NZBCSD: Seize Opportunities from Resource Shortage
October 15 2009
Media Release
Sustainable
business group's new leader: Seize opportunities from
worsening resource shortages.
Businesses need to
focus on how to make the most of new opportunities driven by
the growing shortage of local and world natural
resources.
The newly elected chair of the New Zealand
Business Council for Sustainable Development, Bob Field,
also chair of Toyota NZ Limited, says the planet's resources
are being stretched as never before by a growing population
and higher standards of living.
"The global pressures
from an expected 50% increase in human population and a
tripling of energy demand and vehicle fleet in the first
half of the 21st century will provide New Zealand with a
unique opportunity to build an international competitive
edge as a sustainable economy with eco friendly products and
tourism opportunities," Mr Field says.
"The importance
of sustainability in the 21st century is growing - and
businesses are only sustainable if the environment and
society in which they operate is also sustainable. It's
encouraging that sustainability is becoming more mainstream
- but there is much more to do.
"As a council we
encourage New Zealand business to regard an investment in
sustainability not simply as a cost - but a key opportunity.
Preserving the unique Kiwi quality of life can also be
achieved in parallel to this business objective. That's
reflected in the Business Council's recent major research
and policy development work on how the country can solve its
fresh water allocation problems, improve the performance of
a million poorly insulated homes, and put a price on other
activities affecting the environment, like greenhouse gas
emissions and solid waste going to landfills," Mr Field
says.
Mr Field replaces former chair Nick Main, of
Deloitte, who has moved to London to head his firm's global
climate change work, as leader of the 10 year-old Business
Council. Its member companies jointly employ more than
88,000 people. Their annual sales of $59 billion equate to
about 43% of gross domestic product in dollar
terms.
The Business Council was launched in 1999 with
20 member companies by then Fletcher Challenge chief
executive Mike Andrews and The Warehouse founder Sir Stephen
Tindall. Mr Andrews said at the time: "I think the quality
of New Zealand's economy, environment and society, the size
and scope of export opportunities and the domestic and
international policy frameworks supporting them, could all
be enhanced by a strong, credible and rigorously
well-informed business group committed to sustainable
development."
Members believe sustainable businesses
are profitable, contribute to social progress and ecological
balance and protect New Zealand's quality of life.
New Business Council appointments are:
Bob
Field, Toyota NZ Limited, Chairman
Mark Drury, URS, Deputy Chair (large enterprises)
Steve Bonnici, Urgent Couriers, Deputy Chair (SMEs)
Nick Collins, Beacon Pathway, Executive Committee Member
Brett Tomkins, Deloitte, Executive Committee Member
Existing Committee Members
are:
Doug Heffernan, Mighty River Power
Graeme Norton, 3R
Malcolm Rands, Ecostore
Mark Gilbert, BMW NZ
Rob Fenwick, Living Earth
Sean Bignell, Hobsonville Land Company
Tim Lusk, Meridian
Warren Parker, Landcare Research
Sir Stephen Tindall, The Warehouse
Dick Hubbard, Hubbard Foods
Biographical notes:
Bob
Field, Chair, Business Council: Currently Chairman of
Toyota New Zealand, a director of KiwiRail, and Chairman of
a private funds management company. Mr Field has 40
years’ international experience in the motor
industry, including 25
years as the CEO of Toyota New Zealand. He has a
Bachelor of Commerce degree from Canterbury University and
post graduate qualifications in accounting and corporate
governance. He was a founding member of the New Zealand
Business Council for Sustainable Development and has been a
trustee of the World Wide Fund for Nature for the past 25
years, including past service on the WWF International Board
in Switzerland and Chair of the local branch. He is also an
alumnus member of NZ Business Roundtable.
Mark Drury,
Deputy Chair: Chief Executive of URS New Zealand Limited, a
wholly owned subsidiary of URS Corporation, a publicly held
company listed on the New York Stock Exchange. A civil
engineer, he has been with URS, in its various forms, for 30
years. He was appointed to his current role as Chief
Executive of URS New Zealand in 2000. He is also a member of
the URS Asia Pacific Advisory Board.
Steve Bonnici,
Deputy Chair: Managing Director, Urgent Couriers Limited,
started in the transport industry in 1983 and formed Urgent
Couriers in 1989, specialising in on-demand courier
services, growing it to become the country's largest
privately owned courier company. Mr Bonnici has an MBA from
the University of Auckland. Urgent Couriers joined the
Auckland Environment Business Network in 1997 and the
Business Council in 2000.
Ends