Finding the balance and protection for the future
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CATHARINE COOPER
The spring evening settles into the palest of melon colors sandwiched
between a darkening sky and a deep blue ocean. Venus rises in the
distance and contrails of yet another transport line the sky. What
amazing creatures we are to have developed wings! Not quite the
finesse of our fellow feathered friends, and certainly fraught with
pollution and fossil fuel issues, but never the less, we have
achieved loft and it has given us vision.
This vision and distance has allowed us to see the earth’s oceans,
her landmasses, polar caps and fragile atmosphere in one glimpse.
From this vantage, we are able to see the interconnectivity her
vastly diverse ecosystem. Hopefully, this broad holistic view
continues to fuel our understanding of the need to protect the
resource we call home.
Can businesses work to the benefit of the environment? Robert
Sullivan, the founding Dean of the new Rady School of Business at
University of California, San Diego believes this to be true. As the
newest business school on the West Coast, and the first business
school to open at a top-tier research university since 1970, the
school’s focus is to educate tomorrow’s business leaders in
technology, medicine and science. Based on the free-market system,
with an underlying principle of the sustainability of the planet
earth, Sullivan’s dream of a new way of manifesting business
education is taking form.
The school recruits not only the best and the brightest, but also
those with a passion for implementing change. A recent forum,
“Managing the Earth’s Future,” explored some of the possibilities.
While naysayers wait in the wings, company’s such as British
Petroleum prove to the world, that balance and protection can not
only be good for the planet, but they can be good business as well.
By viewing the Kyoto accord as an opportunity and challenge, BP
reduced their emissions to beyond the Kyoto standards on a global
basis.
Sullivan states, that businesses can be developed based on the
triple bottom line of “ ... taking care of shareholders, the
environment and the community.” What if, GM et. al discovered it made
more financially sense to develop hybrid or hydrogen fueled vehicles
instead of oversize gas-guzzling emission-belching Hummers? What if
our government, instead of offering $25,000 tax credits for vehicles
more than 6,000 pounds, worked in reverse? These scenarios are
imminently plausible, but they require forward thinkers, versed not
only in technology, but fueled by the knowledge of the need for
sustainability.
The earth’s resources are not unlimited. Certainly, the recent
shock at the price of gasoline should make it abundantly clear, that
it is not more drilling that answers our transportation problems (the
resource is dwindling and not is not self-regenerating), but a
solution that does not require fossil fuels.
Sullivan speaks of providing his students with the “ ... freedom
to be extraordinary.” Programs provide for students to work at their
own pace, sometimes in an on-line situation, and to waive the intern
requirement in most business schools, since the UCSD model includes
many who already own their own businesses or are uniquely in
positions of top management.
UCSD has long remained the hidden jewel of the University system,
quietly producing six Nobel Laureates and maturing into one of the
top research universities in the country. One of the great assets to
the school is the opportunity to offer joint degrees, i.e., a
graduate degree in computer or marine science, coupled with a
master’s in business. Opportunities abound in the field of coupling
medical research with business design. The school’s mission statement
includes building a “collaborative learning community that encourages
imagination and discovery ... and collaborations ... that result in
enlightened thinking with global impacts.” Partnerships with
pre-eminent global universities are one of the program’s goals.
The sky has darkened on my pondering. The contrails of yet another
John Wayne “escapee” drape white fluffy lines in the blue-black sky.
I can’t help but dream, along with Sullivan and his developing cadre
of bright minds, how that same transport might be powered so that
instead of consuming nonrenewable resources, it might contribute to a
healthier earth system.
It is the dreamers that set the world to change, and each of us
has a place. In each moment, we have the opportunity to choose the
course of our actions. If sustainability stands as our underlying
purpose, than life on earth cannot help but become a very different
place.
* CATHARINE COOPER loves wild places. She can be reached at
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