As chairman of the advisory council of
CII-ITC Centre of Excellence for Sustainable Development, Y C Deveshwar is promoting the
concept of triple bottom line or economic, environmental and social performance, for
sustainable development. He tells Narayani Ganesh that economic growth and sustainability
can go together:
How would you quantify
environmental and social aspects of business?
ITC is combining the three successfully as per the guidelines of the
Global Reporting Initiative and we have come out with our third annual
sustainability report. Were carbon positive and water positive. Our large-scale
agroforestry programmes helps carbon sequestration and we use carbon neutral fuels.
Were hoping to attain zero solid waste status. Were harvesting four times more
water than were consuming. Companies have to voluntarily reveal the environmental
and social dimensions of their business. We believe that businesses need to make
commitments beyond the market. More in industry are beginning to see why the triple bottom
line approach is important for all-round development.
Many think conservation hinders
economic growth.
The developed world has used up a lot of resources. If India and China follow the same
(western) model we will run out of water, forests, soil quality etc. Everyone should
conserve and create fresh sources. Greening industry has many advantages for the
environment but that is only one aspect. The other is employment creation. ITCs
e-choupals have proved to be enormously successful in empowering the farmer. We need to
have synergy between shareholder wealth-creation and helping the farmer prosper in a
sustainable manner without degrading the land.
Wont green practices hike the
cost of the end product?
Why should consumers pay more? I am not worried about cost to my books, but costs to the
next generation. Businessmen first take care of the bottom line, so we need to create
those business leaders who look also beyond this bottom line.
Surely businessmen cant be
motivated entirely by altruism?
Why am I doing this? If you do good, goodwill is created and consumers prefer
this. True, in the beginning you might have to bear additional cost. For instance, we grow
trees for our paper business with tribal people using wasteland. It is a good supply
source and generates employment. A long-term approach is important. Ultimately, people do
value this. Anyway, at the moment, we are not showing costs. The effort to green industry
is a long-run issue, and eventually, costs will stabilise. If you can dovetail
sustainability with your business practices, it doesnt add to costs. Weve done
watershed development in the most moisture-stressed districts. It works and in the long
run, the benefits far outweigh the costs.