Join our Waitlist for Expert Advice!

Entrepreneurs Reshaping The Future Move over, United Nations: it's time for entrepreneurs to save the planet

By Karl W. Feilder

Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own.

You're reading Entrepreneur Middle East, an international franchise of Entrepreneur Media.

Shutterstock.com

It's now over a quarter of a century since the United Nations met at the Rio de Janeiro Earth Summit, and pledged to reduce global greenhouse gas emissions. And how are we doing? Every year since then, global greenhouse gas emissions have risen, and at the end of 2018, the various UN task forces issued a wide range of predictions relating to climate change, including end-of-the-economic-worldas- we-know-it forecasts, as well as look-on-the-brightside optimistic forecasts of a US$26 trillion new market for clean tech products and services before 2030.

In common with many other serial entrepreneurs, I sensed this global opportunity more than a decade ago. Any time when an existing market is forecast to undergo major change, and where the existing players seem to be failing to either acknowledge the need for change, or be unable to grasp the speed of change required, that's when the entrepreneurs step in.

According to a Carbon Majors report, over the last 30 years, just 100 companies have caused more than 71% of the world's greenhouse gas emissions. According to Sir David Attenborough, humans also created "the greatest threat in thousands of years," and if we don't take action, "the collapse of our civilizations, and the extinction of much of the natural world, is on the horizon."

Just stop and think about that for a second. "Collapse" and "extinction": those are heavy words indeed. Even framing the problem is tricky– the United Nation created a blueprint known as the 17 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) with 169 targets, which are designed to achieve a more sustainable future for everyone by 2030. Broadly, they focus on protecting the planet, ending poverty in a variety of ways, balancing gender equality, and ensuring all people enjoy peace, justice, and prosperity. There's no mandatory singing, and holding hands around the camp fire, but you get the idea. Of course, they are all important– but some of them will be pointless if our planet is uninhabitable, especially as climate change intensifies and speeds up. It may seem confusing, but a major part of the problem, is that despite 25 years of educating Joe Public, climate change hasn't actually been caused by consumers, it's been caused by business decisions. As entrepreneurs and the leaders of tomorrow, it's now up to you and me to provide solutions to the mega corporations, so that, together, we can save the planet.

Related: Five Signs That You Have A Great Business Idea

Selling your products and services
Sustainability, in terms that businesses can understand, is all about money. And money is always expressed in numbers. So, any budding clean tech entrepreneur needs to be very good with numbers, both financial and non-financial. Telling a corporate board that your new whizz-bang invention will put a lot of smiles on employee's faces is useless. Telling them it will achieve a specific increase in productive hours of employment would be better, but showing an actual EBITDA (earnings before interest, tax, depreciation, and amortization) improvement will get you firmly in the door.

Back in 2007, we provided just such a global system for DHL, enabling them to accurately and frequently (annual measurements are basically useless) measure their carbon footprint efficiency, which then allowed us to pilot new technologies, and then scale the most financially impactful. It's up to us, the entrepreneurs of today, to inspire and teach the entrepreneurs of tomorrow how to factor numbers based sustainability metrics into every aspect of their product and sales strategy. We need to identify, coach, and invest in startups and scalable innovations that actively target environmental solutions on mega-corporates, and we need to quickly teach those that don't.

Saving the planet isn't a thankless task. From personal experience, I can tell you that your decision to redirect your entrepreneurial flair and talent into scalable low carbon products and solutions won't just generate a strong financial return. It will get you up every morning with a real sense of genuine purpose and authentic pride. And at night when you kiss your children and grandchildren to sleep, you will know, deep in your heart, that your efforts are helping their future. Together we can make sure the future ain't what it used to be.

Related: Got an Awesome New Business Idea? Here's What to Do Next

Karl W. Feilder

Founder, CEO, and Chairman of The Neutral Group and Neutral Fuels

Karl W. Feilder is founder, CEO, and Chairman of The Neutral Group and Neutral Fuels. A serial tech entrepreneur and business sustainability advocate, Karl’s direct actions to mitigate climate change have resulted in over 10.5 million tonnes of carbon dioxide savings from global corporations. Karl has previously built five companies to exit via trade sale, and taken two more to their initial public offering. In the last decade, he has built up The Neutral Group from a two-person startup to an international business, and is now preparing its Neutral Fuels LLC subsidiary, a company that produces bio-fuel from waste, for an IPO on the London AIM stock market in 2023. Simultaneously, Karl is building another subsidiary Neutral Assets LLC into an internet of things asset management company. Karl mentors startups across industry, and was the first Adjunct Lecturer at the Masdar Institute in Abu Dhabi. He has worked as a Catalyst at Hult International Business School in both Dubai and San Francisco. Karl holds a B.Eng. (Hons.) in Industrial Engineering, an executive MBA from Henley Management College, and is writing his PhD thesis on “psychological optimization of innovative teams.”
Side Hustle

At 16, She Started a Side Hustle While 'Stuck at Home.' Now It's on Track to Earn Over $3.1 Million This Year.

Evangelina Petrakis, 21, was in high school when she posted on social media for fun — then realized a business opportunity.

Business News

Hybrid Workers Were Put to the Test Against Fully In-Office Employees — Here's Who Came Out On Top

Productivity barely changed whether employees were in the office or not. However, hybrid workers reported better job satisfaction than in-office workers.

Science & Technology

This Influencer Has Nearly 150,000 Instagram Followers and Makes Over $10,000 a Month. There's Just One Catch — She's Not Real.

Aitana López has over 149,000 Instagram followers and brands love her. Is she the future of social media marketing?

Living

How to Achieve Superhuman Levels of Focus with Nutritional Psychology

Could poor nutrition be the reason for a lack of focus?

News and Trends

Entrepreneur Middle East Publishes Report Looking Into The GCC's US$3 Billion Cloud Kitchen Industry

According to the report, the cloud kitchen industry is currently booming, especially as more customers are opting for ordering in, instead of dining out, in a world still mired in pandemic realities.