Holiday Rates

You may notice that the price of journeys is quite high at the moment; that is due to double rates being applied in the industry for Christmas Eve, Christmas Day, Boxing Day and New Years Day (and some hours of new years eve). Outside of these times, prices should return to normal.

Techhub Event with David Willetts, Minister for Universities and Science

Last night, I attended the Techhub event where Elizabeth Varley (from Techhub) chaired a panel with David Willetts (Minister for Universities and Science) and Anthony Browne (Mayor’s Office Advisor for Economic Development) to face an array of entrepreneurs to discuss and take questions on the future of the Silicon Roundabout; I think it was great for Techhub to arrange this and look forward to other events, although I appreciate it has set off a debate about the role of Techhub (see here and here). I honestly expected a bit of a grilling session of the two politicians but they got off quite lightly I think – I was going to say a few words about public sector procurement, but my chest infection/ bubonic plague or whatever it is got in the way.

One of the disappointing cop outs was about the £200 million fund for innovation that many of us were rather interested in hearing about – start ups can rarely access the money that they need. To quote from the official website, these “Enterprise Capital Funds (ECFs) address a market weakness in the provision of equity finance to SMEs by using Government funding alongside private sector investment to establish funds that operate within the ‘equity gap’. An equity gap arises where businesses with viable investment propositions are unable to attract investment from informal investors or venture capitalists.” Wow – that sounds amazing – until you get to the bit where its controlled by a bunch of Venture Capital Funds – part of the problem, not the solution. Startups through to early stage businesses need funding solutions that sit well outside what venture capitalists are happy with – and the incubator/ innovation model is alive and well in the tech world but hardly something that your average investor will touch. That the minister was unable to provide any real detail on the scheme, such as details of companies that haven’t been funded is very poor. The Minister even suggested that there were not the mechanisms in place to provide small amounts of funding which is a ridiculous proposition – both the Technology Strategy Board and the Enterprise Finance Guarantee Scheme (EFG) are just such mechanisms, and some of the TSB small competitions are a great way of funding this innovation. The EFG on the other hand is a great disappointment. One other post I read cited similar experiences to me and another which highlighted that not everyone necessarily deserves funding – which is also true. I do think the funding model is broken for start ups though and it is about the £10-£50k size – latching on to existing structures, more TSB competitions would be perfect; fully backed EFGs with accountability from banks to detail exactly how many EFG applications they receive, process and accept/ reject (banks in my experience are more than willing to offer other debt products, but actively dissuade consideration of the EFG). At least the Minister agreed to return at some point with whomever runs the Enterprise Capital Fund which could be amusing!

The other area which I would have liked to hear more about would have been government efforts to help SMEs with getting into public sector procurement (and given that I’ve mentioned that my last post or two, I won’t again). There were also some interesting points raised about education and lack of decent computer science engineers in the UK, immigration for highly skilled migrants and the ridiculous system about not having the NI exemption in London (a tremendous way to dis-incentivise start ups from employing locally).

Some good videos

I thought I would add a couple of cool videos that I’ve seen!!! Both are linked in to The Prince’s Trust Accounting For Sustainability – all with some interesting characters in them. The first involves a number of business leaders including Sir Richard Branson, Deborah Meaden and Theo Paphitis and the second features Stephen Fry.  The first of the videos again highlights the point made in my last post about how sustainability can indeed assist in reducing the cost of doing business, and should be embedded into day to day process rather than operate as something that sounds nice in a CSR policy.

I saw another horrendous video yesterday on Mother Jones where they’ve uncovered an excerpt from some utterly ridiculous ultra-right wing religious fanatics claiming that environmentalism is part of some satanic world order – aside from dismissing the link between fossil fuel usage and climate change, I think that they perhaps miss the point in the Bible about being custodians of the earth – which we are all quite bad at!

An opportunity being missed – Government spending cuts and inefficiencies

In the last day or so, there have been a number of articles about spending cuts in the NHS, Defence and local government in the UK – one article by the Guardian was entitled No Credible Plan for £20 bn NHS savings, warns MPs and in small print “Target would require ‘unprecedented’ efficiency gains to maintain quality of care, says health select committee”. The Telegraph on the other hand wrote an article entitled MoD ‘wasting £ billion a year‘ – and a cursory glance of news sites has plenty of articles about the recently announced reduction in local government budgets.

These massive inefficiencies are hardly new news nor has been the news about budget reductions. What is sad though is that there is now a tremendous opportunity to look at how sustainability and cleantech can actually help deal with this. There is a great chance to demonstrate how efficiencies can be achieved through more sustainable services and products but I sometimes wonder if the message is getting through. And sadly with the public sector, the methods for procurement are so bad that there is very little opportunity for innovation or solutions from start up businesses. In our limited experience in trying to get through procurement, every single tender asks for services that were around five years ago and barely reflect technological change, or provide the opportunity for new market entrants to provide solutions (if for no other reason than they have not been around for three years).

It is a disappointing situation – like us, I am sure that there are many other start up businesses that can provide the solutions needed to help the public sector meet its cost reduction targets without diminishing the underlying service needs – but there is very little chance of that happening until there is a radical rethink about public sector procurement. It may sound logical, but perhaps the answer is a government-sponsored incubator of sorts that allows start up, innovative solutions to be piloted in suitable government locations…

Carbon Voyage wins the 2010 Greenbang Award for Most Efficient Transport Programme

So today we can announce that we’ve won the 2010 Greenbang Award for Most Efficient Transport Programme for our “simple strategy to maximise the energy efficiency of existing modes of transport”. Some of the other winners included SAP, L’Oreal, Sony Ericsson and Verizon so it is nice to be included alongside some of those rather large business names! And of course congratulations to all the other winners – 1E, Onzo, TelecityGroup and Cawleys. Details of the awards can be found here, but the other winners are as follows:

Best corporate responsibility project: SAP, for its SAP Project Ghana, which provides women in Ghana with the training and technology needed to operate competitive, market-based cooperatives in the international shea nut butter trade.

Best IT technology: 1E, for its NightWatchman automated software for desktop and server power management.

Top smart-grid technology: Onzo, for its suite of energy management products and services to help both utilities and end-users improve energy efficiency.

Best data centre innovation: TelecityGroup, for the innovative, efficiency-maximising design of its Condorcet data centre in Paris.

Most efficient transport programme: Carbon Voyage, for its simple strategy to maximise the efficiency of existing modes of transport through taxi ride-sharing, web-based trip planning and reduction of empty taxis.

Best sustainable resource management programme: Cawleys, for its multi-benefit initiative to reduce food and agricultural waste while reducing landfill emissions of greenhouse gases and generating clean energy via anaerobic digestion.

Best low-energy building: L’Oreal, for its 100-per cent biomass-fueled beauty products plant in Libramont, Belgium.

Best cross-organisation sustainability effort: Sony Ericsson, for its GreenHeart across-portfolio initiative to eliminate paper phone manuals, significantly reduce packaging, phase out hazardous substances in its products and recycle phones to recover valuable resources.

Top in-house sustainability effort: Verizon, for instituting waste-reducing printing practices, greening its fleet with hybrid and compressed-natural-gas vehicles, re-engineering shipping processes to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and trialing fuel-cell, geothermal and solar energy at its Garden City facility in New York.

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