1 / 4

BP 3503-5503 – Marketing Bio-based Products

Sustainability: a business case Dr. Tim Smith Associate Professor, CEM & Bio-based Products Director, Forest Products Management Development Institute University of Minnesota. BP 3503-5503 – Marketing Bio-based Products. DISCUSSION QUESTIONS. Define sustainability.

stew
Download Presentation

BP 3503-5503 – Marketing Bio-based Products

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Sustainability: a business caseDr. Tim SmithAssociate Professor, CEM & Bio-based ProductsDirector, Forest Products Management Development InstituteUniversity of Minnesota BP 3503-5503 – Marketing Bio-based Products

  2. DISCUSSION QUESTIONS • Define sustainability. • Why is the concept of sustainable development important for business managers? Marketers of renewable products? • How do productivity, investment, and profit relate to sustainability? Are these at odds with societal pressures? • If operations of many firms appear to be sustainable (even from a societal perspective) why aren’t we seeing more developments around social/environmental accounting? | UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA, Department of Bio-based Products

  3. SOCIAL COSTS OF FOREST DEPLETION • Climate Mitigation • Global Warming – Cabon Dioxide (CO2) • 76% Fossil Fuel (wood as substitute for high energy products) • 23% Tropical Deforestation (conservation and afforestation) • 1% Cement Manufacture • Recreation • Protection (soil erosion, watersheds, biodiversity, etc.) • Reinhardt • Carbon Tax (i.e. a price of $14-$23 per ton of carbon equivalent emissions) • Exxon - $32 profit per to of carbon emitted (still profitable) • Elasticity of demand and Kyoto Protocol • Carbon sequestration - 5.4 million acres of G-P N. American lands ($30-400 million) | UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA, Department of Bio-based Products

  4. CONCLUSIONS AROUND SUSTAINABILITY • Managers have a vested interest in encouraging public policies that force private and social costs to converge (complicated, but in the long run the best companies will succeed). • Managers need to pay attention to parts of their businesses where private and social costs diverge dramatically, particularly where: • Resource rents are high (and/or a high percentage of profits), or • Profitability is low (less able to invest in new technologies) | UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA, Department of Bio-based Products

More Related