A survey carried out by
Smurfit Kappa earlier this year confirmed what we already suspected: Despite
most companies showing increased ambition when it comes to sustainability, there
is still a big gap between renewed levels of ambition and the action needed to
turn the dial.
Among the 440 senior managers surveyed, half claimed to have set ambitious
net-zero
plans;
but only 11 percent of them believe they have a robust and actionable
sustainability strategy. And while 63 percent of the execs claimed to have
achieved transparency on how sustainability decisions are made, fewer than a
third say they are not confident their firm’s wider actions align with the
ambitions being communicated to stakeholders.
This so-called ‘action gap’ is widely acknowledged. After years of skepticism,
stalling and a lack of commitment, brands are finally taking sustainability
seriously with hard-hitting goals and targets. But without the actions to back
it up, most projects fail to gain traction internally, and therefore get stuck.
“The real blockers to sustainability are hidden inside companies and are often
the result of what was considered sound management practice in the 20th
century,” says Elisa
Farri, VP of Capgemini
Invent’s Management
Lab,
writing in the Harvard Business
Review. She
calls such management the “hidden enemies of sustainability: the prevailing
organizational winds that tend to blow in the direction of routine and an
incremental approach rather than sustaining a more radical and transformative
journey.”
Does AI have the answers?
OK, Now What?: Navigating Corporate Sustainability After the US Presidential Election
Join us for a free webinar on Monday, December 9, at 1pm ET as Andrew Winston and leaders from the American Sustainable Business Council, Democracy Forward, ECOS and Guardian US share insights into how the shifting political and cultural environment may redefine the responsibilities and opportunities for companies committed to sustainability.
Two former Coca-Cola execs think they have developed the answer — a solution
that will unlock common blockers and finally enable companies to take action
that matches their ambition, whether that’s in reducing carbon or realising
circular processes to eliminate waste. As with so many new solutions being
created right now — including ensuring brand sustainability claims accurately
reflect their
achievements
— the pair believe artificial intelligence (AI) holds the key.
In a nutshell, Ubuntoo is an online platform that uses
AI to serve up suggested solutions and insights to a company’s sustainability
challenges. Company execs can ask any question and prompt a search into a
database of solutions and knowledge. The system retrieves the most relevant
content, and then creates a summary with specific references to solutions and
knowledge posts.
“Our AI platform combines the best human curation and AI to provide
authoritative insight,” co-founder Peter
Schelstraete tells
Sustainable Brands®. The tech curates, categorizes, and analyzes knowledge
and solutions drawn from both public and private data sources. It then indexes
and organizes the data to find the most relevant information to answer
questions.
Schelstraete is keen to point out that the B Corp-certified Ubuntoo is not
simply a database of solutions; it is in providing “links and
adjacencies” that it can
create real value: “For example, solving an issue related to agave waste in
Mexico can lead you to solutions in the areas of
textile,
building
materials,
animal feed, packaging or pharmaceuticals. Traditionally, people think of
databases as a connection of individual entries. Ours is a connected web of
solutions and knowledge.”
The ambition-action gap is real
The company already has an impressive roster of clients — including Amazon,
Kimberly-Clark and PepsiCo. Previously, Schelstraete and fellow
co-founder Venkatesh Kini held a
number of high-profile roles at Coca-Cola — including CMO for Asia Pacific
(Schelstraete) and Global VP Digital & Assets (Kini): “We’ve experienced
firsthand the difficulty many businesses face in turning their ambition into
action. This prompted us to quit our corporate careers and work to provide
solutions to the planetary crisis we face,” he said.
Schelstraete draws a parallel between the current state of sustainability in
companies and the digital landscape, say, two decades ago. Yes, there’s a
significant amount of goodwill and ambition, but the execution “tends to be
marginal and disjointed.”
“In most organizations, sustainability isn’t genuinely integrated into the
growth strategy,” he said. “Too often, companies just engage in sustainability
initiatives out of necessity rather than embracing it as a fundamental element
through which their brands can create value. We’re driven by the vision of
instilling a sense of possibility and action.
“Just as
ChatGPT
is beginning to supplant – or at least reduce – the routine tasks of copywriting
and research, AI will soon support companies in getting the advice they need to
turn environmental ambition into action.”
How does Ubuntoo work?
What sort of things are companies able to achieve using such a platform?
Depending on the project, sustainability, supply chain, innovation and/or
marketing teams can use the platform to find results. The objective of the AI
platform is to exponentially accelerate the process of finding solutions and
taking action. You might ask a simple question, such as: “I have two tons of
discarded fishing nets. Who should I partner with to
recycle and upcycle?” Or it might be a more technical question, such as: “How
can I improve the effectiveness of bromelain extraction out of pineapple waste?”
Largely, the tech links clients to the most appropriate technology or partner to
solve their problems. So, it might be a company like Cox Enterprises looking
for ways to recycle coaxial cables, a company like The Clorox Company
wanting to find ways to deal with hard-to-recycle waste or alternatives to
plastic
packaging,
Or a company attempting to find alternatives to pesticides on plantations along
their supply chain.
Based on a client briefing, Ubuntoo compiles an initial, AI-enabled “landscape”
— mining a large amount of data (more than one billion datasets) including
technologies, IP filings, companies and startups, academic articles and regular
articles. It then selects the solutions and knowledge that are most relevant
(“which is often less than 5 percent of what we find through AI”); and, through
an iterative process with the client, it selects the most relevant solutions or
partners to work with, to solve the issues.
“Sometimes, we match our client with one single solution provider,” Schelstraete
says. “But often we connect them with an ecosystem of multiple partners. For
waste projects, for example, we might need to find three partners – one to
collect the waste, one to convert the waste, and one to upcycle the material
into new materials or products.”
Can AI truly replace human expertise?
Can AI really be trusted to deliver the knowledge and insight that
sustainability experts have spent years developing? Schelstraete is quick to
make it clear that his technology, which has taken five years to create, will
not replace human expertise. But what traditional consultants, and humans in
general, have a hard time doing is scanning millions of pieces of content,
summarizing those and creating links for ideation or solution discovery in a
matter of seconds: “And it’s not just a matter of efficiency. AI tools allow us
to expand our knowledge, decreasing the ‘unknowns’ exponentially.”
He highlights how Large Language
Models – deep learning
algorithms that can recognize, summarize, translate, predict and generate
content using massive datasets – tend to be excellent in ideation and the
discovery of adjacencies. In a recent
study,
researchers pitted university students against ChatGPT to see which produced
better product ideas. ChatGPT won hands down, Schelstraete says. “Well-trained
AI models can also discover unexpected
adjacencies across disciplines — from
physics to biology, and vice versa — which is very hard for any expert to do.”
So, what’s next for Ubuntoo? Like most AI developers, the focus is on making the
technology even better to build credibility and trust. The two founders are
committed to ensuring humans remain in the driving seat; but they also want to
tackle other challenges associated with AI — which tends to prioritize
search-engine-friendly, top-down perspectives and have a strong bias toward the
English language.
“It makes it difficult for AI to incorporate practical knowledge from
on-the-ground experience. Think about the knowledge on regenerative
farming,
passed over from generation to generation,” Schelstraete says. “The
game-changing potential of these developments lies in the collective power of
humans and artificial intelligence, working together in a common endeavour to
put the natural environment first.”
Get the latest insights, trends, and innovations to help position yourself at the forefront of sustainable business leadership—delivered straight to your inbox.
Content creator extraordinaire.
Tom is founder of storytelling strategy firm Narrative Matters — which helps organizations develop content that truly engages audiences around issues of global social, environmental and economic importance. He also provides strategic editorial insight and support to help organisations – from large corporates, to NGOs – build content strategies that focus on editorial that is accessible, shareable, intelligent and conversation-driving.
Published Dec 5, 2023 8am EST / 5am PST / 1pm GMT / 2pm CET