1 / 15

What is Sustainable Innovation ?

What is Sustainable Innovation ?. Planetary Boundaries. ( Rockström et al. 2009). The Biological Analogy. Eco-efficiency vs. Sustainable development. New structural solutions New functional solutions Improvement of the Current products. Sustainable development . Eco-efficiency.

wattan
Télécharger la présentation

What is Sustainable Innovation ?

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. What is SustainableInnovation? Professor Lassi Linnanen October 20, 2011

  2. PlanetaryBoundaries (Rockström et al. 2009)

  3. The BiologicalAnalogy

  4. Eco-efficiency vs.Sustainable development New structural solutions New functional solutions Improvement of the Current products Sustainable development Eco-efficiency

  5. Ambition Levels Purpose/Mission - Align with core values Space for Innovation Integrated Strategy - Business opportunities BeyondCompliance - Eco-Efficiency Compliance - Regulatory Demands and Enforcement (Non-Compliance)

  6. Transition of Socio-TechnicalRegimes (Geels 2003)

  7. TransitionFrameworkforSustainableNutrientEconomy

  8. Dependency of Systems Economic System (markets) Social System (citizens and institutions) Natural System (resources)

  9. Global Trends: Tomorrow’s Markets • Expanding population in developing regions will create large markets dominated by the young • Global wealth is rising but the income gap grows wider • Millions are malnourished amidst an abundance of food • Life expectancy rises, yet preventable disease contributes to limit development • Primary education is widespread, but opportunities for learning elude many

  10. Global Trends: Efficiency and Energy • Rising consumption creates environmental risks and business opportunities for innovation • Escalating demand for energy propels economic development but threatens Earth’s climate • Pollution remains a global challenge • Throughput still grows even as energy and materials efficiency improves

  11. Global Trends: Natural Capital • The productive capacity of the planet is in decline • Food production is the basis of many economies but threatens the ecosystems upon which it depends • Freshwater is growing scarce amidst competing human needs

  12. Global Trends: Connections • Urban growth concentrates business opportunities and societal challenges • Humans are more mobile, accelerating the flow of goods and knowledge and raising demand for energy and infrastructure • Access to information and communication technologies enables economic opportunity • As economies become service-based, women are a growing part of the formal labor force

  13. GlobalTrends: Roles andResponsibilities • Democracy spreads, creating improved conditions for market-based economies • Civil society is demanding greater accountability and transparency from government and business • Private sector investment is increasingly financing economic development

  14. Landscape • Tomorrow’s Markets • Efficiency • NaturalCapital and Energy • Connections • Roles and Responsibilities Mode 1 knowledgeproduction -> STI-mode of innovation Context of knowledgeapplication (companies and publicsectororganizations) Mode 2 knowledgeproduction -> DUI-mode of innovation Economic System (markets) Regime Actors Public Sector Businesses CivilSociety Enablers / Disablers Capabilities Resources Motivation Social System (citizens and institutions) Natural System (resources) Niches STI Innovation DUI Innovation

  15. SomeConcludingRemarks • System innovation for sustainabledevelopmentdifferssharplyfromtraditional ”national competitiveness” innovationpolicies • Basic economic, technical and social systemsexistbutcurrentprogramsclearlyinadequate • Balancing the tension betweendesire to secureeconomicbenefits and need to maximisetechnologydiffusion • Priority to criticalnaturalcycles: carbon, nitrogen, phosphorus

More Related