theglobaljournal.net: Latest activities of group Morten Albaekhttp://www.theglobaljournal.net/group/morton-albaek/2011-11-08T10:39:03ZMorten Albaek: The Answer? It’s Blowing in the Wind…2011-11-08T10:39:03Zhttp://www.theglobaljournal.net/article/view/341/<p><img style="vertical-align: top;" src="/s3/cache%2Fc4%2F63%2Fc4631827cda34b35f4eb945a62ec22cc.jpg" alt="Morton Albaek" width="580" height="387" /></p> <blockquote> <p style="text-align: justify;">Morten Alb&aelig;k, Senior Vice President at Vestas, talks to The Global Journal&nbsp;about his vision &ndash;not just for the future of wind energy but also for an&nbsp;innovative business model where the bottom line includes human welfare.</p> </blockquote> <p style="text-align: justify;"><span style="color: #800000;">How would you describe the world&rsquo;s attitude to the&nbsp;concept of energy mix today?</span>&nbsp;</p> <p style="text-align: justify;">I would say it is progressing, that it&rsquo;s more accepted&nbsp;now than five years ago. I actually think that something&nbsp;good has come out of the financial crisis in&nbsp;that people have accepted the fact that if they do not&nbsp;change their behaviour, the way they do business&nbsp;and govern societies, their business will not survive&nbsp;or they will be overthrown.&nbsp;</p> <p style="text-align: justify;">We are most optimistic about the creation of a&nbsp;whole new innovation prism. Even though thousands &nbsp;of people are in the streets in New York, Berlin and&nbsp;London, wanting to occupy Wall Street, the vast&nbsp;majority of youth is not there. Not because they don&rsquo;t&nbsp;think that something must change, but because they&nbsp;accept the fact that the only way to create sustainable&nbsp;change is to merge the two &ldquo;isms&rsquo;&rsquo; that have dominated&nbsp;Western culture for the last 250, if not 500,&nbsp;years: capitalism and humanism.&nbsp;</p> <p style="text-align: justify;">A new innovation platform &ndash;a &ldquo;capitalistic humanistic&nbsp;innovation platform&rdquo;&ndash; has been created. This&nbsp;means that innovation needs to do two things at the&nbsp;same time: generate the highest possible revenue&nbsp;and the highest possible EBIT, and, at the same time,&nbsp;have a positive societal impact. This is fully doable.&nbsp;This new platform is not &ldquo;humanistic capitalism&rdquo;,&nbsp;because that would start with a utopia like creating&nbsp;world peace, and eternal universal peace will never&nbsp;exist. But we can certainly create much more peace&nbsp;than we do today.&nbsp;</p> <p style="text-align: justify;">By putting &lsquo;capitalism&rsquo; before &lsquo;humanism&rsquo;, you&nbsp;add realism to ideals. And it is a fundamentally realistic&nbsp;ideal to change the energy mix by 2050. This new&nbsp;"capitalistic humanistic innovative platform&rdquo; creates&nbsp;designs that were indefinable in the old world. I must&nbsp;say that WindMade is an example of that, although&nbsp;it&rsquo;s very un-Danish to compliment myself, even indirectly.&nbsp;WindMade is the first global consumer label for&nbsp;a single energy source. The six other global consumer&nbsp;labels that have been launched, such as Fairtrade,&nbsp;have all been initiated by civil society, that is, human&nbsp;beings or communities of citizens or consumers getting&nbsp;together and creating an NGO and then going to&nbsp;the corporate world and saying, &ldquo;You have to support&nbsp;this, or we are going to expose you negatively&rdquo;. No&nbsp;corporation has ever jumped to the very beginning of&nbsp;the innovation chain and said, &ldquo;Why wait for consumers&nbsp;to demand a global consumer label for renewable&nbsp;energy?&rdquo; But why can&rsquo;t a corporation drive that innovation?&nbsp;Why can&rsquo;t a corporation create an NGO and&nbsp;hand it back to civil society? Doesn&rsquo;t social responsibility&nbsp;now mean stepping in and truly acting like a&nbsp;citizen? That gives me hope that if my 5-year old child&nbsp;is invited to a panel in 2050, when he&rsquo;s 44, he won&rsquo;t sit&nbsp;there and feel like his dad wasted his time.</p> <p style="text-align: justify;">To read the full interview, order a copy of the <a rel="nofollow" href="http://www.theglobaljournal.ch/product.php?id_product=29">magazine</a>.</p> <p style="text-align: right;"><span style="color: #999999;">By Jean-Christophe Nothias</span></p>