Could business community be mobilizing?
I had the good fortune of attending an evening event last week hosted by the David Suzuki Foundation. There must have been at least 50 people at this cosy event, and the objective was to gather Bay St. and other business types who share a common concern for the environment. Ron Dembo of Zerofootprint Energy gave a detailed slide presentation talking about the risk of not acting quicky enough to combat global warming. He also spoke convincingly about the role geothermal energy can play as a renewable replacement for electric heaters and air conditioners.
My friend Jose Etcheverry from the foundation also made a heart-felt speech about the need to take action now, pointing to developments in Europe that should be happening here. Finally, David Suzuki — the main attraction — spoke about how ridiculous humanity is behaving around the issue of global warming. To paraphase, he said it’s like we’re all in a car heading 100 kilometres an hour toward a brick wall, but we’re all arguing about who’s going to sit where, rather than trying to turn the wheel and apply the break. Meanwhile, he added, NGOs like the Suzuki Foundation are locked in the trunk of the car so all you can hear is their muzzled shouts in the background. Nicely said.
Anyway, it was an enjoyable night. When all the formal speeches were done, a microphone was handed around to anyone in the crowd that wanted to talk. At least three business men, two of whom I know personally, stepped forward and talked about their own hopes of pulling together business personalities who can get behind the cause. Nick Parker of the Cleantech Venture Network, for example, pointed to California and the influence the business community and venture capitalists there have had in pushing through progressive legislation and policy.
From my perspective, as a journalist, I’ve seen nothing come from the business community within the context of Ontario and its 20-year plan to overhaul the electricity system. What I have seen are dozens of press releases from the establish industries — i.e. Canadian Nuclear Association, AECL, Power Workers’ Union (biased towards coal and nuclear), Gas Association, Electricity Association, etc.
To be fair, I’ve also seen the other side of the debate (i.e. the push for renewables, conservation and distributed generation) from NGOs like the Suzuki Foundation, Pembina Institute, WWF-Canada, GreenPeace and Sierre Club. But, as Dr. Suzuki pointed out himself, they’re all locked in the trunk of the car. What’s desperately missing from this equation is the voice of the business community. We need leadership to come from top business leaders who aren’t necessarily in bed with the established power industries.
So, given this need, there’s hope that last week’s event will spark discussion amongst Ontario’s business elite. And who knows? Perhaps we’ll see this crowd begin to mobilize over the next two months as the Ontario Power Authority puts the finishing touches on its 20-year plan. An election is coming next October, after all. Much can still be done to persuade the current government or any future government about the need to accelerate the move toward clean energy, conservation and energy efficiency.
If such a group does ever mobilize, I’d advise a full-page ad in a major daily newspaper that shouts, “We’re here, and we’re staying in this debate.” That should get the government’s attention.
On a side note, Jose, thank you for the invite. And Dr. Suzuki, it was a pleasure meeting you.

Tyler Hamilton is editor-in-chief of Corporate Knights magazine and a business columnist for the Toronto Star, Canada's largest daily newspaper. In addition to this Clean Break blog, Tyler writes a weekly column of the same name that discusses trends, happenings and innovators in the clean technology and green energy market. This blog is a personal project started in April 2005. It is not an official blog of the newspaper.
November 18th, 2006 at 10:09 pm
Global warming is akin to a huge asteroid that’s flying at Earth from space. Right now its just a tiny bright dot in the sky, and every day it grows an unnoticeable increment, casting its shadow elsewhere –easy to ignore. This is an apt analogy since the energy providing that global-scale warmth is coming at us from space -from the Sun, and our temperature increases in unnoticeable tiny increments hour-by-hour. Meanwhile, that same asteroid’s energy is all we need to divert the asteroid –being that same Sun! And –we know this!
The answer to this “problem” we The Earth are experiencing with that other spatial body, The Sun, is – - – wait for it – - – The Sun!
Duh! If we can’t make such a simple and “staring-us-in-the-face-daily” connection like that, why not just turn our backs right now on all concepts of any progress we might envision for ourselves, and accept that we’re heading back into the primordial soup from whence we arose, bereft of the gift of life and intelligence so undeservedly bestowed upon us. Cheerio!
November 19th, 2006 at 11:21 am
If you can make it up to Barrie this Thrusday Nov 23rd, there will be a world premiere screening of a documentary about this called The Dark Side of Power …the flyer about it says it “uncovers the reasons for today’s critical power crunch and delineates the daunting challenges and possible solutions.” There will be a discussion after led by Dr. patrick Boyer who has written a book called Powershift. Email reservations can be made at rsvp@novalisproject.com.
November 20th, 2006 at 1:38 pm
We few that realize global warming is real, serious, growing, and not going away have a different perspective than most.
Currently oil / coal / nuke is a billion dollar a year business. And its not sustainable.
We know that cars will be EV. Replace whatever is made on oil with batteries and electricity (each part of the consumed resource)
Replace whatever is powered with coal with wind & solar.
So whoever figures out the cheapest solar cell will be massively rich.
And whoever figures out a great battery (or just manufactures them) will be massively rich.
Those of us that realize the time for change is near & real — have a big time advantage because the rest just don’t see it.
November 20th, 2006 at 1:40 pm
Did I say billion dollar a year business? I meant trillion dollar a year!