Ship Building

Friday, January 28, 2011

Sustainability: Definition

Lately I haven’t really had a chance to write about sustainability, considering everything that was happening. So you may still be wondering what the hell we are talking about here in this little corner of Sweden!!! (oh and sustainability is big everywhere else in Sweden, just so you know)

Taking another look at the posts entitled “sustainability stuff Part I and Part II” will help understand the context and why it’s important for us all to know about sustainability.

I’ll lay it out the way we were taught here: pretend you wanted to make the planet completely sterile, or at least deplete the biosphere enough so that very few species would survive. You would have to understand that the conditions allowing life (as it is today) took billions of years to create – then take action:
  1. Heavy metals (mercury, uranium, etc..) are now deep underground, CO2 in the atmosphere was absorbed by plants which are now crude oil (also trapped underground), to name a few. You would want to bring the metals back up, and burn the oil to restore the extremely harsh atmosphere Earth had when young.
  2. With the current technology, we are able to create chemical compounds that nature has never encountered before – pesticides, plastics, refined fuels, and other potent artificial substances. Just spread them everywhere.
  3. With current technology also, it is possible to physically destroy the environment: using machines and other means: harvest, cut, clear, dig, bomb...
  4. Finally if you want to get rid of people (not cool writing this kind of stuff), not only you would do all of the above, but you will restrict people in their communications, access to what they need, force them to work more than they should, to rely on less and less resources etc...

Phew... that sounds really dark and sadist. I don’t think anyone was really upset when Dr. Karl Henrik Robert talked about this, but then he’s a great speaker. See any correlation with our Society’s operation? No one actually WANTS to do any of the above (maybe in some rare cases), yet this is what the global society is doing. Everybody brings their ever-so-small contribution to making one big problem – as described in previous posts this un-sustainable behaviour is everywhere.


Now the good news:

In a sustainable society, nature is not subject to systematically increasing:
  1. Concentration of substances extracted from the Earth’s crust
  2. Concentration of substances produced by society
  3. Degradation by physical means

And, in this society;

     4. People are not subject to conditions that systematically undermine their capacity to meet their needs.


These four points are called the Sustainability Principles, as defined by the organisation The Natural Step. They keep us in check when planning for sustainable development.

Dr. Robert clearly explains the Natural Step's take on sustainability in this video:



Finally, our colleague Fúnmiláyò Akinòsì from Nigeria has contextualised her understanding in an article that I wouldn’t try to match; a good read published in The Guardian, Nigeria 19th November 2010 – enjoy!:


Sunday, January 16, 2011

2010 to 2011 - Spiced up continuity

Happy New Year and best wishies to all of you!! It’s been 2 weeks I know.



For the news since the pre-Christmas post, we chilled here (literally) after some intense weeks of studying, as you know it is our occupation - but seriously people must age slower here cause they live in the cold half their life... Anyway we had various gatherings, a Christmas dinner with some of us who had not fled Karlskrona, and during these days in can’t remember exactly what we did... taking it easy, seeing some spots we hadn’t seen.

Many of us MSLS people went travelling to France, Germany, Turkey, the UK, some even going home to the US or Canada. Being in Europe is a great opportunity to see so much; by the amount of history, cultures (etc, you know the drill) and short travel times. Having been in Paris in August 2010, I decided to go check out Berlin as my French/German friend Myriam said a while back that it would be a good plan... and BAM! It was!!

A few days spent in the German capital - WWII and cold war memorials, beers and fireworks at every corner, night clubs with music which is not the usual commercial junk, great local guide host and friends (thanks Anne-Lise and Mimi!), huge NYE celebration with hundreds of thousands of people, bus through northern Germany, ferry to Denmark then bus to Copenhagen, train to Karlskrona Sweden - Hello 2011!!!

Photos speak a thousand words so see this album by clicking on this link (suivez ce lien):



Also, check out what others have been up to on their blogs: Fúnmiláyò Akinòsì (Nigeria), Cindy Sundborg (USA), Christopher Baan (The Netherlands) and Nathaniel Koloc (USA). 
Link (lien):
http://www.bth.se/ste/tmslm.nsf/pages/5fa63d4d87c625dcc12577ad0050f1a5!OpenDocument

Activity kicked in very quickly when we got back to K-town, thesis draft proposal due, 'Advanced Societal Leadership' project and presentation due, Strategic Management exam, and other reports. It has settled a bit now so I'll post about latest developments soon (I hope!).

I'll leave you with this amazing video: faithless - 'I want more' - YES, if anything I want more skills!!


Looking forward to hear some news from you guys after the holiday hangover in gone!
Hasta Luego!
Xav

Wednesday, January 5, 2011

MSLS applications are open!


Hello all! Hope you had a great festive season, mine was fantastic. I'll count some of the action when I can wrap my head around it again. This post is to give you some info about the programme I am taking, and I encourage you to jump on-board for an extraordinary year - you obtain an amazing master's degree, while studying with international colleagues in a beautiful part of the world!

Blekinge Institute of Technology (BTH) in Karlskrona, Sweden offers two groundbreaking Master's programmes. These programmes come with the great opportunity of being free for all EU/EEA and Swiss citizens.


Campus Gräsvik by the water's edge and close to nature trails.

BTH is a top ranked sustainability research and education institution currently recruiting bright, early – mid career professionals for their cutting-edge Master's programmes.

The Master's in Strategic Leadership towards Sustainability (MSLS) and the Master's in Sustainable Product Service System Innovation (MSPI) are underpinned by the science-based Framework for Strategic Sustainable Development (widely known as The Natural Step Framework), developed by scientific consensus and initiated by Dr. Karl-Henrik Robèrt, MD, PhD, cancer scientist, Founder of the NGO The Natural Step (TNS). He is a professor of sustainability at Blekinge Institute of Technology (BTH), and the chairman of the international research program Real Change.


Here is a TED sustainability presentation by Dr. Robèrt:




MSLS explores the baseline science of strategic sustainable development coupled with the skills required for organizational change. The programme produces graduates who can deliver organizational leadership for strategic change towards sustainability.

The programme is about taking a whole systems perspective. This means taking a view that is large enough in space (society in the biosphere) and long enough in time (as long as it takes). To this end, the programme has explored concepts for systems thinking, strategic planning, decision-making, organizational learning and change, transformative public policy, strategic business management, etc. from the context of how they may contribute to a sustainable society in the biosphere.


MSPI enables students to design and innovate for positive socio-ecological impacts of products, services, and product-service systems throughout their life-cycles. This programme produces graduates who can deliver outcomes that meet user needs while generating competitive advantages in the expanding sustainability-driven market.

The Swedish state kindly pays for tuition fees for these Master’s programmes for European students and courses are taught in English. BTH is located in the beautiful coastal city of Karlskrona, a UNESCO world heritage site on the southeast coast of Sweden.

Online applications open on the 1st of December 2010 and close 17th January 2011.

Please see our website portal www.bth.se/sustainability for more information. 


We've had an amazing time here since August 2010, check out my photos of many good times in Karlskrona:


A massive party among others: Halloween

One of the most valuable aspect has been the presence of people from all backgrounds, and they all had something unique to bring; experience, world view, skills, which really allow you to challenge yourself; your thoughts and the way you 'operate'. Meet this kind of people here: 

Being here also allowed for so many activities - often free and provided thanks to fellow student's expertise - yoga, pilates, rock-climbing, dancing (salsa, tango and more), hiking, ice-skating, snowboard/skiing etc...


On top of that, being in Europe means many enriching yet cheap trips; notably Paris and Stockholm on the way here, a cruise across the Baltic to Poland (for SEK480!! - organised by BTH), party in Copenhagen, NYE in Berlin, and a couple more to come - check out my photos page for illustrations!

I'll count some more when I get a chance, please forward this post to anyone you know might be interested!!

Happy new year!
Xav