Small business sustainability?
There is a lot of talk about corporate responsibility and the
environment. Individuals are tiring of the onus being placed on them to change
the world. Have shorter showers, water your garden less, switch to green power,
change your light globes, car pool, take reusable bags to the supermarket, and
recycle. All of these are necessary but pale in comparison to the damage being
done by big business and industry.
But what about small business?
Somewhere in between large corporations and the individual, lies small
business.
It is easy to assume that large corporations are, by the nature of
their large profits, less ethical but is this actually the case? Large
corporations have large reputations to protect. Often it is more cost effective
for big business to invest in environmental impact minimisation than to clean
up the mess afterwards. They also have the capital to invest in changing
technologies to not only utilise the green machine but to actually profit from
it, directly through carbon trading and indirectly through marketing with a
social conscience.
So where does small business fit in and what can be done? The answer is
very little or a lot. It depends on your business model, your business goals
and your values. The advantage that small business has over a large
multinational is fewer layers of bureaucracy and more transparency. Big
business generally has a board of directors that need to be convinced, then a
feasibility study conducted before changes can be implemented. As a small
business owner you can conceive it and implement it virtually simultaneously.
Here are some of the things you can do:
- Recycle. Seems simple enough but you may have to find different
depots for your various waste such as paper, plastic, printer cartridges,
batteries, computers and other electronic parts.
- Switch to paperless billing. It is resource intensive to print and
deliver paper. It is also time consuming and unreliable.
- Switch to a Green Power company that derives its energy from
renewable sources that do not pollute.
- Reduce water consumption by ensuring your business has dual flush
toilets and water efficient taps.
- Choose energy efficient vehicles for your business.
- Choose sustainable suppliers. Research suppliers whose ethos includes
environmental sustainability. The potential for eco-conscious small businesses
to support each other is large and underestimated.
- Donate to charities. Really any charity is a positive step but a
charity that is aligned with your business practice or goals serves to
reinforce those values.
- Become Carbon Neutral. This does not simply mean paying for an offset
for bad business practice or paying for the right to pollute, this means
establishing the carbon footprint of your business, then reducing emissions as
far as possible. Once a minimal emissions target has been met the residual
emissions can be neutralised by the acquisition of offsets.
The changes that you make may depend on your local economic landscape
but have the potential to impact locally and globally. Small business is more
important than ever and has a responsibility to future generations.


