Trevor
Mallard 20 May, 2008 - Speech by Environment
Minister Trevor Mallard to 2008 Small Business
Expo, Christchurch Convention Centre
Good morning and welcome
to the Small Business Expo for 2008.
Thanks to the organisers
for inviting me to open this expo and welcome
everyone to what I am sure will be a worthwhile
and inspiring event. As Environment Minister
it's great to see the choice of sustainability
as this year’s theme.
Not only have you raised
awareness of this important issue by making
it the central topic for discussion, but
you are also practising what you preach
by taking steps such as giving out recycled
bags, printing your flyers on recycled paper,
encouraging delegates to offset their emissions
to travel here, and installing recycling
bins throughout the venue. As we keep saying
– even small steps that are eco-friendly
can make the difference.
Congratulations for
also obtaining certification from carboNZero
to make this expo carbon neutral. This sort
of approach is something I hope many expo
and conference organisers are thinking about
– so thanks for demonstrating how it can
be done.
Many New Zealand businesses,
large and small, are taking a similar path
towards sustainability and recognising the
serious business opportunities it offers.
Far too often the debate
around climate change focuses on costs –
and ignores the opportunities and the potential
for New Zealand from moving onto a sustainable
and carbon neutral footing. And believe
me, the costs of climate change for New
Zealand as a country would be much higher
if we just sat back and did nothing.
Instead our government
is deliberately tackling the challenge of
climate change on several fronts involving
a mix of initiatives and programmes addressing
government, business and household sustainability,
and involving regulation and incentives,
including multimillion dollar support for
research that will help New Zealand businesses
along the way. Yes there is a cost, but
it is affordable, it will be managed fairly,
and the cost would be far greater if we
ignored it.
Government initiatives
and regulatory drivers, such as the Emissions
Trading Scheme and the New Zealand Energy
Strategy, and changing consumer behaviour
mean that New Zealand businesses do need
to get real and recognise that they need
to become sustainable –to remain competitive
and perhaps more importantly – to gain the
edge. Sustainability sells.
Which is why I like
to say to people – look on sustainability
and climate change action - with the glass
half full approach, rather than the glass
half empty – and ignore the business opportunities
at your peril.
Sustainable business
is a holistic business concept that integrates
economic growth, social equity and environmental
management. Sustainable business practices
will also underpin our economic transformation
into an innovative, high wage and export
led economy. It will underpin our competitiveness
by providing New Zealand businesses with
an advantage over others in the global market.
The government wants
New Zealand businesses to be recognised
internationally for their sustainable practices.
For this reason, the
Ministries for the Environment and Economic
Development are jointly working on the Business
Partnerships for Sustainability programme.
The Business Partnerships for Sustainability
initiative is one of six government initiatives
to help New Zealand become more sustainable.
The Business Partnerships
for Sustainability programme is aimed at
building the ability of New Zealand businesses
to respond to the changing consumer-led
and international markets that are demanding
sustainable products and services. To achieve
this, the project is working to integrate
sustainability into existing business capability
programmes and to develop new programmes
where appropriate.
Essentially this programme
aims to help position New Zealand as a world-leading
exponent of smart and innovative responses
to environmental issues and integrates.
Here in Christchurch,
the Target Sustainability initiative provides
a one-stop shop for local businesses on
resource efficiency and business sustainability.
I’m very pleased to
see that they have a stand at this expo.
I encourage you to take advantage of the
excellent service they offer.
There are many small
ways businesses can make a difference: taking
environmental considerations into account
in all business decisions, engaging staff,
talking to the community, understanding
customers’ needs and desires to be eco-friendly,
using less energy, reducing waste, being
more water and energy efficient, and using
or producing goods and services that are
accredited or environmentally certified.
The challenge of understanding
all the environmental certifications on
offer will soon be addressed by the government’s
eco-labels directory, due to be released
soon. It will help business owners make
sense of a complicated field of eco-verification
and help them recognise credible certifications
for their businesses and products.
The benefits of a business
becoming sustainable are not just measured
through environmental outcomes such as fewer
greenhouse gas emissions and less waste
going to landfill.
Sustainable practices
also mean a business can save money by reducing
use of energy and materials or by using
resources more efficiently.
The business that integrates
sustainability throughout its operations
will see improved value for money in its
buying practices, savings in operational
costs, and an enhanced reputation among
existing and new consumers who are attracted
by the sustainable products on offer. The
potential to expand your market share by
the sustainability selling point is also
obvious.
The New Zealand Wine
Company is a case in point. The company
owns Grove Mill in Marlborough which was
the world's first winemaker to achieve the
CarboNZero certification – and its winning
new international business as a result,
increasing its sales to the Sainsbury supermarket
chain in the United Kingdom by a whopping
120 per cent, and now also selling into
the Tesco and Waitrose chains over there.
Widespread sustainable
business practices also mean an enhanced
international reputation for New Zealand
and an affirmation of our ‘clean, green’
and ‘100% pure’ national brands.
As the owners of small
businesses, you are well placed to become
sustainable.
You have the flexibility
to adapt and respond more quickly than large
companies to a changing market.
You are starting from
the baseline of a smaller carbon footprint,
especially if your business is based at
home, so you have less work to do to become
really sustainable.
You can also respond
to and grow within niche markets that are
much harder for large companies to exploit.
And it is not all about products, it's also
about knowledge and expertise, things you
increasingly have access to.
Small and medium enterprises
make up 95 per cent of New Zealand business:
collectively you have a big impact. You
have taken a step in the right direction
by being here today.
I urge you to visit
the Sustainability Zone where you’ll be
able to meet exhibitors from the Ministry
for the Environment, the Sustainable Business
Network and The Natural Step who are committed
to providing information and services to
help you develop your business into one
that is competitive as well as sustainable.
Whether you are well on the road to sustainability
or just starting out, they’ll have something
practical to help you.
Smaller New Zealand
businesses, such as Snowy Peak that owns
the Untouched World brand of luxury clothing,
are already demonstrating the gains that
can be made by absorbing sustainability
into all aspects of their day-to-day business.
I had the great pleasure of visiting Snowy
Peak’s premises here in Christchurch recently
and was very impressed at how sustainability
is engrained in everything they do.
Last year Snowy Peak
became the first company in New Zealand,
and the first fashion company in the world,
to be given permission by UNESCO to carry
the United Nations Decade of Education for
Sustainable Development logo on its labelling.
It is one of a small number of organisations
internationally accredited to carry this
logo. And Wools of New Zealand have credited
Snowy Peak with establishing an industry
that is estimated to be worth around NZD$100
million, with a potential worth of NZD$200
million in the near future.
So the message to you
all has to be "sustainability sells".
We have a once-in-a-generation opportunity
to improve the New Zealand way of life,
our standard of living and the state of
the environment by putting sustainability
at the heart of our business thinking and
decision-making.
The government is leading
by example by making sustainability a core
part of our approach to policy and taking
practical steps such as working towards
a carbon neutral public service and sustainable
procurement policies. We want you as business
owners to work with us and join us on the
journey to making New Zealand a truly sustainable
nation.
Thank you. I’m happy
to take any questions you have.
+ More
Ministry report blueprint
for environmentally friendly printing
Media release: 22 May
2008 - The Ministry for the Environment’s
milestone state of the environment publication
has won a gold award for using best practice
environmental printing processes.
Wellington print company
Printlink entered Environment New Zealand
2007 into the environmental section of the
annual Pride in Print awards last week.
The awards recognise and promote the achievement
of excellence within the New Zealand printing
industry.
Todd Krieble, Ministry
General Manager Reporting and Communications
says the award is an achievement that sets
the standard for green publishing.
"The Ministry produces
a considerable amount of reports and information
material every year. We make deliberate
choices whether to print hard copies or
upload reports onto the web, what paper
and ink to use, which print company to contract
and how to encourage smart design and lay
out."
Peter Ward, General
Manager of Printlink, says the company is
delighted that the Ministry’s publication
has received such recognition.
"The Ministry insisted
that we showed a clear and precise plan
to produce this job with minimal impact
on the environment."
Key elements of the
plan were the use of 100 per cent chlorine
free, recycled paper, vegetable based inks,
and all printing plates, chemicals, and
waste paper were recycled.
"We believe the
end result reflects the commitment of both
Printlink and the Ministry to achieve an
excellent ‘sustainable printing’ outcome
without diminishing the quality of the final
product," Mr Ward says.
The Ministry for the
Environment has adopted sustainable practices
across a range of other business processes,
such as waste management, staff travel and
building management.
Under the motto ‘walking
the talk’, the Ministry for the Environment
runs the Govt3 programme which helps government
agencies become more sustainable.
To date, Govt3 has 55 members including
34 core government agencies. The programme
is about practical action and focuses on
sustainable procurement, transport, buildings,
waste minimisation, and office consumables
and equipment.
For more information
and practical advice on sustainability visit
www.mfe.govt.nz and www.sustainability.govt.nz
.
Lester Thorley, Media Advisor,
Ministry for the Environment – Manatu Mo
Te Taiao