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Stop Talking About Sustainability, Start Sharing What Works

What makes a company like GSK give away information about thousands of potential malaria-treating drugs? Why did Nike spend 6 million USD developing their Enironmental Design Apparel Tool (minimising the impact of their products in the design process) and subsequent MAKING design app only to give them away for others to use?

What makes a company like GSK give away information about thousands of potential malaria-treating drugs? Why did Nike spend 6 million USD developing their Enironmental Design Apparel Tool (minimising the impact of their products in the design process) and subsequent MAKING design app only to give them away for others to use? Why are businesses suddenly giving away what they have spent years defending in billion-dollar lawsuits? Isn’t a company’s most fundamental role to make money for its shareholders, not give away its cash cows?

In a world facing massive change, drastic measures are needed. A lot of the issues at hand — from water scarcity to poverty — are bigger than any one company or non-profit can answer. The good news, though, is that these pressing problems can be solved through sharing what really works and working together, and companies can see that sharing pays back more than taking on the fight themselves.

Working together to bring down expenses

Today most companies are realizing that when it comes to sustainability it’s more often an industry-wide approach that’s needed rather than a single company turning the market around. We recently saw this when the fashion industry joined forces in response to pressure from Greenpeace's "Toxic Threads" campaign and committed to phasing out harmful chemicals from the textile-production process. This is also logical in an economic sense, since the investments in infrastructure can be divided and the benefits harvested by multiple players. Sustainability is unfortunately still seen as an externality in most companies, so convincing them to work together to lower those costs doesn’t take much negotiation.

Knowledge is power

There are so many exciting initiatives around the world offering solutions to some of our biggest challenges, but most often people just don’t know about them, because we as humans inherently feel more important when we know something that our colleagues don’t know. Sadly, we gain power and authority through keeping knowledge to ourselves. This stance has seriously been challenged by the advent of social media, where those who share their knowledge are considered the experts. One can only hope that this trend will continue.

Game-changing initiatives

We need to realize that if we truly want to solve some of the larger social and environmental challenges lurking on the horizon, we need to be better at sharing and I’ll guess that we most likely already have answers to most of the problems out there. When CityMart,a supermarket chain in Myanmar (Burma), wanted to encourage its customers to use reusable shopping bags, it took a different approach. Everyone buying and using one of its reusable shopping bags could use a priority checkout line and in that way be rewarded for an environmental choice by jumping the queue. Think if big retailers such as Walmart or Tesco took on an idea like this?

ColaLife is an organisation with a real life-changing idea: Coca-cola has the largest, most far-reaching distribution network in Africa — why not use this to deliver essential medicines to remote villages? A test project is underway in Zambia and you can follow the progress on their site: colalife.org.

Don’t keep the wheel to yourself

Until recently, it was believed that in pre-colonial America the wheel had never been invented, that the Mayans were only introduced to the wheel when they were occupied by the Spaniards. But excavations have shown that the Mayans had in fact invented the wheel, but only used it for toys. This should be an important lesson to us today, teaching us how important it is to share best practice, scale up what really works and ultimately affect change. Sharing of ideas is vitally important. Just think — if the inventor of the wheel had kept it to himself, where would we be now?

Where good can grow

WhereGoodGrows.com is a platform that takes sharing seriously and believes that by sharing what really works, we can inspire real change. The platform encourages agencies, companies, non-profits, governmental agencies and foundations to work together to find lasting solutions for health, environment and society. It’s already showcasing initiatives by big corporations such as Nike, VW, Unilever, McDonald's and WWF.

Right to recycle

WhereGoodGrows takes this thinking one step further with the Right to Recycle License, encouraging free sharing of initiatives that do good. If an initiative can improve HIV infection rates in India, what is to say it wouldn’t work in Sub-Saharan Africa? By sharing these ideas, we can make a real difference with real results and make local initiatives global!

As a species we have survived because of our ability to collaborate. How would we ever have been able to take on a mammoth or a sabre-toothed tiger alone? Today our ability to survive is again put to the test and our ability to collaborate with each other is key.

Sharing with mankind

Three months after Apollo 17 returned home in December 1972, then-U.S. President Richard Nixon ordered fragments of the space rocks brought home to be sent to 135 foreign heads of state. Each rock, encased in an acrylic button, was mounted on a plaque with each of the recipient nations’ flags depicted.

A letter accompanying the rocks, signed by President Nixon, read, “If people of many nations can act together to achieve the dreams of humanity in space, then surely we can act together to accomplish humanity's dream of peace here on earth. It was in this spirit that the United States of America went to the moon, and it is in this spirit that we look forward to sharing what we have done and what we have learned with all mankind.”

I’ll leave Nixon’s inspiring words with you.

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