump owns pageant franchises in the USA.

u u t i s t u l v a

Miss Suomi 2007 -kilpailun osallistujien uimapukukuvaus on medialle maksullista, selviää Finnartist Oy:n lähettämästä lehdistökutsusta. ...
uutistulva.nettitieto.fi/ - 80k - 31. tammikuu 2007 -


Finnartist, the company that produces the event and has done so for 45 years, has actually agreed, either knowingly or unknowingly, to a very funky new version of the so-called swimsuit competition; photos can be seen here.

Iltasanomat calls this new type of underwear competition (whatever happened to swimsuit competitions?) the height of "tastelessness."

Did I miss something?

How tasteful is it, really, to employ young women to parade on stage -- or on the steps of some building in Loviisa -- in their underwear? (I wonder what compensation the firm or organizer pays to these individuals, if any.) Hope those shopping malls are well heated. Below is a more old-style example of what the tour entails for these women.



This isn't actually a new debate, globally speaking, but what is happening with the Miss Finland tour is definitely a new take on the subject. Pageants as an institution can be viewed from a number of angles. The most dystopian suggests that they objectify women and teach girls to self objectify. Girls -- and boys -- learn that the fastest way for young women to win over the hearts and minds of the people (and the occasional ice hockey player) is to look pretty and say you support world peace. In underwear.

Finnartist and tour organizer Marjo Sjöroos have just committed to the most socially responsible thing they possibly could by allowing this new twist on a very dated pattern. Well done. Looking forward to the repercussions.

Microsoft - Best Corporate Image?

Microsoft has the best public image among largest corporations, according to a new survey ranking the 60 highest profile companies in the world. The Wall Street Journal (31.1.07) says that much of this is due to the social responsibility record of Bill and Melinda Gates. The public doesn't separate between Microsoft and the Gates's foundation: the foundation's philantropic efforts shine on Microsoft. The article notes that in general, social responsibility is becoming an increasingly important component of corporation reputation.

Placing in the top 1-10 spots were Microsoft, Johnson & Johnson, 3M, Google, Coca-Cola, General Mills, United Parcel Service, Sony, Toyota Motor, and Procter & Gamble.

In the lowest positions at 51-60 were Allstate, BP, Chevron, Sprint, Ford Motor, Altria Group, General Motors, Comcast, Exxon Mobil and finally Halliburton.

Exxon Mobil Tries to Clean Up Its Act

A half-page article in the FT yesterday notes that Exxon Mobil (#59 on the corporate image list) finds itself cornered. Known for its overt opposition to the Kyoto protocol, the oil giant is slowly shifting its position and showing signs of joining the scientific mainstream. "We need to be clear that in questioning whether Kyoto is the right approach to climate policy is not and should not be synonymous with being a climate sceptic," Exxon's VP for safety, health and environment is quoted as saying. Does that mean a tide is turning?

IPCC Climate Report Out

The IPCC (Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change) climate summary and full report will be released today. Taloussanomat reports that the report's tone is stark. "We are cooking ourselves." Taloussanomat also links to an article about what changed Ollila's mind about climate change. The Daily Telegraph has gotten wind of the final version of the report, which gives actual numbers on the expected levels of warming.

What seems curious is that certain newspapers are still focusing on reporting whether or not the change is human induced (the report says there is 90% certainty that it is.) I thought we already basically settled that debate enough to do something. With that in mind, the quote of the day seems fitting:


All that is necessary for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing.
Edmund Burke (1729 - 1797)

Saving Other Species

Tigers, cod and the orang-utan. The Guardian suggests ways to help animals on the verge of extinction. The focus is on the UK market, but who's to say we couldn't take the same action in Helsinki?

Feb 1, 2007

Itämereen kaavaillaan jättimäisiä tuulipuistoja

(STT) Virolaisyhtiö Nelja Energia haluaa rakentaa Itämerelle viisi suurta tuulivoimapuistoa, joihin tulisi yhteensä lähes 200 tuulivoimalaa.

Hiidenmaan luoteispuolelle kaavailtujen tuulipuistojen yhteenlaskettu teho nousisi ydinvoimalan kokoluokkaan. Tuulipuistot olisi tarkoitus yhdistää sekä Viron että Ruotsin sähköverkkoon.