What Would Nature Do? Rethinking Business Strategy

Episode 78 | 12.3.2025

What Would Nature Do? Rethinking Business Strategy

In this episode of The Responsible Edge, host Charlie Martin sits down with Nicky O’Malley, a leader in nature-positive business strategy. With a career spanning conservation, corporate responsibility, and high-impact campaigns, Nicky has a clear message: businesses must move beyond sustainability and towards regeneration.

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

Rather than just reducing harm, she argues that companies should actively restore, replenish, and rethink their relationship with nature. But what does that actually look like in practice? This conversation dives into the principles of nature-first business, the power of storytelling, and why the most successful organisations of the future will be those that ask themselves: What would nature do?

 

🌍 Why Sustainability Isn’t Enough—We Need Regeneration

Many businesses now recognise the importance of sustainability, but sustaining the status quo isn’t enough—especially when nature is in decline. Nicky highlights that businesses need to shift their focus from merely mitigating damage to actively contributing to planetary health.

🔹 Moving beyond carbon – While net-zero targets dominate ESG discussions, biodiversity and nature loss are often overlooked.
🔹 Replenishing, not just reducing – Businesses need to restore ecosystems rather than just minimising their footprint.
🔹 Nature as a stakeholder – Just as companies consider shareholders and employees, they must account for nature in decision-making.

“We aren’t going to have businesses and an economy unless we look after the ecosystem within which we operate. Without nature, we don’t exist.”

 

🎶 How a Birds-Only Chart Hit Inspired Millions

One of Nicky’s most impactful projects was “Let Nature Sing”, a campaign she spearheaded at the RSPB. The goal? Get a track made entirely of birdsong into the UK music charts to remind people of the beauty—and fragility—of nature.

📢 Five million people heard birdsong in a single day.
🚆 It played in train stations, cathedrals, and public spaces across the country.
🎶 The track reached #11 in the UK charts—outperforming global pop stars!

“When people heard birdsong on their commute, they stopped and smiled. It sparked an emotional connection—because when people care, they want to protect.”

The success of this campaign wasn’t just about awareness—it was about engaging people emotionally. For businesses, this is a crucial lesson: winning hearts and minds is essential for driving real environmental action.

 

🌱 Three Ways Businesses Can Learn from Nature

If businesses started thinking more like nature, how would they change? Nicky suggests applying three core principles from the natural world:

1️⃣ Systems Thinking: Break Down Silos

Just as ecosystems thrive through interconnection, sustainability should not be siloed within a company. It must be embedded into:

Operations – Sustainable supply chains, circular design
Leadership – Decision-making that considers long-term ecological impact
Culture – Employees empowered to champion environmental goals

“We need to stop thinking of sustainability as a ‘department’ and instead embed it across every function.”

2️⃣ Adaptation Over Perfection: Test, Learn, Iterate

Nature evolves through experimentation—and businesses must do the same.

🔄 Start small – Pilot nature-focused initiatives before scaling them.
📊 Measure impact – Track results and refine strategies.
💡 Stay flexible – Environmental challenges will shift, and so must businesses.

“If we wait for everything to be perfect before we act, we’ll never get started.”

3️⃣ Contribution Over Extraction: Give More Than You Take

Businesses need to stop asking, What can we take? and start asking, What can we give back? 🌍

🌿 Regenerative supply chains – Investing in biodiversity, soil health, and ethical sourcing.
🏡 Community-led projects – Supporting local environmental restoration efforts.
♻️ Product innovation – Designing waste-free, circular products.

“We need to flip the script. How can my business create a positive legacy rather than just extracting resources?”

 

🚀 Breaking Barriers: How Businesses Can Act Now

Many companies struggle not with why they should act, but how. Common roadblocks include:

ESG fatigue – Sustainability feels like a compliance burden.
Solution: Frame nature-first business as an opportunity for innovation, not just a requirement.

Short-termism – Quarterly financial pressures stifle long-term environmental thinking.
Solution: Shift focus from profit maximisation to sustainable wealth creation.

Fear of greenwashing – Companies worry about backlash for imperfect sustainability efforts.
Solution: Be transparent – share progress and challenges. Consumers value honesty.

“Transparency builds trust. No company is perfect, but honesty and action go a long way.”

 

✨ The Magic Wand: A Business Mindset Shift

If Nicky had a magic wand, she’d make every business leader ask nature for advice before making decisions:

✅ Would nature take without giving back? No.
✅ Would nature resist change? No.
✅ Would nature evolve, regenerate, and collaborate? Yes.

“Nature isn’t just something we protect—it’s something we’re part of. The businesses that embrace this will be the ones that thrive.”

 

🌿 Final Thought: Don’t Just Sustain—Regenerate

📌 Test a small nature-first initiative in your business.
📌 Think beyond carbon—embed biodiversity into decision-making.
📌 Share progress openly—authenticity wins consumer trust.

👉 The most successful businesses of the future won’t just reduce harm—they’ll restore, replenish, and rethink their role in the natural world.

 

For a Truly Sustainable Future


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What It Really Takes to Build a Sustainability SaaS Business

Episode 77 | 9.3.2025

What It Really Takes to Build a Sustainability SaaS Business

The Responsible Edge podcast, hosted by Charlie Martin, recently featured Julien Lancha, co-founder of Advizzo, a purpose-driven SaaS platform helping water and energy utilities drive efficiency and sustainability through data. From Julien’s corporate tech career to his entrepreneurial pivot, his journey offers hard-won lessons for sustainability startups trying to carve out market space and create lasting impact.

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

💡 From Tech Corporates to Purpose-Driven Innovation

Julien’s story is one of progressive realisation — sustainability was not always the primary focus, but it became the driving force behind Advizzo’s creation.

👉 Early career in corporate tech giants like Oracle — focused on product, sales, and process-heavy work.
👉 A pivotal shift came when Julien joined Opower, a pioneering US energy efficiency startup, which opened his eyes to purpose-driven technology.
👉 Inspired, Julien co-founded Advizzo in 2015 — focusing on helping utilities and their customers reduce water and energy consumption using behavioural science and smart data.

“We didn’t just build a platform — we built a whole new segment in water efficiency, where few were focusing back then.”

 

⚡️ The Reality of Building a Sustainable SaaS Startup

Julien was refreshingly candid about the realities of founding a sustainability-focused startup. Far from the glamorous tech unicorn narrative, his story highlights the grit required to survive.

Key Challenges Faced:

💰 Raising money with no product — “We went unpaid for eight months, with no salary, building out of nothing.”
😓 Stress and health impacts — “There was a point where the pressure to meet payroll landed me in the hospital. No entrepreneur talks about that enough.”
⚖️ Balancing product innovation with regulatory navigation — Sustainability isn’t just about having a great product; you need the policy landscape to align too.

“Startups in sustainability often forget — the best product in the world won’t succeed if the regulatory environment isn’t pushing the market in the right direction.”

 

🛠️ Building in a Market That Doesn’t Exist

A recurring theme was the sheer difficulty of creating a market from scratch. Water efficiency wasn’t high on the agenda when Advizzo started, so Julien and his co-founder had to educate, advocate, and sell all at once.

🚧 Barriers they faced:

👉 Lack of awareness in the UK about the importance of behavioural water saving.
👉 Minimal regulatory support compared to energy efficiency, which already had established mandates in the US.
👉 Resistance from utilities that saw behavioural programmes as a ‘nice to have’ rather than essential.

“We were asking utilities to invest in saving water — a resource they are used to billing for. That’s a difficult cultural shift.”

 

⚖️ Regulation: The Underrated Growth Driver

Julien spoke at length about the role of regulation in sustainability success. Advizzo’s growth accelerated when:

👉They hired a regulatory expert to help shape water-saving policy in the UK.
👉They aligned Advizzo’s value proposition directly to emerging regulatory requirements.
👉They understood that policy shifts create whole new revenue streams for startups if you position yourself correctly.

“Regulation creates the conditions for growth — without it, you’re trying to sell innovation to customers who aren’t required to change.”

🚀 Pro Tip: If you’re building a sustainability business, embed regulatory engagement into your business plan from day one.

 

🔍 Learn from Others: Embracing ‘Graveyard Diligence’

A standout takeaway was Julien’s use of ‘graveyard diligence’ — a term coined in a fashion sustainability article, which he wholeheartedly embraced.

💀 What it means: Actively studying why similar startups failed and using that intelligence to shape your own approach.

“We saw US startups drowning in endless pilots — never reaching scale. So we deliberately moved to full-scale projects, even if they started small.”

✅ Key Learnings from Competitor Failures:

  • Avoid over-reliance on short-term pilots.
  • Focus on landing longer-term contracts.
  • Build tech that adapts to evolving regulations.
  • Don’t chase grants that create false markets.

 

🔄 The Emotional & Practical Realities of Exit

Julien was open about the emotional complexity of selling Advizzo after nearly a decade of building the company.

⚙️ Why Sell?

  • A new round of funding (Series B) would require another five years of high-intensity scaling.
  • Joining a larger company (Calisen Group) provided access to sales teams, infrastructure, and complementary products, enabling faster market access.
  • Calisen’s existing focus on smart metering and decarbonisation aligned well with Advizzo’s mission.

🧠 The Transition Experience

“It’s a weird adjustment going from being in control to being part of a larger machine. The stress doesn’t disappear, it just changes shape. The hardest part was letting go — trusting others to understand what made Advizzo successful.”

🚀 Despite the challenges, Julien sees partnership with Calisen as a smart, values-aligned route to scale.

 

✨ Final Reflection: What Needs to Change in Sustainable Business?

When asked the magic wand question, Julien’s answer wasn’t about faster exits or better funding — it was about impact.

“The biggest frustration was knowing we could do so much more — but being limited by short-term corporate thinking and lack of regulatory urgency.”

🔥 Julien’s Wish for the Future:

👉Faster, more ambitious regulation that drives sustainability initiatives forward.
👉Corporate leaders who genuinely understand that long-term value comes from embedding sustainability, not treating it as optional.

“We didn’t just want to make money — we wanted to save water, improve resilience, and leave a positive legacy. That’s what sustainability startups should be aiming for.”

 

🎯 Key Takeaways for Sustainability Founders

✅ Embrace regulatory strategy — don’t just build product, shape the market.
✅ Study why similar startups failed — don’t repeat the same mistakes.
✅ Build for long-term partnerships, not quick wins.
✅ Accept stress as part of the process — but find ways to manage it.
✅ Stay true to your impact mission — but be commercially smart about how you achieve it.

Julien’s journey through the trenches of sustainable entrepreneurship offers a goldmine of practical insight for anyone looking to launch or scale a purpose-driven business. As Julien put it:

“You don’t build a sustainability startup to make millions. You do it to make a difference — but that doesn’t mean you can ignore the business fundamentals.”

 

For a Truly Sustainable Future


👉 Become a signatory of The Anti-Greenwash Charter, publish your Green Claims Policy, and be recognised for your commitment to responsible sustainability communications.

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Embracing Complexity: Rethinking Land Use and Sustainability in the UK

Episode 76 | 6.3.2025

Embracing Complexity: Rethinking Land Use and Sustainability in the UK

In a recent episode of The Responsible Edge, Peter Mitchell shared invaluable insights into the evolving role of landowners, estate managers, and sustainability leaders in shaping the future of UK land use. With a career spanning military ambitions, rural estate management, and now sustainability leadership, Peter’s journey offers a unique perspective on the challenges — and opportunities — facing landowners in a climate-conscious era.

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

From Army Ambitions to Land Stewardship

Peter’s career path wasn’t a straight line. His early plans for a military career were derailed by injury, but that abrupt shift led him to discover the complex and rewarding world of rural estate management. Today, Peter serves as Head of Sustainability & Innovation at Gascoyne Estates, where his “generalist with a brain” approach underpins his success in driving sustainability across a diverse portfolio of land-based operations.

“Every job is a sustainability job.”

This mindset runs through the organisation, with every team member — from foresters to property managers — contributing to the estate’s environmental and carbon strategies.

 

The Challenge: A Finite Resource Under Pressure

Land is finite, and in Peter’s words, the famous (and possibly misattributed) Mark Twain quote still rings true:

“Buy land — they’re not making it anymore.”

But today, land isn’t just for farming. It’s expected to deliver:

  • 🥕 Food production
  • 🌳 Nature restoration
  • 🌞 Renewable energy generation
  • 🏡 Housing and infrastructure development
  • 🌾 Carbon sequestration

Balancing these competing demands is at the heart of Peter’s work — and a critical challenge for the entire sector.

 

Food Security: Redefining the Debate

Peter reviewed a report from the Agricultural Industries Confederation (AIC) advocating for an independent Food Security Committee to safeguard domestic food production. But as Peter pointed out, the definition of food security itself remains worryingly vague.

“Do we actually have a production problem, or do we have a distribution problem?”

Peter sees the real challenge not just in growing more food but in optimising how we use land, ensuring food reaches those who need it, and reducing waste. He highlights:

  • 🚜 Over 1.5 million tonnes of food wasted before leaving farms.
  • 🍽️ Millions in the UK relying on food banks, raising fundamental questions about access, affordability, and equity.
  • 🌾 Rising demand for non-food crops (e.g., energy crops) further squeezes available land.

 

Embracing Complexity: No Simple Fixes

If there’s one theme Peter returns to, it’s that land management is inherently complex. Every decision involves trade-offs — between climate goals, biodiversity needs, food security, economic viability, and community concerns.

“We need to get comfortable with the grey area.”

Peter warns against the search for overly simplistic solutions to deeply interconnected problems. Instead, he advocates for:

  • 🔄 Accepting that perfect solutions are rare — iterative, adaptive approaches are essential.
  • 👥 Involving landowners, farmers, communities, and businesses in shaping strategies, rather than top-down mandates.
  • 📣 Emphasising proactive transparency — disclosing not only successes but challenges and dilemmas too.

 

Collaboration is Key 🤝

Despite the complexity, Peter is optimistic — largely thanks to the collaborative culture within the land management sector. Unlike sectors driven by cutthroat competition, landowners and estate managers routinely share best practices, visit each other’s sites, and learn through cooperation.

  • 🌍 Initiatives like Groundswell Festival showcase regenerative farming at scale.
  • 🐑 Farmer clusters enable peer-to-peer learning on biodiversity and water quality.
  • 🏞️ Groups like the Environmental Farmers Group help farmers access emerging natural capital markets, offering new revenue streams for sustainable practices.

“There’s a real desire for collaboration at every level.”

 

Long-Term Vision vs Short-Term Politics

One of Peter’s most critical observations is the mismatch between landowners’ long-term outlook and short-term political cycles.

“We’re making decisions today that will only bear fruit in fifty to a hundred years.”

He urges government to:

  • 🛣️ Set long-term, stable policy frameworks.
  • 🏛️ Provide certainty on subsidy schemes, environmental incentives, and tax policies.
  • 🌱 Engage with landowners as long-term stewards, not short-term delivery agents.

Without this stability, landowners hesitate to invest in ambitious sustainability projects — fearing the rug could be pulled from under them with each political cycle.

 

The Magic Wand Moment ✨

When asked what single change he’d make to the commercial world, Peter’s answer reflects his pragmatic realism:

“Embrace complexity. Be willing to get it wrong.”

He champions a culture where businesses (and governments) feel confident experimenting, learning from mistakes — and crucially, being open about them. This honest, iterative approach, Peter argues, is the only way to navigate the messy realities of land use, food security, and sustainability.

 

Conclusion

Peter’s journey — from aspiring officer to sustainability leader — illustrates the power of adaptability, curiosity, and a commitment to servant leadership. His work at Gascoyne Estates offers a microcosm of the broader national challenge: how to manage finite land in a way that balances food, nature, carbon, energy, and housing — all while ensuring rural communities thrive.

For businesses, government, and society alike, Peter’s message is clear:

“There are no easy answers. But if we work together, embrace the complexity, and stay transparent, we stand a much better chance of getting it right.”

 

For a Truly Sustainable Future


👉 Become a signatory of The Anti-Greenwash Charter, publish your Green Claims Policy, and be recognised for your commitment to responsible sustainability communications.

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Why Corporate Marketing Supply Chains Are Undermining Sustainability Ambitions

Episode 75 | 4.3.2025

Why Corporate Marketing Supply Chains Are Undermining Sustainability Ambitions

On a recent episode of The Responsible Edge, host Charlie Martin sat down with Lauren Wilkinson, a sustainability professional with experience at a leading global drinks brand and a recently completed master’s in Energy, Society and Sustainability at the University of Edinburgh.

💬 Through her experience, Lauren uncovered a hidden weakness in corporate sustainability strategies — the environmental blind spot created by marketing supply chains. From branded bar mats to pop-up displays and giveaway merchandise, these materials often escape sustainability oversight, despite being produced at scale.

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

The Marketing Materials Blind Spot 🧩

Lauren’s time in marketing procurement highlighted a glaring disconnect between sustainability ambitions and the day-to-day decisions made when sourcing branded materials.

⚠️ Key Issues Identified:

  • Physical marketing materials (POS, merchandise, branded assets) often escape sustainability scrutiny.
  • Procurement focuses on cost and speed — sustainability is rarely factored into supplier selection.
  • Sustainability functions sit in corporate affairs, far removed from operational decision-making.

Lauren explained:

“The sustainability team was closely aligned to external communications, so the focus was on reporting and reputation management. Day-to-day procurement decisions? That wasn’t part of the conversation.”

 

Short-Term Costs vs Long-Term Impact 💸

🔎 Marketing procurement teams typically work to short lead times and tight budgets. This often means selecting suppliers based on:

  • Price
  • Speed of delivery
  • Ability to meet brand aesthetic requirements

What’s missing?
Lifecycle thinking — where materials come from, how they’re made, and where they end up.
Supplier audits — ensuring ethical and environmental standards in the supply chain.

“There was this assumption that if suppliers delivered on time and on budget, the environmental or social risks were someone else’s responsibility.”

 

What Gets Measured, Gets Managed 📊

Lauren proposed introducing lifecycle assessments for all branded marketing materials — tracking environmental and social impacts from:

  • 🌍 Raw material extraction
  • 🏭 Production and distribution
  • 🎉 Use in marketing campaigns
  • 🗑️ End-of-life disposal

The idea was rejected.
Why?

“It was seen as too disruptive — it would have forced teams to confront the real cost of these materials.”

This highlights a common corporate failing — sustainability seen as a comms tool rather than an operational priority.

 

Procurement Needs a Rebrand 🚀

If companies are serious about embedding sustainability across their operations, procurement must evolve from: 🚫 A cost-cutting function
✅ To a strategic enabler of sustainability

Lauren’s research found that the most impactful companies:

  • Involve procurement teams in sustainability strategy from day one.
  • Give procurement the authority to challenge unsustainable materials and suppliers.
  • Measure procurement success not just on cost and speed, but also on environmental and social outcomes.

 

The Disconnect Hurting Green Claims 🌍⚖️

With green claims legislation tightening, companies will soon need to prove that sustainability commitments extend beyond their products.

Lauren stressed:

“There’s a critical gap between the headline sustainability commitments brands make and the materials they use to promote themselves.”

Without transparent oversight across all marketing and branded materials, companies risk:

  • Greenwashing accusations.
  • Loss of consumer trust.
  • Non-compliance with emerging regulations.

 

What Needs to Change 🛠️

For companies to align their marketing supply chains with their sustainability commitments, they need to:

  • 🔗 Embed sustainability directly into procurement processes.
  • 📝 Develop clear sustainability criteria for marketing materials.
  • 📢 Ensure sustainability teams have a say in supplier selection.
  • 📊 Track environmental impacts across all marketing materials, not just product packaging.
  • 🏅 Recognise procurement teams for driving sustainable outcomes, not just reducing costs.

“Sustainability has to sit where the money is spent — and that means procurement.”

 

Conclusion: Sustainability Is an Operational Issue, Not Just a Brand Story

Sustainability strategies will always fall short if companies fail to apply the same rigour to their marketing materials as they do to their core product lines.

💬 Lauren’s experience exposes a critical governance gap — one that leaves marketing materials outside sustainability oversight, even as they flood bars, events, and retail spaces across the world.

✅ For companies to truly deliver on their green promises, sustainability must move beyond corporate reports and into every supplier contract, creative brief, and procurement decision.

 

For a Truly Sustainable Future


👉 Become a signatory of The Anti-Greenwash Charter, publish your Green Claims Policy, and be recognised for your commitment to responsible sustainability communications.

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Enoughism: Rethinking Growth and Purpose in Business

Episode 74 | 27.2.2025

Enoughism: Rethinking Growth and Purpose in Business

On a recent episode of The Responsible Edge, Matt Hocking, founder of Leap, a certified B Corp design agency, shared his philosophy on enoughism—the idea that businesses should redefine success not by relentless expansion, but by understanding what is truly enough.

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

A New Business Mindset for a Finite Planet

As businesses worldwide scramble to prove their sustainability credentials, Matt challenges the assumption that scaling up is always the goal. Instead, he advocates for a model where impact, purpose, and resilience outweigh unchecked growth.

“For any ecosystem to thrive, it has to have balance. Growth for growth’s sake leads to collapse. We’ve seen it in nature, and we’re seeing it in business.”

This conversation explored the risks of overgrowth, the integrity of sustainability certifications, and why businesses must redefine their purpose beyond profit.

 

From Creative Chaos to Planet-Centred Design

Matt’s journey into sustainable business was anything but conventional. With no formal design training, he built his career through instinct, experimentation, and a commitment to using creativity for good. His early work with Sky, LEGO, and the Eden Project reinforced a critical insight:

“I wasn’t interested in making money for the sake of it. I wanted to create something that mattered.”

This ethos led to the founding of Leap, a design studio that prioritises sustainability not as a trend, but as the default. In an era where businesses increasingly see sustainability as a box-ticking exercise, Leap was built with purpose at its core—proving that business can be a force for positive change from the outset.

 

Beyond Profit: When is Growth Too Much?

One of the most compelling insights Matt shared was his challenge to the ‘bigger is better’ mindset. As sustainability-focused companies scale, they often face the same pressures as traditional corporations—profitability, shareholder expectations, and market dominance. This raises a difficult question:

“How big do you actually need to be to deliver your mission effectively?”

The concept of enoughism pushes back against the idea that businesses must continuously scale to succeed. Instead, Matt argues that companies should be introspective about their purpose:

Is expansion genuinely serving the mission, or is it just expected?
Can a business be impactful without growing beyond its optimal size?
What does responsible, sustainable growth actually look like?

In a world facing climate crises, resource depletion, and widening inequality, he believes that businesses must redefine success on their own terms—before external pressures force them to do so.

 

Can B Corp Keep Its Integrity?

Matt was an early adopter of B Corp certification in the UK, believing in its potential to drive accountability in business. However, as the movement expands—bringing in multinational corporations alongside activist-led businesses—its original intent is being tested.

“B Corp was never meant to be a badge; it’s a framework. But when it becomes a selling point, that’s where issues arise.”

While certification provides a roadmap for better business practices, Matt warns that some companies are using it as a branding tool rather than embedding real change. The true value of B Corp lies not in external validation, but in whether a company genuinely commits to ethical decision-making, regardless of certification.

“If your values aren’t baked into your business from day one, no certification can fix that.”

This highlights a broader tension within ESG movements: How do we scale responsible business without diluting its principles?

 

The Future of Business: Systemic Change or More of the Same?

As greenwashing concerns grow, Matt sees radical transparency and accountability as the next frontier for sustainable business. Companies must move beyond surface-level commitments and take responsibility for measuring, reporting, and improving their impact.

“The antidote to despair is action, but the antidote to action is love in action.”

For Matt, this isn’t about compliance—it’s about fundamentally shifting business culture. That means:

Rejecting the need for infinite growth and focusing on enough
Challenging internal pressures to scale without purpose
Committing to sustainability beyond marketing claims

“Business should be about adding value, not extracting it. If we don’t rethink what success looks like, we’ll keep repeating the same mistakes.”

This perspective is a powerful reminder that sustainability isn’t just about reducing harm—it’s about redefining what businesses exist to do in the first place.

 

A Call to Action: Defining “Enough” in Business

When asked what single change could accelerate progress, Matt’s response was clear:

“Enoughism. If we understood what ‘enough’ meant—individually, collectively, and in business—we could build a world where companies thrive without needing to extract more than they give.”

For businesses that genuinely want to be a force for good, the question isn’t how to grow faster—it’s how to grow responsibly.

 

For a Truly Sustainable Future


👉 Become a signatory of The Anti-Greenwash Charter, publish your Green Claims Policy, and be recognised for your commitment to responsible sustainability communications.

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Climate Literacy: The Missing Link in the Built Environment’s Sustainability Efforts

Episode 73 | 25.2.2025

Climate Literacy: The Missing Link in the Built Environment’s Sustainability Efforts

On a recent episode of The Responsible Edge, Mina Hasman, Sustainability Director at Skidmore, Owings & Merrill (SOM), shared her insights on why climate literacy is the most overlooked but crucial element in the built environment’s sustainability transition.

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

Bridging the Knowledge Gap in Architecture and Design

With a career spanning architecture, environmental engineering, and policy advocacy, Mina has worked at the forefront of embedding science-based sustainability frameworks into the industry. However, despite the growing push for net zero and ESG commitments, she warns that many professionals still lack the foundational knowledge needed to implement real change.

“Many people still don’t know what net zero carbon truly means—what it entails, how to measure it, and how to verify claims. That’s where problems arise.”

In this conversation, Mina highlights the urgent need for climate literacy, the role of governance in preventing greenwashing, and the steps the industry must take to move beyond fragmented sustainability initiatives.

 

Why Climate Literacy is Critical

Sustainability is now a non-negotiable in the built environment, yet many of the professionals responsible for delivering net zero strategies are not equipped with the scientific, technical, or regulatory understanding required to do so effectively.

Mina explains that this knowledge gap leads to:

  • Misaligned sustainability claims that fail to translate into measurable impact
  • Buildings that underperform despite being marketed as ‘net zero’
  • Greenwashing—sometimes unintentional—due to misunderstandings of carbon accounting

“It’s not that people are deliberately misleading others—many simply don’t know the full technical implications of what they’re committing to.”

This is why climate literacy must be treated as a core competency, not just for sustainability consultants, but for architects, engineers, developers, policymakers, and financial decision-makers.

 

A Science-Based Approach: The Net Zero Carbon Building Standard

One of the most promising developments in tackling these issues is the Net Zero Carbon Building Standard (NZCBS), a UK-based initiative aiming to set science-backed energy and carbon targets for real estate projects.

Mina has played an integral role in shaping the framework, which aims to define what “net zero” truly means for the built environment, ensuring companies can no longer make vague or misleading claims without accountability.

“If we cannot join forces, we will never be able to truly understand where we stand—and if we don’t know where we stand, we cannot map the route to net zero.”

The NZCBS pilot phase is currently underway, allowing businesses to test its methodologies and refine the approach before its full-scale launch later this year. Mina encourages industry professionals to actively engage with the standard now, rather than waiting for it to become a regulatory requirement.

 

Beyond Silos: Why Collaboration is Key

One of the biggest roadblocks to effective climate action in the built environment is fragmentation. Too often, different stakeholders—architects, engineers, developers, investors, and regulators—approach sustainability from disconnected perspectives.

“We need to eliminate this sense of ownership—where organisations want to ‘lead’ rather than work together. Progress is not about individual recognition; it’s about collective impact.”

The industry needs greater alignment, where sustainability is integrated from the earliest stages of project planning, rather than being added on as a compliance exercise. This shift requires leadership at all levels—from company boards to project managers—ensuring that sustainability is not just a marketing statement but a structural priority.

 

Governance: The Guardrail Against Greenwashing

The risk of greenwashing is one of the biggest challenges in sustainability today. While some organizations intentionally overstate their progress, many others simply fail to measure their impact accurately, leading to claims that don’t hold up under scrutiny.

For Mina, strong governance is the most important factor in ensuring sustainability commitments are real, measurable, and aligned with long-term business objectives.

“If you don’t have governance in place, you will struggle to ensure accountability. The board and leadership teams must understand that net zero is not just a goal—it’s an ongoing responsibility.”

This means:

Embedding sustainability education into leadership training programs
Ensuring sustainability claims are independently verified
Making science-based decision-making the norm, not the exception

 

A Call to Action: Climate Literacy as a Non-Negotiable

When asked what single change could accelerate progress in the built environment, Mina’s answer was clear:

“Climate literacy. If we could all have the same foundational knowledge of sustainability—its challenges, solutions, and interdependencies—we could make better decisions, avoid unintended consequences, and scale impact faster.”

Rather than relying on short-term initiatives, the industry must invest in long-term education, knowledge-sharing, and governance structures that ensure sustainability is understood, applied, and enforced at every stage of development.

The future of sustainable construction will not be shaped by ambition alone—it will be shaped by those who have the knowledge and leadership to turn ambition into action.

 

For a Truly Sustainable Future


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