Twitter

Recent Posts

RSS Feed

Egypt May 2011

I recently spent 3 weeks aboard the Fleur de Passion as part of the Changing Oceans expedition (http://www.changingoceans.org). The Changing Oceans Expedition is a ten-year adventure through the world’s most important marine eco-regions to bring the world the latest update information on the state of our oceans. We just completed the last mission in the Red Sea, where we sailed from the Deep-South of Egypt to the Northern region around Hurghada. It has been a very enjoyable and satisfying expedition, although the outcome of the research on the health of the Red Sea is far from positive. You can find some of the pictures I took on my Flickr page (http://www.flickr.com/photos/vincentkneefel), I will post a detailed report on the expedition as well as more pictures in the upcoming weeks.

Confessions of an Eco-Terrorist

Business Lessons from a Radical Industrialist

In 1994, Ray Anderson was 60 years old and at the top of his game as founder and CEO of Atlanta-based Interface, Inc., a modular carpet company that makes those clever carpet tiles that you may have underfoot in your office or coveted via the company’s residential brand, FLOR.

That was 17 years ago – before ‘green’ was the compelling business imperative that it is today (for reference, oil was then $18/bbl), and the environment was nowhere on Ray’s radar.  An Interface associate asked Ray to give a speech to a task force that was forming to answer customer concerns about environmental impacts, and though he had not a clue what he would say, he accepted.  As the date for the speech grew closer, he began to sweat — and then Paul Hawken’s book, The Ecology of Commerce, landed on his desk.  The rest is green business history — Ray read the book (he’s called it a ‘spear in the chest’ epiphany), his outlook was radically transformed, and he gave a speech that would put the petroleum-dependent carpet company on a path to zero environmental footprint.

What’s happened in the intervening years has made Interface the best practice example for green business, and Ray’s become a bit of an eco rock star. He ditched his gas-guzzling Jaguar in favor of a Prius, built an off-the-grid home, and today, at 76, his life is radically different than what he would have imagined for himself at age 60.  This is his story.

Some pics from Malta – Bluefin Tuna

Robert F. Kennedy challenges Gross Domestic Product

Recent Video

  • Dolphin Resort - Taiji Japan
  • HC Bloemendaal uit de lucht
  • Leatherback turtle laying eggs
  • Earth Day - 22nd of April 2010 - Erasmus University Rotterdam

Subscribe by Email