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Yang, Si Eun Graduate School of International Studies, Korea University Green Business Case Studies in Asia 2 nd Training of Trainers Capacity Development Seminar29 March – 1 April, 2010 Seoul, Republic of Korea

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Page 1: Yang, Si Eun Graduate School of International Studies, Korea University Green Business Case Studies in Asia 2 nd Training of Trainers Capacity Development

Yang, Si EunGraduate School of International Stud-ies, Korea Univer-

sity

Green Business Case Studies in Asia

2nd Training of Trainers Capacity Development Seminar29 March – 1 April, 2010 Seoul, Republic of Korea

Page 2: Yang, Si Eun Graduate School of International Studies, Korea University Green Business Case Studies in Asia 2 nd Training of Trainers Capacity Development

ContentsPart I. Mainstream Business- Cleaner Production: Sharp Corporation - Green Products: Samsung Electronics

Part II. Pro-Poor Green Business- Rural Electrification: Sunlabob- Green Loan: Xac Bank

Page 3: Yang, Si Eun Graduate School of International Studies, Korea University Green Business Case Studies in Asia 2 nd Training of Trainers Capacity Development

Part I.

Mainstream Business

Page 4: Yang, Si Eun Graduate School of International Studies, Korea University Green Business Case Studies in Asia 2 nd Training of Trainers Capacity Development

• A leading manufacturer of photovoltaic power systems and electronic appliances

• operates 38 plants in more than 20 countries worldwide

• To improve environmental performance Sharp estab-lished a system to develop environmentally sustainable Green Factories based on Green Factory Guidleine.

Cleaner Produc-tion

Page 5: Yang, Si Eun Graduate School of International Studies, Korea University Green Business Case Studies in Asia 2 nd Training of Trainers Capacity Development

■10 Key Areas

1) greenhouse gases 2) energy 3) waste 4) resources 5) chemical substances 6) the atmosphere, waste and soil 7) harmony with nature 8) harmony with the community 9) environmental awareness 10) information disclosure

■ Based on these guidelines Sharp set unique quantified environmental performance criteria

Green Factory Guidelines

Page 6: Yang, Si Eun Graduate School of International Studies, Korea University Green Business Case Studies in Asia 2 nd Training of Trainers Capacity Development

■ SGF Quantified Environmental Performance Criteria

and Assessment Weighting in Japan

Page 7: Yang, Si Eun Graduate School of International Studies, Korea University Green Business Case Studies in Asia 2 nd Training of Trainers Capacity Development

■SGF II System

Beginning of fiscal 2008, Sharpe launched SGF II, a new initiative for plants in Japan that have at-tained SGF certification

Page 8: Yang, Si Eun Graduate School of International Studies, Korea University Green Business Case Studies in Asia 2 nd Training of Trainers Capacity Development

■ SGF II Quantified Environmental Perfor-mance Criteria and Assessment Weighting in

Japan

※Total score is 200point including previous SGF criteria

- SGF II adds an assessment of “soft” aspects to the previous initiative such as the know-how to maintain and upgrade environmental equipment.

Page 9: Yang, Si Eun Graduate School of International Studies, Korea University Green Business Case Studies in Asia 2 nd Training of Trainers Capacity Development

■ Since Sharp Corporation has launched this in-house certification activity in 2003, 16 plants out of 38 worldwide were certified as a Green Factories and 21 plants were certified as being a Super Green Factory.

■ Curbing Green house gasses emitted in 2008

■ Improved in minimizing and recycling waste

■ Improved in water recycling

Achievement

Page 10: Yang, Si Eun Graduate School of International Studies, Korea University Green Business Case Studies in Asia 2 nd Training of Trainers Capacity Development

■ Amount of Sharp Group’s Greenhouse Gas Emis-sion

In fiscal 2008 re-duced total GHGs emission by 6%.

• Partly due to Japa-nese economic reces-sion

• However, effort by SGF / SGFII and instal-lation of PFCs emission abatement system are major contributors.

Page 11: Yang, Si Eun Graduate School of International Studies, Korea University Green Business Case Studies in Asia 2 nd Training of Trainers Capacity Development

• 10% reduction in amount of waste etc. discharged by the Sharp Group(Japan & overseas)

• achieved Zero discharge in landfill in 8 consecutive year in 2008 • Valuable resources recovered from waste at 10 plants in Japan expanded

by 31% compared to the previous fiscal year, while the total amount of waste discharged decreased by 16%

Page 12: Yang, Si Eun Graduate School of International Studies, Korea University Green Business Case Studies in Asia 2 nd Training of Trainers Capacity Development

• The amount of water used by the Sharp group in fiscal 2008 decreased by 11% over the previous fiscal year, thanks to increase in recycling wa-ter and decrease in production volume

Page 13: Yang, Si Eun Graduate School of International Studies, Korea University Green Business Case Studies in Asia 2 nd Training of Trainers Capacity Development

Samsung Electronics

■ Founded in 1969 in Korea, Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd. manu-

factures and sells a wide variety of electronic products, com-munication devices, and semiconductors.

■ The company has responded to the challenges of climate change and environmental degradation by taking green man-agement policy as one of its CSR initiative

■ Green management principles: greening of; management, products, processes, the workplace, and communities.

Greening Products

Page 14: Yang, Si Eun Graduate School of International Studies, Korea University Green Business Case Studies in Asia 2 nd Training of Trainers Capacity Development

Greening Product?

■ Samsung Electronics defines greening products as “minimizing environmental im-pacts throughout the product development, manufacturing, usage, and disposal stages”

■ Geening of products can also play an im-portant role in promoting a carbon-lean and low energy lifestyle amongst consumers by reducing CO2 emissions emitted by using the products.

Page 15: Yang, Si Eun Graduate School of International Studies, Korea University Green Business Case Studies in Asia 2 nd Training of Trainers Capacity Development

How to Greening Prod-ucts?

■ life cycle assessments (LCA)

■ eco-design assessment systems

■ eco-friendly supply chains

■ hazardous material regulation response systems

■ extended end-of-life product disposal capacity

■ Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR) systems

Page 16: Yang, Si Eun Graduate School of International Studies, Korea University Green Business Case Studies in Asia 2 nd Training of Trainers Capacity Development

Achievements• Acquired environmental certifications in major global mar-

kets

• six environmental certifications from Republic of Korea (EDP), China, U.S. (EPEAT), Germany (Blue Angel), Sweden (TCO) and the EU (Eco-Power) covering 1,900 models in seven product groups; printers, PCs, monitors, TVs, DVDs, refrigerators, and washing machines.

• The largest number of certifications ever won by a single electronic company in the world

Page 17: Yang, Si Eun Graduate School of International Studies, Korea University Green Business Case Studies in Asia 2 nd Training of Trainers Capacity Development

LED TVEnergy Saving

-↓energy consumption by 43% ( 183W→105W ) ,

- ↓ remaining power by 86% ( 0.7W→0.1W )

☞ ↓ carbon emission by 38.1 kg annually

( equivalent of planting 14 fine tree )

- Non VOC(VOC : Volatile Organic Compounds) and Mercury em-ployed

- employ an LED back light unit (existing products contain Hg 77mg )

- free of six hazardous materials regulated by EU standards in the production process

Material Safety

-↓ 6.3% in weight ( 24kg→22.5kg ), depth 70.4%( 9.8cm→2.9cm )

-↓ package volume by 31%

- (↑Load efficiency by 43%, 203EA → 291EA)

Resource Efficiency

Eco-Products

[ UN46B7000WF ]

Page 18: Yang, Si Eun Graduate School of International Studies, Korea University Green Business Case Studies in Asia 2 nd Training of Trainers Capacity Development

Application of environment-friendly packaging material for

42inch PDP-TV• development of folding stand of PDP TV is an idea for package

material reduction and cost saving

• Fold the stand as following picture at packaging time for minimize its depth and unfold the stand when TV is installed.

[ Before] [ After ]

Page 19: Yang, Si Eun Graduate School of International Studies, Korea University Green Business Case Studies in Asia 2 nd Training of Trainers Capacity Development

Exterior Size of Package

• Halved its depth of previous model. (Previous : 455mm, Im-proved : 228mm)

• Efficiency : ↓ 66% distribution cost from Korea to LA, U.S.A.

∵ the number of lightened TV has risen from 104 to 312 in container with 40ft-HC loaded weight.

[ Comparison of external package size reduc-tion ]

Page 20: Yang, Si Eun Graduate School of International Studies, Korea University Green Business Case Studies in Asia 2 nd Training of Trainers Capacity Development

Cushion Volume • The weight of 503g of cushion reduced in compar-

ison to the previous one. (Previous : 986g → Improved : 483g)

Improved model Previous model [ Case 1 ]

Improved model Previous model [ Case 2 ]

Page 21: Yang, Si Eun Graduate School of International Studies, Korea University Green Business Case Studies in Asia 2 nd Training of Trainers Capacity Development

Corrugated cardboard usage

• 0.9775m2 of corrugated cardboard usage is reduced based on outer box.

[ Before] [ After ]

Page 22: Yang, Si Eun Graduate School of International Studies, Korea University Green Business Case Studies in Asia 2 nd Training of Trainers Capacity Development

Part II. Pro-Poor Green Business

Page 23: Yang, Si Eun Graduate School of International Studies, Korea University Green Business Case Studies in Asia 2 nd Training of Trainers Capacity Development

Sunlabob

■ Founded: 2001

■ Activities: Full service energy provider selling hard-ware and energy services in remote regions where there is no access to grid electricity.

■ Size: Has installed over 5,600 systems in 450 villages across Lao PDR

■ Location: Headquarters in Lao PDR, operations across Southeast Asia and growing number in Africa

Renewable Energy – solar rechargeable lantern

Page 24: Yang, Si Eun Graduate School of International Studies, Korea University Green Business Case Studies in Asia 2 nd Training of Trainers Capacity Development

What Needs Were There?■ Although 58% of Lao

population has access to grid electricity this is concentrated in cities and town area.

■ High dependency on Kerosene lamps for lightening

-Cheap-Easily main-tained

- Respiratory dis-ease- Fire potential

DANGER-

OUS

Needs for Al-ternative En-

ergy Re-sources

Page 25: Yang, Si Eun Graduate School of International Studies, Korea University Green Business Case Studies in Asia 2 nd Training of Trainers Capacity Development

Solution?Solar Energy■ Cost competitive■ No need to worry about rising fuel

price■ Cheap in long-term■ Environmental friendly energy

Page 26: Yang, Si Eun Graduate School of International Studies, Korea University Green Business Case Studies in Asia 2 nd Training of Trainers Capacity Development

Solar Rechargeable Lantern

•Last 10-20hrs depending on battery and globe se-lected

•Simple to repair: Simple construction and readily available familiar compo-nents

•Manufactured/Assembled on site by local staff/ Uti-lize as much as possible local material

•Can be used as ceiling lamp or can be set on the table

Page 27: Yang, Si Eun Graduate School of International Studies, Korea University Green Business Case Studies in Asia 2 nd Training of Trainers Capacity Development

Solar Lantern Recharge Sta-tion

■ Located in center of village for easy access ■ operated by village entrepreneurs under the franchise agreement with Sunlabob ■ can recharge 24 to 144 lanterns depending on the size of the solar array and battery station

ÞAchieve Economies of scale ÞOffer affordable recharging fee for village household

Page 28: Yang, Si Eun Graduate School of International Studies, Korea University Green Business Case Studies in Asia 2 nd Training of Trainers Capacity Development

What are the Benefits?

■ Extra income generation using night time■ Reliable and regular income for village technicians / village entrepreneurs■ Green job creation■ Electricity supply in off-grid rural area■ Less environmental impact

⇒ Rural Development and Poverty Alleviation⇒ Improved Resilience and Capacity to AdaptClimate Change

Page 29: Yang, Si Eun Graduate School of International Studies, Korea University Green Business Case Studies in Asia 2 nd Training of Trainers Capacity Development

• Founded in 1998

• Activities: providing financial products and services including microfinancing

• Size & Location: : forth largest commercial bank in Mongolia with a nationwide network of 77 branches and is headquartered in Ulaanbaatar.

Green Loan – poverty alle-viation

Page 30: Yang, Si Eun Graduate School of International Studies, Korea University Green Business Case Studies in Asia 2 nd Training of Trainers Capacity Development

What Needs Were There?

In Ulaanbaatar 70 % of population lives in a ger, a traditional Mongolian dwelling made of a wooden frame covered by layers of wool felt.

Page 31: Yang, Si Eun Graduate School of International Studies, Korea University Green Business Case Studies in Asia 2 nd Training of Trainers Capacity Development

What Needs Were There?

• Average winter temperatures: -20℃• Households in ger-districts consume an average of 5

tons of coal and 1.5 tons of wood per year.

Þ Pollution levels in the city during the winter season are on average over twenty times higher than those of summer

Þ The poorest 20 % of the city’s population spends as much as 40 % of their monthly income roughly a $140 a month on coal and wood for heating.

Þ cuts in nutrition and health budgets

Page 32: Yang, Si Eun Graduate School of International Studies, Korea University Green Business Case Studies in Asia 2 nd Training of Trainers Capacity Development

Xac Bank’s Eco Product Program

■offering low interest loans to make eco products financially accessible to the residents of the Ger District

■ 3 types of green loans for personal consumptionÞ energy efficient stoves,Þ ger coversÞ energy efficient fuel

■ The loan products were developed in conjunction with Fi-nancierings-Maatschappij voor Ontwikkelingslanden (FMO), the entrepreneurial development bank of the Netherlands.

Page 33: Yang, Si Eun Graduate School of International Studies, Korea University Green Business Case Studies in Asia 2 nd Training of Trainers Capacity Development

Energy Efficient

Stoves■ Introduced a loan product for

the stove of 2 years duration with zero down payment and an annual interest rate of 17%

■ Stoves were developed and tested by GTZ 

■ a type of brick similar to that found in a pottery kiln and are designed to circulate and retain heat for longer periods than traditional stoves.  

Þ reduces fuel consumption by more than 60%/month

Þ helps to reduce a family’s air pollution

Page 34: Yang, Si Eun Graduate School of International Studies, Korea University Green Business Case Studies in Asia 2 nd Training of Trainers Capacity Development

Ger Covers

Þhelps to keep heat within the ger Þresults in a 50% reduction in fuel burned/m 

•large insulating blankets com-posed of three separate layers that wrap the entire outside of the ger.

•designed by the UNDP but is produced locally in Mongolia

Page 35: Yang, Si Eun Graduate School of International Studies, Korea University Green Business Case Studies in Asia 2 nd Training of Trainers Capacity Development

Energy Efficient Fuel

•loan to buy fuel from producers who create efficient fuels from things like compacted sawdust and gasified coal.

•more expensive than traditional fuels but have less of a negative impact on the environment by burning longer and producing less carbon output. 

Þ price difference between clean fuels and brown coal is made up through clients using less fuel to achieve the same heating results

Page 36: Yang, Si Eun Graduate School of International Studies, Korea University Green Business Case Studies in Asia 2 nd Training of Trainers Capacity Development

Carbon Revenues■ Energy efficient products that the Bank is promoting are standard-

ized the amount of their carbon emissions can easily be calculatedÞ it enables aggregate carbon offsets from the program to be sold on

the voluntary carbon market

■ In October 2009 bank finalized a Carbon Purchase Agreement with Micro Energy Credits (MEC), a social enterprise which links microfi-nance institutions to the carbon markets.

Þ additional revenue from carbon offsettingÞ become the first micro-finance institution in the Northern Hemi-

sphere to generate carbon revenues. Þ The revenue earned from carbon offsets can now be used for further

loans or other socially or environmentally beneficial products.

Page 37: Yang, Si Eun Graduate School of International Studies, Korea University Green Business Case Studies in Asia 2 nd Training of Trainers Capacity Development

■ provides affordable means for low income house-holds to lower their fuel costs,

■ reduce air pollution and greenhouse gas emissions from heating and cooking,

■ Allow them to stay warm during the long winter sea-son.

Þ The bank has become a showcase of green business practices by earning revenue from the carbon mar-kets while improving the lives of the poor.

What are the Benefits?

Page 38: Yang, Si Eun Graduate School of International Studies, Korea University Green Business Case Studies in Asia 2 nd Training of Trainers Capacity Development

Q & A

Page 39: Yang, Si Eun Graduate School of International Studies, Korea University Green Business Case Studies in Asia 2 nd Training of Trainers Capacity Development

Thank You!!

Yang, Si EunGraduate School of International Studies, Korea University

[email protected]