NGO
BUSINESS LEADERS' INTER-FORUM
FOR ENVIRONMENT 21 (B-LIFE21)
- Article No.3 (Feb,2003)
CORPORATE EXECUTIVES WORKING FOR THE ENVIRONMENT AND DIALOGUING WITH ENVIRONMENTAL NGOs
http://www.zeroemission.co.jp/B-LIFE/english/index.html
B-LIFE21, the Business Leaders' Inter-Forum for
Environment 21, was established in January 1997.
It is an environmental NGO whose members are leading
figures in the Japanese corporate world.
"To build a sustainable economy, it is important
that companies, the main players in a country's
economic activities, should be the first to change.
In particular, large companies, having with large
work forces, material resources and capital, must
be the ones to lead the way forward. In order
to carry out reforms within a company, it is imperative
that the management should change." This
is the assertion of B-LIFE21, a non-governmental
organization that business people interested in
environmental issues can participate in voluntarily.
Currently, there are 18 members, among them Mr.
Kunio Anzai, chairman of the board of Tokyo Gas
Co., Makoto Iida, Founder, Secom Co., Ltd., Keiichiro
Okabe, Chairman & CEO, Cosmo Oil Co., Ltd.,
Mr. Yotaro Kobayashi, chairman of the board of
Fuji Xerox Co., Mr. Shoichiro Toyoda, honorary
chairman of the board of Toyota Motors Corporation,
Shigeo Fukuchi, chairman of the board and chief
executive officer of Asahi Breweries, and Mr.
Masatake Matsuda, chairman of the East Japan Railway
Company.
Mr. Norihiro Mitsuhashi, Professor of the Faculty
of Policy Informatics, Chiba University of Commerce,
is the founder and general secretary of the forum.
He is also a Director of Japan for Sustainability.
While he was on the editorial board of Japan's
top business newspaper, the Nihon Keizai Shimbun,
Mr. Mitsuhashi oversaw the editorial series, "Proposals
for the Environmental Century," which included
31 articles starting on New Year's Day in 1995.
The editorials emphasized the importance of environmentally-conscious
corporate management and had a major impact on
the business world. He is also deserves credit
for being a strong promoter of the zero-emissions
movement (which aims for "zero-emissions"
from industry through careful planning and "industrial
ecology") in Japan, which was originally
proposed by the United Nations University.
B-LIFE21 has two objectives. One of them is to
promote dialogue with environmental NGOs. The
basic goal of corporations is to pursue profits,
and after the Second World War, companies contributed
greatly to the improvement of Japanese living
standards by expanding business operations in
the pursuit of profit. In the twenty-first century,
however, humanity is facing the limits of the
Earth's capacity, so it has become increasingly
important to adopt considering the benefit for
the Earth. The idea of benefits for the Earth
means protecting the natural environment from
further deterioration.
Many environmental NGOs and NPOs start from the
principle of benefiting the Earth. It is important
in future that corporate management reflect on
the value of benefiting the Earth as a an issue
of corporate interest. For that purpose, business
people should actively promote dialogue with environmental
NGOs and learn from them.
With such a purpose, B-LIFE21 has been holding
symposiums with representatives from environmental
NGOs and monthly breakfast meetings with members
of environmental NGOs as guest speakers. At these
meetings, the corporate management listens carefully
to the information provided by NGOs, as well as
their candid views and proposals. Besides discussions
here, these meetings also provide opportunities
to initiate collaborative ties between companies
and NGOs.
The other purpose is to "toil to improve
the environment." While the accepted goal
of the business people is to pursue company profits,
as we face the limits of the Earth today, they
need to take out a number of days a year, or even
a few hours to think about, and work for the environment.
By doing so, these people will have a first-hand
experience of the multidimensional aspects of
environmental issues, and it is hoped that they
will come up with their own ideas of what they
can do for the environment, so that they can incorporate
the necessary measures into their business management.
For this purpose, B-LIFE21 sponsors university
lectures by corporate managers. Business people,
mainly members of B-LIFE21, teach or speak about
corporate measures for environment, constraints
and future prospects. The members, however busy
they may be, are not allowed to send substitutes,
but must stand at the podium themselves. This
is how students learn about the corporate environmental
mindset, and empowers them to be informed observers
of the company's behavior even after they become
a working member of society.
On the other hand, the companies cannot fall
back from or compromise the strategies their leaders
had spoken about. The organizers believe these
dynamics will give further momentum to environmentally-conscious
corporate management.
These lectures have been convened at Shonan-Fujisawa
Campus of Keio University (full-year term in 1998,
and autumn term in 1999), and Kinugasa Campus
of Ritsumeikan University (autumn term in 2000),
and Nishi-Waseda Campus of Waseda University (full-year
term in 2002).
The contents of the sponsored lectures are published
on the Internet so that anyone who is interested
can see them. They were also compiled and published
in Japanese in "Earth Environment and the
Japanese Economy," and "Earth Environment
and Corporate Management" (both from publisher
Toyo Keizai Shinpo Sha). The former, by Tadahiro
Mitsuhashi, was translated into English as "Japan's
Green Comeback: Future Visions of the Men Who
Made Japan" (Pelanduk Publications, if you
are interested in getting the book, please contact
JFS secretariat.).
In Japan, until now, the NGOs were not as active
as their western counterparts due to social systems
and other factors that limited participation in
them. Even the Wild Bird Society of Japan, which
is said to be the country's largest environmental
NGO, only has about 55,000 members. None of the
Japanese NGOs are comparable to their U.S. and
European counterparts in terms of their large
membership of several hundred thousand and robust
funding, as well as their influential power.
Despite such a background, Japan has been seeing
an increase in the numbers of the NGOs and expansion
of their activities today, as the issues inherent
in the existing social and economic structures
are coming to the fore. In the future, we expect
that these NGOs will be treated equally with government
and businesses at conferences, and will have more
influence in society, more similar to their western
counterparts.
B-LIFE21 has continued its unique activities,
such as setting up fora for dialogue between NGOs
and corporate management, and between management
and students, even in the past when the majority
of businesses underestimated the impact and importance
of NGOs. In that sense, B-LIFE21 is a unique environmental
NGO, where business leaders of Japan can have
heart-to-heart talks with environmental NGOs,
and speak enthusiastically to students.
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