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Green economy IN U.K

Courtesy : www.sustainablebusinesstoolkit.com

Green economy in u.k

According to Nick Clegg at the Rio+20 talks in June 2012, the UK green economy is already estimated to be worth 8% of GDP and is one of the few bright spots in our economy, growing at 4.7% per annum. The green economy includes energy efficiency and generation, waste reduction and the long-term management of resources and its growth is being fuelled by:

We are at the start of a massive transformation of our economy that can be compared with the Industrial and IT revolutions. We are moving into a period of great change bringing huge opportunities for businesses to innovate, develop, produce and sell green products and services, replacing the wasteful goods in the market today. Those who embrace the change will be winners and those who try to continue with business as usual will lose out.

Examples of companies who are making a real impact in this area include:

There is plenty of opportunity for many more entrepreneurs to enter the green economy as we sweep away inefficient ways of producing goods and services and unethical ways of doing business.

There are some huge green projects underway and in the pipeline. For example, at the infrastructure level, there are enormous and expensive projects to renew our energy generation to provide the clean energy we need to drive the economy forward; the installation of 53 million smart meters across the country; the energy refurbishment of our homes and commercial buildings; and de-carbonising our transport system. New small businesses can play a part in all of these projects!

The transformation also applies at the everyday level. Objects we buy and use every day have all been designed and produced in the context of cheap energy, cheap and available resources and with no real concern about waste. There are massive opportunities for people to redefine these objects so they are greener and cheaper. We can learn from history and how the industrial and IT revolutions transformed the way we live and the things we consume – and who were the winners and losers from these revolutions.

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