Where Ownership Ends and Waste Becomes Someone Else’s Problem

Episode 154 | 6.4.2026

Where Ownership Ends and Waste Becomes Someone Else’s Problem

Dr Greg Lavery on lease cycles, procurement incentives, and why remanufacturing struggles to displace new supply.

Listen to the full podcast episode on YouTube, Spotify, and Apple Podcasts.

A system optimised for exit, not longevity

In the UK office market, furniture decisions are tied to lease events, not asset life.

At lease end, companies relocate. Fit-outs are replaced. Furniture is written off. Around 300 tonnes go to landfill each working day. Another 200 tonnes go to recycling. Much of it remains high quality.

This is not a failure of materials. It is a failure of alignment.

The entity specifying the furniture does not own it long enough to bear the downstream cost. Procurement cycles reward speed, aesthetics, and compliance with current design trends. Residual value is rarely considered.

Responsibility ends at exit.

 

Formation inside a mispriced decision

Dr Greg Lavery traces this misalignment back to his early engineering work.

In 1994, he was designing waste infrastructure for a coal-fired power station. The plant was expected to operate for 50 years. The waste system was scoped for seven.

The reason was not technical. Ownership would change. Liability would transfer.

“They won’t own the power station after seven years.” Greg’s response was immediate. “That’s not the right answer.”

The decision exposed a structural gap. Design decisions were being made on a shorter horizon than the asset’s impact.

Greg moved from engineering into strategy to understand how those decisions were made, and how they might be changed.

 

The same logic, scaled across furniture

A decade ago, Greg encountered the same pattern in office interiors.

Furniture followed a predictable path:

  • Procured new at the start of a lease
  • Used for a fixed term
  • Disposed of at exit

The system ignored embedded carbon, material scarcity, and cumulative cost.

The supply chain amplified the inefficiency. Raw materials sourced globally. Processed across multiple countries. Margins added at each stage. Then discarded after a single use cycle.

“It’s incredibly wasteful.”

The issue was not lack of alternatives. It was that the default option remained easier.

 

Replacing new demand, not just extending old supply

Through Rype Office, Greg focuses on displacing new furniture demand rather than servicing the secondhand market.

The distinction is operational.

Secondhand markets serve a small segment willing to accept visible wear. Greg targets the majority that expects “as new” performance and appearance.

This requires remanufacturing, not reuse.

The process includes:

  • Material-level restoration, including non-toxic scratch removal and re-finishing
  • Reupholstery and recolouring to meet current design specifications
  • Integration of multiple supply streams into a single coherent design

Typical project composition:

  • ~40% client’s existing assets, remanufactured
  • ~40% externally sourced assets, remanufactured
  • ~10–20% new items

The outcome is indistinguishable from new.

“If someone can tell the difference… then we’ve failed.”

Cost is typically around 20% lower than wholesale new. Environmental footprint is reduced by roughly 80%. Waste is similarly avoided.

The constraint is not performance. It is market behaviour.

 

Where incentives block substitution

The furniture industry is structurally linear.

Manufacturers are configured around centralised production. Revenue depends on selling new units.

Design cycles reinforce this. Annual colour trends and aesthetic shifts create artificial obsolescence.

Greg describes this as a form of “fast fashion” applied to interiors.

Sales incentives reinforce it.

“If your bonus… depended on selling more new stuff, of course you’re incentivised to sell more new stuff.”

Remanufacturing introduces friction into this model. It reduces volume demand. It decentralises production. It shifts value from manufacturing to service and operations.

As a result, incumbents have limited incentive to promote it.

 

Policy begins to intervene at scale

The UK government is attempting to shift this dynamic through procurement.

Greg is part of a taskforce designing the Circular Economy Growth Plan. The focus is not theory but implementation across sectors including the built environment.

One mechanism is purchasing standards.

Government contracts are being structured to require circular outcomes. In one case, suppliers must provide IT equipment without purchasing new devices.

This creates immediate demand for remanufactured supply. It also signals quality thresholds to the wider market.

The scale matters. Government spending exceeds £200 billion annually.

Procurement becomes a lever to reshape supply chains.

 

The behavioural constraint

Despite cost savings and performance parity, adoption remains inconsistent.

Greg attributes this to perception and awareness.

The term “secondhand” carries negative associations. Buyers expect visible compromise.

This creates a signalling problem. Even when outcomes are equivalent, expectations are not.

Greg recalls a project where users assumed a fully remanufactured office was new. “That’s a win.”

The challenge is scaling that outcome without requiring direct exposure each time.

 

The unresolved dependency

Circular models reduce reliance on global supply chains. They create local employment. They lower cost and emissions.

But they depend on three conditions:

  • Sufficient supply of recoverable assets
  • Operational capability to remanufacture at scale
  • Willingness from buyers to specify non-new solutions

The first two are technical. The third is behavioural.

Greg places responsibility on decision-makers inside organisations. “I wonder if there’s a circular solution to this.”

Until that question is routinely asked, the system defaults to replacement.

 

No natural endpoint

The circular model does not resolve the system. It competes with it.

Linear incentives remain embedded in manufacturing, design, and procurement.

Policy can shift demand. Technology can improve quality.

But ownership cycles still define responsibility.

The same question persists from Greg’s early career: Who designs for consequences that occur after exit?

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When Leadership Defines the Job as Output, Ethics Disappears

Episode 153 | 30.3.2026

When Leadership Defines the Job as Output, Ethics Disappears

Pablo Lloyd OBE argues that ethics fails not from neglect but from how leaders frame decisions under pressure.

Listen to the full podcast episode on YouTube, Spotify, and Apple Podcasts.

The problem is misdiagnosed

Leaders say they lack time for ethics.

This is the wrong diagnosis.

The constraint is not time. It is definition. Leadership is defined as output delivery. Targets, metrics, throughput. In that definition, ethics has no role. It becomes optional. Then it disappears at the moment it is needed.

This is predictable. Not accidental.

Ethics fails because it is treated as an add-on to a system already operating at capacity.

 

The operating environment

The context reinforces this failure.

Trust is falling. Two thirds of people believe business leaders mislead. At the same time, information has become unstable. AI increases volume while reducing certainty.

Leaders are now responsible for decisions and for the credibility of the information surrounding them.

This increases pressure. It does not create space.

 

Formation under pressure

Pablo’s experience is not theoretical. He spent close to twenty years as a chief executive. Before that, he trained as a chartered accountant and held senior finance roles.

He describes leadership conditions directly. “Above a certain speed… the world is coming at you.”

This is the real setting of ethical choice. High velocity. Limited time. Consequences unfolding in parallel.

Any approach to ethics that assumes reflection outside this environment will fail.

 

The reframing

The key move is simple but non-obvious.

Ethics is not additional work. It is a way of making decisions.

Pablo states it clearly. “That’s not the message at all.”

The alternative framing is this. Ethics acts as a filter. It reduces the decision space. It does not expand it.

“I suppose… this is actually a tool to help the stress become bearable.”

This is the crux. Leaders assume ethics adds complexity. In practice, it can remove it.

 

The mechanism

Without ethics, decisions are evaluated on financial logic alone. Cost, benefit, risk.

This creates a wide solution space. Many options remain viable. Trade-offs are unresolved. Pressure accumulates.

With ethics, a second constraint is introduced. “What’s the right thing to do?”

This eliminates options early. Some choices are no longer available. The solution space narrows.

Narrowing the space reduces cognitive load. It also clarifies accountability.

This is not moral positioning. It is functional.

 

The friction

The constraint introduces a different problem.

Ethics is not uniform. “The ethics is in the eye… of the beholder.”

Different leaders will draw different boundaries. This creates disagreement.

The organisation must now manage two types of complexity. External complexity from markets and technology. Internal complexity from competing ethical interpretations.

There is no stable equilibrium.

 

The real choice

Leaders operate between two models.

In the first, leadership is execution. A “human doing” focused on output. Ethics is deferred because it has no defined place.

In the second, leadership includes judgement. A “human being” with purpose embedded in decisions. Ethics is present because it is part of the decision rule.

The external pressure is identical in both models.

Only the internal definition changes.

 

Closing

Ethics does not fail because leaders ignore it.

It fails because the system they operate in has no slot for it.

Redefine the role, and ethics becomes usable.

Do not, and it will remain a cost that is never paid.

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Why CSOs Struggle to Price 15-Year Risk into 12-Month Profit

Episode 152 | 23.3.2026

Why CSOs Struggle to Price 15-Year Risk into 12-Month Profit

Amelia Woodley on aligning ESG strategy with capital allocation, reporting cycles, and investor pressure.

Listen to the full podcast episode on YouTube, Spotify, and Apple Podcasts.

Short-term earnings cycles leave long-term risk unpriced

Public companies allocate capital against short-term financial signals. Annual accounts look backward. Market expectations reset every quarter.

Sustainability operates on a different timeline. Climate exposure, supply chain fragility, and resource constraints develop over decades. Returns on mitigation are delayed and uncertain.

This creates a structural conflict. Investment decisions prioritise near-term cash generation. Sustainability initiatives compete for capital without comparable payback profiles. In periods of volatility, they are deprioritised. Businesses “are just bunkered down short term in a survival mode.”

The issue is not awareness. It is how risk is priced and when value is recognised.

 

From contaminated land to board-level capital decisions

Amelia began her career in environmental remediation, working on contaminated land and complex infrastructure programmes, including the London 2012 Olympic Park.

These roles required translating environmental constraints into operational delivery. Regulatory approval, cost control, and timelines were immediate constraints.

Over two decades, Amelia moved into executive roles across infrastructure, transport, and listed companies. Her work focused on embedding sustainability into business models, governance, and commercial strategy.

Her position is explicit. Businesses exist to generate profit. “They’re not on a philanthropic journey.”

The constraint is not profit itself. It is whether that profit model remains viable under changing environmental and social conditions.

 

Where sustainability loses: inside financial planning cycles

The friction becomes visible in financial planning.

Transition plans require projecting performance over 10 to 15 years. Financial systems are built around 12-month reporting cycles. This creates resistance. Forecasts are uncertain. Once disclosed, they create accountability.

At the same time, sustainability proposals often fail to align with financial metrics used in capital allocation. This reinforces internal scepticism.

Amelia describes the perception directly. “They’re perceived as being kind of moral highwaymen.”

At this point, sustainability is not rejected on principle. It is rejected because it cannot be priced.

 

Rewiring sustainability into revenue, cost, and risk

Amelia’s approach focuses on embedding sustainability into core financial drivers.

This means linking ESG strategy directly to commercial outcomes. Execution is structured across three areas.

  • Revenue generation. 
  • Cost efficiency. 
  • Risk management.

Prioritisation is selective. “Don’t worry about the other things. For now. Just fix that problem.”

This aligns sustainability with existing decision-making logic rather than competing against it.

 

An expanding mandate inside unchanged financial systems

The CSO role sits in a narrow space.

Sustainability is expected to be embedded across the organisation. At the same time, regulatory pressure, disclosure requirements, and systemic risks are increasing.

Full integration has not occurred. Most organisations remain fragmented. Central coordination is still required.

The deeper issue is structural.

  • Capital allocation prioritises short-term return
  • Sustainability requires long-term investment
  • Disclosure frameworks impose long-term accountability

This creates exposure. Companies must commit to outcomes they cannot model with precision.

At the same time, risk categories are expanding. Climate volatility, supply chain disruption, and emerging technologies introduce new financial exposure.

The CSO is expected to manage this within systems that were not designed for it.

 

Bridging timelines without resolving the mismatch

The role is shifting from advocacy to financial translation.

Sustainability leaders must express long-term systemic risk in terms that fit short-term capital allocation. This requires trade-offs. Some initiatives are delayed. Others are reframed to deliver immediate value.

Amelia’s approach is incremental. Establish short-term wins. Build credibility. Extend planning horizons over time.

The underlying tension remains unresolved. Financial systems reward immediacy. Sustainability depends on duration.

The CSO operates between the two, without control over either.

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How Charlie Bigham’s Eliminated Edible Food Waste

Episode 151 | 16.3.2026

How Charlie Bigham’s Eliminated Edible Food Waste

A conversation with Charlie Bigham on product quality, operational discipline, and why responsibility must follow competence.

Listen to the full podcast episode on YouTube, Spotify, and Apple Podcasts.

A system under pressure

Food systems face growing scrutiny. Health concerns are rising. Environmental costs are becoming clearer. Waste remains persistent.

The tension sits inside daily operations. Food must be affordable. Retailers require scale. Consumers expect convenience.

At the same time, public awareness has shifted. Ultra-processed food has entered public debate. Food waste has become a policy priority.

Globally, roughly one billion tonnes of food are wasted each year. The value is estimated at around one trillion dollars. Food waste contributes around ten percent of global emissions.

For businesses inside the system, the choices are practical. Ingredients can be cheaper. Packaging can be cheaper. Waste can be ignored.

Those decisions accumulate over time.

Charlie Bigham runs a business that has had to make those decisions repeatedly.​

 

A kitchen table start

Charlie Bigham began his career as a consultant at Andersen Consulting.

He left after several years.

“I quite quickly worked out I wasn’t very good at working for other people.”

In 1996 he started a food business from his kitchen table.

The ambition was not modest.

Today the company employs about 750 people and produces prepared meals sold across UK supermarkets. Revenue is around £150 million.

Production takes place in two kitchens, one in London and one in Somerset.

Charlie attributes part of the early timing to circumstance.

“Every business needs to be lucky.”

In the mid-1990s British food culture was shifting. Newspapers introduced food sections. Television chefs became widely visible. Supermarkets began stocking more international ingredients.

Consumer curiosity around food was increasing.

The company grew steadily.

Charlie still describes the journey cautiously.

“We’re still in the foothills even after thirty years.”

 

Rejecting the purpose-first model

Many modern companies start with an explicit social purpose.

Charlie does not.

“I think you’re much better off saying, let’s focus on your product or your service and make that extraordinary.”

Responsibility follows competence. It cannot replace it.

The company’s first obligation remains the product.

“We are here first and foremost to make delicious food.”

Broader responsibilities appear alongside that work.

Some issues were not widely discussed when the company started. Climate change gained prominence years later. Regenerative agriculture has appeared more recently.

Ultra-processed food is another example.

The company’s ingredient discipline predates the debate.

“We will only ever put ingredients into our food that I have in my kitchen cupboard or my fridge at home.”

The rule originally supported taste and quality. It later aligned with emerging health concerns.

 

Inside the kitchens

Operational detail defines the company’s approach.

Meals are assembled from separate components. A dish such as chicken tikka masala includes cooked chicken, sauce and rice prepared independently.

Perfect alignment between components is difficult.

If one element runs out before the others, the remaining ingredients become surplus.

The company began measuring this problem carefully.

Food waste was first divided into two categories: edible and non-edible. Ingredients were then tracked by type and stage of production.

Measurement changed behaviour.

Over three years the company worked to eliminate edible food waste. Surplus food is now redistributed through charity partners including City Harvest and FareShare.

More than half a million meals have been redistributed.

Measurement also revealed smaller inefficiencies.

At one point the company discovered roughly 800 kilograms of food were being dropped on the floor each week.

Relative to total production it was small. In absolute terms it represented thousands of meals.

The next operational challenge became preventing that loss.

 

The commercial tension

Responsible decisions often cost more.

Packaging illustrates the trade-off.

The company packages its meals in wooden trays made from poplar grown in southwest France. The trays are produced by a family business that also manufactures traditional cheese boxes.

Plastic would be cheaper.

It would also work more easily with automated packing systems.

Natural materials vary slightly in size. Machines prefer precision.

Yet the company chose wood largely to avoid single-use plastic.

Similar decisions appear across procurement. The company purchases around a thousand ingredients and packaging components.

Cheaper options usually exist.

Short-term margins improve when they are chosen.

Resisting them requires discipline.

 

Responsibility without resolution

Charlie rejects the idea that business exists purely for extraction.

He also rejects the idea that purpose can replace commercial competence.

Responsibility appears through operational decisions rather than slogans.

Structural tensions remain. Incentives across supply chains often prioritise cost and speed. Regulation can sometimes move in contradictory directions.

Charlie believes the long-term answer must eventually involve governance.

“Business cannot exist purely for profit. It has to do more than that.”

For now, responsibility continues to emerge through the daily decisions made inside operating businesses.

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When “Green Paint” Masks a Petrochemical Industry

Episode 150 | 9.3.2026

When “Green Paint” Masks a Petrochemical Industry

Historic building consultant Michiel Brouns argues the sustainability language around decorative coatings obscures a simpler question of materials.

Listen to the full podcast episode on YouTube, Spotify, and Apple Podcasts.

A sustainability claim under pressure

The paint aisle now looks virtuous. Labels promise low emissions, water-based formulas and environmental responsibility. Green palettes and reassuring language suggest a sector aligned with sustainability.

The chemistry behind many products tells a different story.

Historic building consultant and paint manufacturer Michiel Brouns believes the industry has become skilled at describing progress without changing its fundamentals.

Discussing a recent industry guide on environmental claims in paint, Michiel calls the strategy “a perfect example of flooding the zone.”

The document contains many terms. It contains far fewer explanations of what actually sits inside a tin of paint.

The central distinction, Michiel argues, is rarely discussed. Most modern decorative paints remain dependent on petrochemical polymers.

 

A career shaped by buildings

Michiel’s route into the argument began long before he started making paint.

He grew up in Maastricht in the south of the Netherlands, a city layered with Roman, Spanish, French and German influences. Historic architecture was not an abstraction. It was the physical environment.

Early work took him into the commercial world of architectural ceramics. Michiel worked for a Dutch tile manufacturer supplying designers and architects.

The decisive shift came through chance.

Waiting for a connecting bus in the town of Gulpen, Michiel repeatedly passed a small shop selling traditional building materials. Curiosity eventually took him inside.

The shop specialised in historic finishes: lime washes, traditional paints, wrought iron and restoration materials. Michiel describes the reaction as instinctive.

The materials were natural. The finishes tactile. The environment felt recognisably human.

Michiel left his corporate job soon afterwards and joined the shop’s owner, Dutch restoration expert Haske van Zadelhoff. There he learned the practical logic behind traditional materials.

Once understood, Michiel says, the reasoning becomes difficult to ignore.

 

An unexpected market gap

Michiel moved to the United Kingdom in 2006. The initial focus was glazing.

He founded Histoglass to supply thin double-glazing units designed for historic windows. The technology allowed period properties to improve thermal performance without replacing original frames. Over time the business became a recognised supplier for heritage buildings.

During presentations to architects and conservation professionals, one question surfaced repeatedly.

Which paint should be used on historic timber?

The answer, for Michiel, was straightforward. Linseed oil paint had been used across Europe for centuries.

The surprise was the response.

Architects often had never encountered it. High-quality versions were difficult to obtain.

“Somebody has to manufacture it,” Michiel concluded.

The decision led to the creation of Brouns & Co, producing linseed oil paints based on traditional formulations.

 

The work today

Today Michiel divides his time between manufacturing, consulting and education.

Brouns & Co produces linseed oil paint made from flaxseed oil. The coating contains no plastics and allows timber to release moisture rather than trapping it.

Alongside the product business, Michiel advises architects and preservation specialists on historic building envelopes.

The work involves a steady programme of lectures and professional education. Michiel has delivered hundreds of continuing professional development courses through the Royal Institute of British Architects.

Projects connected to this work range widely. They include historic estates and heritage landmarks such as the Tower of London and the Chatsworth Estate.

More recently Michiel expanded advisory work in the United States through Brouns & Galloway, focusing on historically accurate building envelope solutions.

The objective behind these activities remains uncomplicated.

Michiel says the aim is simply to replace petrochemical paints with natural alternatives wherever possible.

 

The communication problem

The difficulty lies in how the industry describes itself.

Paint manufacturers frequently emphasise water-based formulas and low emissions. Such claims create the impression that the environmental question has largely been addressed.

Michiel disputes that conclusion.

Many products described as water-based still rely on plastic polymers. The water allows thinning and cleaning, but it does not alter the underlying material.

The result, Michiel argues, is a discussion dominated by labels rather than ingredients.

This matters because the paint sector sits within the wider petrochemical supply chain. Large chemical manufacturers underpin many of the brands found in retail stores.

Against that backdrop, sustainability claims become part of marketing.

The debate shifts towards terminology rather than materials.

 

An unresolved shift

The structural imbalance between natural paint producers and the petrochemical coatings industry is substantial. Large manufacturers command budgets and distribution networks that smaller producers cannot match.

Yet Michiel sees signs of movement.

Homeowners increasingly ask about indoor air quality. Conservation professionals are revisiting traditional finishes. Environmental concerns about microplastics are also growing.

The change remains gradual.

Michiel describes it less as a breakthrough than a slow accumulation of attention. Conversations that once seemed niche are beginning to reappear in mainstream discussion.

For Michiel the argument ultimately returns to transparency.

If products carried clearer ingredient listings, he believes, consumers could decide for themselves.

The choice would remain theirs.

But the materials inside the tin would be harder to obscure.

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