3 Steps to Being Green from the Get-Go

Here are three steps entrepreneurs can take to have sustainable practices from the get-go

By U.S. News Staff

Posted: March 10, 2009

  1. Decide what sustainability means to you. Miriam Karell, founder of sustainability consulting firm Three Point Vision, says that "when it comes to sustainability, there is no separation between the environmental and social components." Every client she works with has different goals for issues like environmental consciousness and employee development, so she always suggests they think about what they truly want to achieve.
  2. Set realistic goals. "If you start at the beginning, you're being efficient and strategic," says Karell. "But if you feel overwhelmed, then it's good to have someone keep you on track."

    Not everyone needs an outside expert. Dino Lambridis, Alkis Crassas and Michael Jeffers, all 40, didn't use a consultant when they co-founded earth-friendly EVOS. Their Tampa, Florida-based fast-casual restaurant chain, which made $4 million in 2008, uses renewable wind energy and sustainable materials and serves organic ingredients. And they opened in 1994, when printing menus with soy-based inks was considered "weird."

    Lambridis suggests people take small steps when educating themselves. "We simply did what we could with what was available and acceptable at that time," he says, "and we talked about it with our guests."
  3. Be authentic. Don't fake how much you care, Lambridis cautions. "If you do something you don't believe in or understand, it will ultimately come across as inauthentic, and that's far more harmful to your cause than the sustainable effort is worth."

—By Jennifer Wang.

Copyright © 2009 Entrepreneur.com, Inc. All rights reserved.

How about a little focus

on profits.

This entire "Green" thing is a scam.

Global warming a scam

Junk science for the wacko's

Scientists meet to dispute global warming theory

Pete Chagnon - OneNewsNow - 3/8/2009 4:00:00 AM

NEW YORK CITY - The A-list of manmade climate-change skeptics is meeting in New York City for the 2009 International Conference on Climate Change.

The Conference is definitely international in scope. Opening the conference is Vaclav Klaus, president of the Czech Republic and the European Union. When it comes to manmade global warming, Klaus calls that a myth. He is also an outspoken critic of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, and says the panel is one-sided and has a political agenda.

Featured at the conference will be more than 70 scientists who do not subscribe to the notion that so-called global warming is driven by manmade emissions of carbon dioxide, one of those being Harrison "Jack" Schmitt -- one of the last astronauts to walk on the moon.

The Conference is being hosted by The Heartland Institute. Dan Miller is the director of public relations at Heartland.

"What we are trying to accomplish with this conference is to present to the politicians and to the public that the debate is not over about global warming or climate change; that there is plenty of room for disagreement; and that sound science shows that the earth is not warming," says Miller.

"For much of the latter part of the 20th century there's been a mild warming as we come out of an ice age -- but the planet today is much cooler than it was a thousand years ago."

Besides the 70+ scientists at this conference, more than 650 scientists worldwide have expressed skepticism over manmade climate change.

Larry of CA @ Mar 10, 2009 14:35:40 PM

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