A new profit motive: the bottom line is preserving the environment. (Consumer News).As protesters regularly disrupt meetings of the World Bank and the World Trade Organization, it's becoming apparent that many consumers want their goods to come from companies that practice environmental and social responsibility. And those same consumers also object to international agreements like the North Atlantic Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA NAFTA in full North American Free Trade Agreement Trade pact signed by Canada, the U.S., and Mexico in 1992, which took effect in 1994. Inspired by the success of the European Community in reducing trade barriers among its members, NAFTA created the world's ), which puts profit ahead of environmental protection. "When businesses can roam from country to country with few restrictions on their search for the lowest wages, the loosest environmental regulations and the most docile and desperate workers, then the destruction of livelihoods, cultures and environments can be enormous," writes The Body Shop founder Anita Roddick Dame Anita Lucia Roddick, DBE (23 October 1942 – 10 September 2007) was the founder of The Body Shop, a British cosmetics company producing and retailing beauty products that shaped ethical consumerism. in Business As Unusual. "You can't stop business from going global, but you can make it listen to the responsibilities that go with jumping on the globalization globalization Process by which the experience of everyday life, marked by the diffusion of commodities and ideas, is becoming standardized around the world. Factors that have contributed to globalization include increasingly sophisticated communications and transportation bandwagon." Creating jobs with fair wages. Making products that respect the health of the Earth and its people. Protecting land and wildlife. A business that does any one of these things is a step ahead of the rest. But some companies are finding ways to do all three. Working for Wildlife In 1995, Mike Korchinsky, CEO (1) (Chief Executive Officer) The highest individual in command of an organization. Typically the president of the company, the CEO reports to the Chairman of the Board. of Wildlife Works, sold his management consulting company and went to Kenya. "I had one of those cliched cli·chéd also cliched adj. Having become stale or commonplace through overuse; hackneyed: "In the States, it might seem a little clichéd; in Paris, it seems fresh and original" experiences where the meaning of life seemed right in front of me," he says. But he also noticed the wildlife was in a fragile condition. A growing Kenyan human population competing for scarce resources made for slash-and-burn agriculture and widespread poaching poaching: see cooking. . "When you see the poverty first-hand," says Korchinsky, "and see that these people aren't getting any benefit from the wildlife, you wonder why the wildlife has survived so long." Korchinsky decided to make it in the community's best interest to protect wildlife. He founded Wildlife Works, an eco-friendly clothing company, and then bought the 80,000-acre Rukinga Wildlife Sanctuary to create a migration corridor within Tsavo National Park Tsavo National Park (tsä`vō), 8,034 sq mi (20,808 sq km), SE Kenya; est. 1948. Located on the semiarid plains, it is a sanctuary for the large animals of E Africa. The Mzima Springs are found there. . "The only reason we're there is because of the wildlife" says Korchinsky. "We told the people, `If you don't honor the boundaries, the wildlife will go, and so will we.' They were surprisingly receptive." Though some t-shirts are being produced at the 20-acre eco-factory at Rukinga, most of Wildlife Works' clothing is made in San Francisco. Once the company has trained more workers, created a solid market demand and established African sources for their organic, hemp hemp, common name for a tall annual herb (Cannabis sativa) of the family Cannabinaceae, native to Asia but now widespread because of its formerly large-scale cultivation for the bast fiber (also called hemp) and for the drugs it yields. and eco-fleece clothing, production will be augmented in Kenya. Nevertheless, U.S. production and sales pay for the Rukinga sanctuary and the jobs for the people there. Sporty graphics and clever environmental slogans adorn Wildlife Works' line of clothing, which includes t-shirts ($31) and tank tops ($24) for women, a safari jacket ($175), lightweight jackets ($64) and men's jersey tees ($32). The clothes can most easily be found in trendy fashion boutiques. Matte Matters When Alex Pryor came to California from Argentina for college, he brought yerba Yer´ba n. 1. (Bot.) An herb; a plant. Yerba dol osa A kind of buckthorn (Rhamnus Californica). Yerba mansa A plant (Anemopsis Californica matte, the drink of his country, with him. He began sharing it, and a few years later, he started Guayaki Sustainable Rainforest Products with a group of friends. Yerba matte is a tea native to South America. It contains 190 active compounds, nutrients and amino acids and is touted as a healthful health·ful adj. 1. Conducive to good health; salutary. 2. Healthy. health ful·ness n. alternative to coffee. Grown on the Guayaki Rainforest Reserve in eastern Paraguay, where Pryor's extended family runs the project, the matte is certified organic, shade-grown and smoke-dried. With 272 species of birds and 36 species of mammals, the whole forest reserve is second only to the Amazon for the world's highest biodiversity, according to the World Wildlife Fund. Guayaki aims to make it more economically valuable to keep the standing trees on the land rather than chop them down for timber and cattle grazing. Guayaki has donated 2,700 acres to the 34 families who live on the reserve. The project also helps provide for the health center and school in the area. "From the beginning, our mission was to sustain forests," says Guayaki CEO Chris Mann. "Now, it's to cultivate sustainability to preserve the culture of the people while promoting market-driven conservation." Guayaki has been hosting "tea parties" from its 35-foot RV, decorated with a bright mural of the rainforest, and it is serving up matte lattes and smoothies in stores across America. Plans for a cafe are in the works, which would incorporate matte-based munchies munchies Substance abuse A popular term for the craving for salt-rich and/or high-carbohydrate 'junk food,' associated with use of marijuna, amphetamines, and other recreational drugs. See Junk food. and other rainforest-grown foods, such as brazil nuts, into the Guayaki mix. The tea ($1.75 for a three-bag sampler; $5.91 for 16 bags) is also sold at coffee shops and natural foods stores in traditional, orange blossom, chai and mint flavors. Some of Maine's Beeswax beeswax: see wax. beeswax Commercially useful wax secreted by worker honeybees to make the cell walls of the honeycomb. A bee consumes an estimated 6–10 lbs (3–4. Between August 2000 and June 2001, Maine-based Burt's Bees, maker of natural body care products, spent $5 million on preserving the largest surviving area of the great North Woods The Great North Woods are spread across four northeastern U.S. states: Maine, New Hampshire, Vermont and New York and into the Canadian province of Quebec, from the Down East lakes to the Adirondack Mountains. , which once stretched from Maine to Minnesota. Some $2 million of that went toward helping The Nature Conservancy acquire 185,000 acres along the St. John River in northwestern Maine--the biggest conservation acquisition in Maine's history. Burt's Bees, along with the group RESTORE: The North Woods, has proposed using the land to create a new 3.2 million-acre Maine Woods National Park. "I believe the North Woods was a big set of lungs creating fresh air for this part of the ecosystem," says Burt's Bees cofounder co·found tr.v. co·found·ed, co·found·ing, co·founds To establish or found in concert with another or others. co·found Roxanne Quimby. "We have more need of that set of lungs than ever because we're creating a lot of pollution south and west of here. It's important to restore and preserve these trees, if for no other reason than to keep our air clean." The land, bought back from logging and paper companies, is still intact, with only about 100 people living in camps off-and-on throughout the year. It plays host to moose, bear, Canada lynx and the second-highest concentration of rare plants in Maine. "It's a miracle It's a Miracle was a television show that aired on PAX-TV (now Independent Television) between September 6, 1998 and September 1, 2004.[1] Initially hosted by Richard Thomas[2], and later by Roma Downey, [3] [preserving the area] is even possible in this day and age," says Quimby. "There just isn't this kind of land left." Burt's Bees, whose latest line of products includes a refreshing Rosemary Mint shampoo bar ($6), vivifying Wild Lettuce toner ($9), all-natural facial powders ($16), cremes ($9) and moisturizers moisturizers hydroscopic agents, applied to the skin and hair, as creams, rinses or shampoos, to increase hydration of the stratum corneum. Examples are propylene glycol, glycerine and lactate. ($11), has always included the environment in its economic equation. "You can have a successful business without compromising your values, and one of my values is the environment," says Quimby. "I've not had to compromise anything." CONTACT: Burt's Bees, (800)849-7112, www.burtsbees.com; Guayaki, (888)GUAYAKI, www.guayaki.com; Wildlife Works, (888)934-WILD,www. wildlife-works.com; RESTORE, (207) 626-5635, www.restore.org. KATHERINE KERLIN is associate editor of E. |
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