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Toughening environmental legislation, national and supra-national
environmental product policies and growing customer demands are
focusing the attention of companies on the environmental and
broader social issues linked to the creation and delivery of their
products and services. There is now an urgent need for appropriate
management structures, practical tools and increased awareness
among all stakeholders in the product development process and
throughout the entire product life-cycle. These are huge issues -
with major implications for corporate management, design and
production strategies. Sustainable Solutions provides
state-of-the-art analysis and case studies on why and how
cutting-edge companies are developing new products and services to
fit "triple-bottom-line" expectations. The book is split into three
sections: first, the broad issues of business sustainability are
examined with focus on sustainable production and consumption and
consideration of North-South issues. Second, the book tackles the
major methodologies and approaches toward organising and developing
more sustainable products and services. Third, an outstanding
collection of global case studies highlights the progress made by a
wide range of companies toward dematerialisation, eco-innovation
and design for durability. Finally, the book collects together a
comprehensive list of web addresses of useful organisations.
Practical and comprehensive, Sustainable Solutions will be
essential reading for corporate managers, product designers,
R&D staff, academics and all individuals interested in a
definitive source on how new product and service development can
and is contributing toward tacking the challenge of sustainable
development.
The EU-funded project "Sustainable Consumption Research Exchanges"
(SCORE!) consists of around 200 experts in the field of sustainable
innovation and sustainable consumption. The SCORE! philosophy is
that innovation in SCP policy can be achieved only if experts that
understand business development, (sustainable) solution design,
consumer behaviour and system innovation policy work together in
shaping it. Sustainable technology design can be effective only if
business can profitably make the products and consumers are
attracted to them. To understand how this might effectively happen,
the expertise of systems thinkers must be added to the mix. The
publication in 2008 of System Innovation for Sustainability 1 was
the first result of a unique positive confrontation between experts
from all four communities. It examined what SCP is and what it
could be, provided a state-of-the-art review on the governance of
change in SCP policy and looked at the strengths and weaknesses of
current approaches. System Innovation for Sustainability 3 is the
second of three books of case studies covering respectively the
three key consumption areas of mobility, food and agriculture, and
energy use and housing - responsible for 70% of the life-cycle
environmental impacts of Western societies - with the aim of
stimulating, fostering or forcing change to SCP theory in practice.
The availability of healthy food for all is a basic human need.
Yet, primarily due to higher food prices, the overall number of
undernourished people in the world increased from 923 million in
2007 to 963 million in 2008 - the vast majority of whom live in
developing countries. Experts estimate that close to half of the
human impact on the environment is directly or indirectly related
to food production and consumption. Food production, distribution,
consumption and disposal are important in terms of land and
resource use, pollution and emissions, biodiversity and landscape
design. Also of key importance are health issues and issues
surrounding the satisfaction of citizens' basic needs: more than
200 million adults in the European Union are overweight or even
obese due to unhealthy diets and too little exercise.
Sustainability issues are now clearly on the agenda for food
producers and market actors, politicians and regulators, as well as
being increasingly important in the decisions consumers make about
food. A large number and variety of efforts to stimulate
sustainability have been instigated and numerous studies, research
programmes and publications have addressed such issues. Agri-food
issues have also been prominent in the evolving definition of what
sustainability means. This book focuses largely on providing
answers to the question of how food production and consumption
systems can stay within the limits of the carrying capacity of our
natural environment. But it also considers the challenges of food
security and nutrition in the context of sustainability and a
growing world population. The book first analyses the state of the
art in sustainable agriculture and food production in Europe.
Eleven case studies follow, examining issues such as food policy,
greening mainstream agricultural systems, organic farming, farmers'
markets, sustainable food networks, eco-labelling, consumer
behaviour, slow food and fair trade. Finally, a concluding chapter
summarises what has been learned by the 60-plus experts active in
the SCORE! food project. In brief: bottom-up and top-down processes
have to be linked, industrialised nations must reduce their meat
consumption, and agriculture should become a multifunctional
sustainable system not only producing food but also delivering
other services such as energy and material production, CO2 storage
and recreation - which would have the added benefit of improving
farmers' socioeconomic situations. The System Innovation for
Sustainability series is the fruit of the first major international
research network on SCP and will set the standard in this field for
some years to come. It will be required reading for all involved in
the policy debate on sustainable production and consumption from
government, business, academia and NGOs for designers, scientists,
businesses and system innovators.
Selling products used to be the standard way of doing business.
Traditionally, it is left to the user to transform the purchase of
a product into something that fulfils effectively a final-user
need. Today, two streams of research - business management and
sustainability - normally with very distinct perspectives on the
world, have surprisingly converged to form a common conclusion:
selling products is old-fashioned business. Companies should switch
their focus to selling need fulfilment, satisfaction, or
experiences. Or, in other words, selling integrated solutions or
product-services. The business management literature argues that,
by focusing on the integrated, final-client needs, and delivering
integrated solutions fulfilling these needs, companies will be able
to improve their position in the value chain, enhance added value
of their offering, and improve their innovation potential. In a
business world where many products are becoming equally
well-performing commodities, this strategy is one of the ways to
avoid a sheer competition on price - a type of competition that
Europe never can win with emerging and low-cost economies such as
China. In that sense, product-services can mean new business for
old Europe. The sustainability knowledge stream argues that
need-focused solutions could be inherently more sustainable than
products. Product-services could offer the value of use instead of
the product itself and decrease the environmental load in two ways.
First, companies offering the service would have all the incentives
to make the (product-)system efficient, as they get paid by the
result. Second, consumers would be encouraged to alter their
behaviour as they gain insight into all the costs involved with the
use. Until today, the connections and interchange between the two
research streams have been quite limited. The question of whether
product-services truly are the avenue to a sustainable world is
still under discussion. This book aims to develop a systematic view
on this issue. The potential of product-services to enhance
competitiveness and contribute to sustainable development prompted
the EU to invest heavily in the theme under the EU's 5th Framework
Programme (FP5; 1997-2002). A variety of research and development
projects in the field were supported under the umbrella of the
Sustainable Product Development Network (SusProNet). These included
MEPSS (Methodology Product Service Systems); Home Services; HiCS
(Highly Customerised Solutions); Prosecco (Product-Service
Co-design); and Innopse (Innovation Studio and exemplary
developments for Product-Service). The projects were undertaken by
a mix of European research institutions and companies including
Orange, Philips and Nokia. Some of these projects focused on
developing methods that could help industries change their output
from a product to a service. Others focused on the development of
new product-services or solutions (HiCS, Prosecco, Innopse), and
yet others tried to analyze under which circumstances
product-services are likely to be implemented and accepted by
consumers (Home Services). One project focused on dissemination of
the concept to SMEs (Lean Services). Other projects focused purely
on new product-service development, such as Brainfridge (an
intelligent fridge managing its supply chain), ASP-NET (application
service providers), Protex (intelligent enzymes) and IPSCON
(receivers for wireless telephones). New Business for Old Europe
brings together the key outputs from all of these groups to present
a state-of-the-art collection on product-service development,
prospects and implications for competitiveness and sustainability.
The book has a number of aims. First, it attempts to bridge the gap
between business and sustainability literature to lead to a
better-founded understanding of the business drivers for embarking
on product-service development, and its relation with
sustainability and competitiveness. Second, the book reviews the
large amount of studies that have developed toolkits, methods and
approaches that can support marketers, product developers and
strategists in business to develop product-services, selects the
best-practice approaches and analyses any gaps. Third, the book
examines what opportunities there are for product-service
development in a variety of key areas including base materials,
information and communication technologies, offices, food and
households. Each chapter in this section discusses the area,
developments that will stimulate or hinder the market opportunities
for product-services, product-service examples, and typical
implementation challenges for product-services in that area. These
chapters serve as a quick introduction for companies interested in
developing product-services in a specific area. Fourth, the book
translates all the lessons into suggested approaches for
product-service development by companies. Annexes include a
lightweight "product-service development manual" and an
alphabetical list of useful underlying tools.
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