ESG Challenges Archives - BigGreenAcademy https://biggreenacademy.com/category/esg_challenges/ Online platform to support improving energy & sustainability performance within workplaces Sat, 03 Jun 2023 15:03:12 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.6.1 https://biggreenacademy.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/Big-Green-Academy-logo-1.png ESG Challenges Archives - BigGreenAcademy https://biggreenacademy.com/category/esg_challenges/ 32 32 Do you Know your Level of Big Green Proficiency? https://biggreenacademy.com/do-you-know-your-level-of-energy-proficiency/ https://biggreenacademy.com/do-you-know-your-level-of-energy-proficiency/#respond Wed, 09 Jun 2021 19:30:48 +0000 https://biggreenacademy.com/et-et-similique-quo-at-aperiam-id/ If you look around you'll find avoidable waste practically everywhere. This seems inevitable in all operational activities at the moment. This article introduces an energy user proficiency model to help identify levels of energy proficiency to cut costs, save water and energy, and reduce environmental impact. Table of Contents: Will you Thrive or Survive?Level 0: […]

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If you look around you'll find avoidable waste practically everywhere. This seems inevitable in all operational activities at the moment. This article introduces an energy user proficiency model to help identify levels of energy proficiency to cut costs, save water and energy, and reduce environmental impact.

Will you Thrive or Survive?

1.  What is your level of proficiency?

2.  Where do you need or want to be in the future?

This guide introduces a basic, quite crude model, to help all types of energy user:

  • Understand the reality of where you are now
  • Think about the opportunities there are to reduce energy & resource use and set objectives
  • Work out how you could influence and support colleagues to do the same

It’s meant to be a simple guide based on practical experience and feedback from energy users over the years.
The real value often comes from talking about this with the other people involved. 

20-30% savings are often possible

 The model has 5 levels:

  • Level 0: I don't think about energy efficiency
  • Level 1: Foundation Level
  • Level 2: Everyday Champion
  • Level 3: Smart Savers
  • Level 4: Master Practitioner or Leader

We rely too much on just hoping we're efficient

  • Many organizations waste at least 20-30% of the energy they buy. (#CarbonTrust)
  • In some countries, buildings consume two to three times more energy than their equivalents in other countries. (#BetterBuildingsPartnership)
  • We rely too much on others to tell us what is efficient despite them not knowing our operations and having to make assumptions.
  • Our fear of making mistakes also means we inevitably overprovide in our facilities and operations.
  • Recognize the avoidable energy waste coming from overprovision and take advantage of the opportunity!

A leader is someone who can see how things can be improved and who rallies people to move forward.

Jacob Morgan


The good news is that where there’s waste, there’s an opportunity:

  • For our organizations - to cut costs, manage increasing energy prices and significantly reduce environmental impact.
  • For Everyday Energy Champions - to grow their environmental skillsets, and learn and develop as much as they can.

The most effective way to energize change is by developing a proficiency in leadership that's taken on by all of us i.e. not just the CEO.

Thrive or Survive

Surviving means we carry on as we are i.e. business as usual which often means fear, anxiety and a lack of trust.

Or we can focus on thriving with the courage to try things out – the ultimate aim is to be confident we’re only using what we need.

Thriving relies on both technical and behavioral solutions; behaviors are important as proficiency in energy performance always comes back to the people involved.

This basic 5 level model is based on practical experience from over 25 years of improvement projects. The secret is to connect the technical, behavioral and operational aspects of change.

Logistics Company Achieves ISO 50001 in Record Time

Challenge: Involve, empower and train local everyday champions, doing it for themselves

Result: ISO 50001 certification achieved in less than 6 months with a new continual improvement energy system in place 

“This is a fantastic achievement and demonstrates how a collaborative and focused approach can bring our teams together from different countries and at all levels in our business to gain this certification so quickly. I am impressed with the team’s commitment to energy management and their enthusiasm in meeting the aims of our policy.” Company Chief Operations Officer, 2018 

“It has been a pleasant surprise to audit a company that is doing it not only because it is needed, but also because they are into the subject!” External ISO 50001 Auditor

This approach has delivered results – significantly cutting energy use, carbon emissions and costs – and has received positive feedback from staff.

Big Business Big Responsibilities, 2010


The 5 Proficiency Levels 


Level 0: I don't think about energy efficiency - it's all on most of the time

At level 0, the behavior tends to leave systems on for maximum levels of service or because there are perceived service or reliability issues. In reality, this practice isn’t adding value, but it is just significantly overproviding
We see this in some areas in at least 50% of the organizations we work with.

       

Typical impact

  • Higher cost – due to the larger amounts of avoidable waste
  • Larger environmental impact and CO2 emissions
  • Lower stakeholder value – as it's not fit for purpose

Example key Actions

  • Install some visible ways to save energy & water, e.g., new lighting systems or water saving controls
  • Focus on creating some green sparks to get colleagues interested

Level 1: Foundation Level - I'm active but risk averse

At level 1, individuals and teams are more aware of the drivers, but actions are low risk.
The problem is often that you still see energy & water savings going against other operational (priority) objectives.
Some of our colleagues call this level (a bit tongue in cheek) ‘toeing the line’:
– Some systems and equipment may be switched off, but generally…
– This only happens when risks are considered very low because of our fear of making mistakes.

In-built ways to make savings are often not used
water savings technology dual flush

“We have the water savings technology so surely our toilets must be efficient!?” our Customer Services Manager said, but in practice metered consumption showed the full flush button is still used most of the time.

Typical Impact

  • No correlation between energy or water consumption and commercial activity
  • Very little savings achieved in practice

Example Key Actions

  • Raise awareness and visually demonstrate levels of avoidable waste and opportunities missed
  • Shake things up; you may need to become an agent provocateur
  • Simple messages often work best here: Switch it off, Turn it down
Members Lounge Chart – Visualizing Avoidable Waste

Example Hospitality Lounge Chart – Visualizing Avoidable Waste

  • Red shows typical energy consumption over a day, 24 hours
  • In green, the chart plots the number of customers using the space over the same time period
  • Comparing the two, through a commercial lens, means the avoidable waste jumps out at you
  • Since then, the teams are now making progress and have saved the equivalent of $30,000 per year in reduced energy consumption (to 2019), with much more opportunity to target


Level 2: Everyday Champion - making it work as intended

At level 2, we find ourselves thinking about energy & water performance for 20 minutes or so every day.
Everyday champions can thrive in most cultures, often working by themselves in areas they know well.
This is about doing things right, following well-known operational practices and procedures.
Some measures may require some technical knowledge or input, such as understanding the benefits of upgrading boilers or retuning air-handling units.

Many measures can reduce consumption by 20-30% or more in targeted areas of use
energy user switching lights off

Typical Impact

  • Quick wins are made though you may be unsure how to prioritize your ideas and actions
  • There’s pride in systems working well, but you may struggle involving colleagues, so savings can be lost when you move on

Example Key Actions

  • Prioritize actions using good practices in design, operation and maintenance activities
  • Share experiences and lessons with colleagues as and when you can

Challenge:  Controls service partner to re-tune the air-handling units (AHUs) so they work properly again

Approach: Apply remedial measures and track savings on AHUs for a trial area so the system is controlled by ventilation requirements as intended – rather than being left on at full power, all the time

Savings per year (Electricity use): Low: 700 MWh; High: 650 MWh; Most probable: 600 MWh

See chart below

"before" chart showing electricity consumption

BEFORE CHART

"after" chart showing electricity consumption decreased

AFTER CHART

The 'Before' chart shows electricity consumption for one of the AHUs in the trial area over 7 days; you can see it only switches off overnight otherwise it runs at full speed (and full power) every day. The 'After' chart illustrates 70 to 80% daily reduction in energy consumption for this targeted area of use.


Level 3: Smart Savers – connections for ‘Win Win’ solutions

Level 3 is more sophisticated. We see many champions working effectively at this level. They prioritize projects with multiple benefits: a ‘Win’ for the organization and a ‘Win’ for  the people involved.

Typical Impact

  • Bigger wins come about when you collaborate and work closely with colleagues, particularly when you involve others who best understand the levels of service required
  • You learn from experience, though you can struggle converting action into on-going continual improvement for long-term savings

Example Key Actions

  • Connect strategies and prioritize projects that improve service, occupant comfort. Make maintenance easier, as well as cutting costs and pruning environmental impact
  • Apply tools that better connect people and simplify the process e.g. #Pareto80/20

Challenge: Building FM team to upgrade an airport departures lounge lighting system

Approach: Lighting upgrade to reduce energy consumption by 60-80% and also improve the ambiance in the area for passengers

Savings per year (Electricity use): Low: 120 MWh; High: 170 MWh; Most probable: 150 MWh

energy users team

This is an airport example (from 2007) that created the spark for the local team to go on to deliver 30%+ energy savings across the whole terminal building over 3 to 5 years and equivalent to savings worth over $1.2m a year. The approach focused on targeting biggest impacts using Pareto 80/20. We've included this old example here as it's been a pathfinder example project for us ever since.


This chart models the split of overall energy consumption for the terminal building. This helped the team target the best opportunities and think more holistically

Level 4: Master Practitioner & Leader - taking pride in only using what you need

Violin player under a spotlight, visualizing the concept of only using what you need

Level 4 is the pinnacle – the point when you have the proficiency to be absolutely confident you’re ‘only using what you need’. Some consider this is as the point of utopia to continuously move towards, that delivers overall best value, but one that you never actually reach.

Typical Impact

  • Achieving maximum levels of savings as complex situations are distilled down into simple effective solutions
  • An energy conscious culture clearly integrated into your approach with devolved targets and tracking etc.

Example Key Impact

  • Think strategically, be centered around continual improvement, learning and innovation to deliver the 'Wins for All of us'
  • Lead by example, promote collaboration, and achieve long-term results

Challenge:  Process performance improvement team were challenged to see how low they could go (in energy consumption) for a trial material handling process

Approach: ‘100-day plan’ of steps to highlight the level of avoidable waste and to apply an on-demand philosophy to the process to demonstrate how low they could go (utopia) by reprogramming the controls

Savings per year (Electricity use): Low: 500 MWh; High: 1000 MWh; Most probable: 750 MWh

See chart below

electricity consumption comparison

The left-hand side of the chart shows the (pre) electricity consumption profile over one day; the materials conveyor is switched on in the morning, it turns off for a few times during the day on its existing controls, but generally it is running, consuming energy for most of the time before being switched off at night. The right-hand side shows the results the team managed to achieve during the review; the chart demonstrates a very high 95% saving in energy consumption. This was a much-targeted area of use and, as such, we wouldn’t set this level of saving as a target in reality, but the factor 10 improvement does demonstrate that significant savings could be achieved by challenging current assumptions and so provides the Level 4 utopian target to aim for.



Join the New Age of Energy Leadership


At the beginning of this guide, we posed two questions:


  1. What is your level of proficiency?
  2. Where do you need or want to be in the future?


Yes, there’s good work going on, but we all know there’s so much more we can be doing – the time to do more is now.

This is a basic model to help champions and teams think about where they are and how they can help improve performance.

It provides a ladder that can be metaphorically climbed; you can’t just jump to the top – this is a process of getting fitter and staying fit.

Think about the opportunities you see, the savings that could be achieved and the actions that would help you deliver lasting change.

What’s important is that you just go for it. Don’t worry about being wrong or making mistakes – it doesn’t have to involve anything fancy or risky, just set up the simple structures to help manage the process and develop your level of energy proficiency and performance.

The everyday champion mindsets don’t change – focus on making it personal, making it focused, making it continual and making it desirable. And most importantly, make it yours.

In recent years, we’ve seen a new drive towards people-led approaches to sustainability in organizations. It's up to you to join in!

energy user opportunities
climb the energy user ladder


Example Sustainability Leadership Ladder for Energy & Water – collaborating for change

In 2018, an airport set about bringing together their business partner energy consumers around a drive for reducing energy & water consumption through better overall efficiency practices. The airport has been doing well in reducing energy & water consumption within its own operations but wanted to work more closely with its business partners, building on good work going on already across the airport.

A key part of the strategy was to co-create the shared vision together: as well as targeting ‘reducing consumption’ and achieving a ‘better utilization of resources’, the team prioritized ‘doing it together’ to influence and make it easy for colleagues and business partners to contribute.

The table below illustrates the summary application of the proficiency model used to help identify current levels of proficiency and  performance, identify the opportunities and input into the developing strategy.

Click to view the table!

energy user table

Written by James Brittain

We created this model in 2007 and so have been using it for many years; this article also refers to it published in the Winter 2015 edition of Environment Magazine. Click here to see the original article, The New Age of Energy Leadership.

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Discovery Guide to Only Using What You Need https://biggreenacademy.com/master-practitioner-only-using-what-you-need/ https://biggreenacademy.com/master-practitioner-only-using-what-you-need/#respond Tue, 16 Jun 2020 13:31:56 +0000 https://biggreenacademy.com/?p=2048 This article offers a step by step guide, drawing on ESTA's EnCO framework, to review and refine your Catalyst and Performance Metrics to thrive as an energy conscious organization.  Its aimed at supporting Management Reviews conducted by master practitioners, leaders, senior managers, suppliers and steering teams. Table of Contents Do you know whether you’re only […]

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This article offers a step by step guide, drawing on ESTA's EnCO framework, to review and refine your Catalyst and Performance Metrics to thrive as an energy conscious organization.  

Its aimed at supporting Management Reviews conducted by master practitioners, leaders, senior managers, suppliers and steering teams.

Do you know whether you’re only using what you need?


  • Most organizations consume much more energy than they need – this adds extra cost and environmental impact.
  • Many of us have more energy & sustainability processes than we need – this adds friction & makes it all harder to do.
  • Energy is often marginalized within organizations – because it’s seen to be a technical subject, not interesting or not understood.
  • Consequently energy is not deemed to be core business or it’s contracted out to service partners and then side-lined.
  • The result: strategic decisions are made without considering energy use, its cost or other impacts.

“Surely our automatic monitoring & targeting system deals with energy performance for us – so we don’t need to think about energy!?”

“Our big thick energy manual has it all covered – our people just need to read it all!”

Yes, many of us are taking actions, but there’s so much more we can do.

Experience shows most of us struggle to optimize solutions. We may lack the engagement, alertness, skills, recognition or ability to adapt.

Follow this guide to find out to go to the next level.

Why is Energy important to ‘All of Us’?

People deliver business plans. Energy drives the buildings/processes they need.


Energy demand is ever increasing due to economic and technological developments, and increasing population.


Supply can easily be disrupted  energy is a dynamic global issue, it’s politically sensitive, it crosses borders and (still) relies on exhaustible energy resources.


Energy is the primary contributor to climate change – it is a key target for regulation.


Policies for cleaner air are also putting pressure on shifting energy systems.


Pressures for electrification  (transport/heating systems/etc.) means costs are likely to rise unless we can significantly bring down existing consumption.


Understanding energy use allows us to quickly adapt to external changes/internal factors.


‘Only using what we need’ is crucial in ensuring our demand doesn’t outstrip supply.

Step 1: It starts by highlighting reality

How balanced are your pillars for success?

Success requires a balance in technical, people and organizational practices:

All these can offer good opportunities for energy savings:

Technical energy efficiency projects, automated controls, planned preventative maintenance, design & development, monitoring & targeting systems and system optimization.

But in reality they rely on People and Organizational practices to work well

  1. How confident are you that you’re only using what you need? 
  2. What are your opportunities and priorities to thrive as an Energy Conscious Organization (EnCO)?

This guide uses an illustrative framework to check confidence for only using what you need & the checkpoints to ensure:

  • Balance in outcomes – to deliver the 'Win for All’ to lock in benefits long-term
  • Balance in skills – for an integrated approach to make it all intuative & easy
  • Balance in measures – to check energy performance against goals & activities

Success is not about following any specific framework, but about being able to ask the right questions to the right people at the right time.

We see ultimate performance is the point when you’re absolutely confident you’re only using what you need.

  The 5 Pillars for Success for an Energy Conscious Organisation (EnCO)

 Engagement | Alertness | Skills | |Recognition | Adaption

  • Developed by the Energy Services Technology Association (© ESTA).
  • EnCO is a simple self-analysis tool to help assess the five people pillars for success.
  • These are related and interdependent to define an Energy Conscious Organisation.
  • The EnCO Matrix is used to assess the 5 pillars against 5 levels:

           - Level 0 to indicate little or no progress

           - Up to Level 4 to represent best practice

  • Use informal conversations with colleagues as the basis to discuss and agree which levels apply to create the ‘current’ position.
  • The profile, along with antidotal feedback from colleagues, forms the benchmark & the EnCO confidence score.
  • An uneven profile highlights the weaknesses that can undermine the strengths.

Step 2: Win for All Catalyst - Engagement

Is everyone engaged in the right way for the ‘Win for All’?

Typical Problems:

  • Very little or no engagement in energy & sustainability management across the organization.
  • We limit the team to dedicated energy managers & possibly investment teams.

Common Best Practices:

  • Specific reduction targets set by top management.
  • Coordinated team working towards common goals.
  • All levels enthused and taking positive action.

Organizations come into being because there are tasks that are far too big for one person to do.

John Adair

Action Centered Leadership

Engagement is about creating the right conditions so colleagues can contribute:

  • to organizational goals,
  • in a way that benefits the people involved - the ‘Win Win’.

The ultimate outcome is a ‘Win for All’ – our organizations, our customers, our planet and ourselves.

  • Win for our Organizations – this often means meeting basic business objectives: cutting costs, improving customer service, reducing environmental impact and risk, enhancing reputations, etc.
  • Win for our Customers – creating better overall value for customers by eliminating avoidable waste, keeping future energy costs down and protecting our environment.
  • Win for the Planet – resulting from more of us reducing our impacts, ultimately achieving critical mass and momentum to achieve our climate goals.
  • Win for Ourselves – being healthier, creating better workplaces, improving our skills, more job security, involvement, doing it together, achievement, challenge, new experiences, doing it for ourselves.

It needs to involve All of Us

For any given task, we need to bring together the team with different perspectives, and then meet the needs of the individuals.

Asking the Right Questions:

  1. Do you fully understand the context & needs/ expectations of your key stakeholders?
  2. Is there a good compelling vision/ mission with a set of priorities/values in place?
  3. Does everyone understand their role in delivering these?
  4. Are you measuring, nurturing and continually improving your engagement?

Step 3: Alertness

Are all colleagues alert to the energy opportunities and measures to take?

Energy management through people is often one of the quickest & most cost effective ways to save energy & enhance sustainability

Our eye opener: We keep coming back to this airport case study as it was our eye opener. The green columns show the savings achieved by the team. We’ve been working with the airport ever since. See Heathrow case study.

Typical Problems:

  • Little alertness/awareness at various levels within the organization to save energy.
  • No mechanisms in place to alert people of energy waste when it occurs.

Common Best Practices:

  • High levels of alertness to eliminate energy waste and prioritize actions.
  • Colleagues proactively seek opportunities and innovate new measures.
  • Positively impacting on other business priorities e.g. better service, skills, etc.

A collaborative approach means there’s more upfront discussion about opportunities & the questions to ask: 

  1. Are goals and objectives realistic?
  2. Are (strategic) activities delivering balanced outcomes for key stakeholders?
  3. Which dragons of inaction are impacting on levels of alertness & action? (see box)
  4. Are there adequate surveillance controls in place to monitor for changes in context & requirements?

The 7 Dragons of Inaction 

According to psychologist, Robert Gifford, there are 7 reasons why colleagues may not fully engage with your catalyst for change: 

1) ‘Limited cognition’: people tend to only have the capacity to think about short-term objectives, e.g. “My priorities are elsewhere.”

2) ‘Discredence’: there’s a natural mistrust or denial to new things, e.g. “I don’t believe people can make a difference.”

3) ‘Comparisons with other people’: to justify why they should do more, e.g. “if other people aren’t doing anything, why should I?”

4) ‘Sunk costs’: it’s usually hard to buy into something that conflicts with previous efforts, e.g. “we’ve tried it before, it didn’t work.”

5) ‘Perceived risks’: could be social, psychological, financial or physical, e.g. “it wouldn’t be normal for me to be green”

6) ‘Ideologies and beliefs’: people set their views to justify why they shouldn’t take action, e.g. “the boss won’t like it.”

7) ‘Limited behaviors’: some people offer tokenism; e.g. “we recycle, isn’t that enough?”

Step 4: Skills

Do your colleagues have the right skills to exploit the opportunities?

Typical Problems:

  • Few or no skills in energy management across all levels of the organization.

Common Best Practices:

  • Skills gap analysis conducted & plan in place to close identified gaps.
  • Everyone fully skilled in their energy management roles.
  • Commitment to continual learning and up-skilling by ongoing investment in education, competency and training.

The Balance of Skills for Change

Prosci’s ADKAR model illustrates we need skills for an integrated approach:

  • It starts with Awareness
  • Then comes the decision to get involved; we need to create Desire
  • After desire comes Knowledge
  • Then Ability to make change
  • For change to be sustainable, Reinforcement is needed

Focus efforts on Proficiency 

  • Studies have shown that Ability is often a defining factor for successful change.
  • It is a common error to think Awareness alone improves performance.
  • Awareness increases Knowledge but, for it to be effective, it needs to be part of an integrated skills approach.
  • Reinforcement often relies on Desire and the Balance of Skills to deliver success in outcomes.
  1. Do top management, practitioners & significant users have the skills to deliver the activities required?
  2. Have you absolutely minimized the amount of controls/procedures in use?
  3. Are tools in place to make the activities as quick & easy as possible?
  4. Can training/coaching/gamification help with developing confidence, skills & performance of those involved?

This champions’ training program for a logistics company, not only meant ISO 50001 certification was achieved in record time, but that they also had the diversity and integration of skills for their efforts to be effective in the longer term – See Vanderlande Case-study.

   This is a fantastic achievement and demonstrates how a collaborative and focused approach can bring our teams together from different countries and at all levels in our business to gain this certification so quickly. I am impressed with the team’s commitment to energy management and their enthusiasm in meeting the aims of our policy.

GERT BOSSINK

Gert Bossink

2018, as COO for Vanderlande

Step 4: Performance metrics - Recognition

Are you recognizing, measuring and reporting the results?

Typical Problems:

  • No recognition of the benefits of energy management, savings achieved or those making savings.

Common Best Practices:

  • Data systems in place with capacity to recognize savings achieved against robust targets.
  • Recognizing benefits and co-benefits.
  • Those making savings are routinely recognized and celebrated.

Link metrics to people & results

  • Target measures that energize teams.
  • Energy crediting systems can link savings to people and teams to facilitate recognition & reward – bottom-up savings should also be verified top-down.
  • Dashboards/ trackers/ apps help people to make quicker/better decisions and reinforce & maintain momentum.
  • Whether it be absolute or intensity measures that are better will depend on the situation.

The Balance of Measures

  • Primary measures (overall organizational performance)
  • Secondary measures (system/process or local performance)
  • Indicative measures (which explain why performance has changed)

Measures can be either Lead or Lag:

  • Leading (input) indicators offer the opportunity to change, but do not guarantee success
  • Lagging (output) measures are used to assess past performance; they’re usually easier to measure but are after the fact

For best results, we need a balance of measures

Are you delivering the right results?

  1. Are metrics communicated in a concise way so everyone understands how they contribute to strategic goals?
  2. Do evaluation controls adequately monitor progress and provide feedback?
  3. How are people rewarded for success?

A Shared Vision of 3 priority success measures:

1) Reduce consumption (community measure)

2) Better utilization of resources (local business level measures)

3) Doing it together (ideas and actions trackers)

Bringing together a UK airport community 

  • In 2018, a UK airport set about bringing together business partners around a shared vision for better energy & water efficiency.
  • The challenge is that tenants & concessionaires are all individually responsible for their own energy consumption.
  • A shared vision was co-created focused on 3 priorities and the balance of measures.
  • Recognition & celebration is based against agreed targets & action plans, along with better reporting and recognition of consumption.
  • The approach was signed off by the airport’s sustainability partnership board of business partner CEOs as a published vision.
  • See the airport case-study for more details.

Step 6: Adaption

Do your policies and practices effectively drive continual improvement and momentum?

Typical Problems

  • Change is viewed as a threat rather than a positive challenge and opportunity.
  • No energy policies, procedures or mechanisms in place to adapt to change.

Common Best Practices:

  • The organization positively expects and embraces change.
  • Energy policies & procedures are continually under review to allow for greater flexibility, response & momentum.
  • Adapt to minimize risk and maximize opportunity to maintain continual improvement in energy performance.

ISO 50001 is the international energy management system standard to help us

Apply ISO 50001 in a streamlined fashion for effective continual improvement. Balance strategic thinking & controls with operational management processes

Do you need to adjust your plans?

  • Are your goals and objectives realistic in the current (and future) context?
  • Are you focusing on the right priority energy management activities?
  • Does your team have the required skills and resources to deliver the activities?
  • Do you have the right (minimum) checkpoints in place to monitor activities?
  • Are your evaluation and feedback processes adequate?
  • Are you achieving the right goals? Will you be delivering the right results in the future? 

  • This pyramid is an example of a strategic map that shows everything Vandelande needs to think about, how it all fits together with a clear line of sight to strategic objectives.  It describes their Catalyst for change.
  • Not only does this communication tool help to raise awareness and make sure the approach is understood, but it also tests the strategy & plans to ensure the organization is only using what it needs. See case-study.

Most impactful activities + the right checkpoints = confidence you’re only using what you need

What’s next?

Are you always asking the question ‘what’s next’ to drive momentum?

Written by James Brittain

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How to Guide to Develop your Own Big Green Solution https://biggreenacademy.com/how-to-develop-your-own-big-green-solution-2/ https://biggreenacademy.com/how-to-develop-your-own-big-green-solution-2/#respond Tue, 16 Jun 2020 04:05:34 +0000 https://biggreenacademy.com/?p=2592 This article offers a step-by-step guide to help reduce energy & resources use at work by making connections for 'Win Win' solutions and focusing on some smart attitudes and behaviors. It's been put together to help Smart Savers, Lead Champions and Key Connectors to develop their own Big Green Solution through people at work. We hope it creates […]

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This article offers a step-by-step guide to help reduce energy & resources use at work by making connections for 'Win Win' solutions and focusing on some smart attitudes and behaviors.

It's been put together to help Smart Savers, Lead Champions and Key Connectors to develop their own Big Green Solution through people at work.

We hope it creates some ideas for you.

The Challenge

Are you interested in developing your own big green solution for your workplace? 

This makes total sense:

Involving colleagues at work is one of the quickest and cheapest ways of reducing carbon emissions and cutting utility costs for your organization at scale. 

Most organizations typically waste 20-30% of the energy they buy (#CarbonTrust). 

Governments are asking businesses to improve their energy efficiency at least by 20% to help meet our Zero Carbon climate change goals (#CleanGrowthStrategy).

Others say we all need to improve our energy productivity by at least 3% every year (#ThreePercentClub).

Our 1st Big Green event was for an airport terminal building (2008), which brought together a core team who went onto reduce their energy consumption by 22% in 3 years by engaging,  involving & working with teams of local everyday champions.

We know many organizations struggle with their programs and become disillusioned as energy savings don’t result or because they quickly fall away over time. 

How do you create the green spark and engage colleagues to deliver quick wins, i.e., develop your own big green solution? 

Once you do, how do you generate the momentum and benefits longer-term? 

There aren’t many step by step guides available that help take the mystery out of behavior change.

It’s not as hard as you think!

When we first started with people solutions, we massively surprised ourselves on what we achieved. So we thought we’d share some of our ideas & approaches within courses – hopefully to give you ideas & help you avoid the usual pitfalls & discover benefits for yourself.

A big green solution need to blend technical, strategic & behavior change measures


TECHNOLOGY alone will not solve it all 

Many of us focus 99% of our effort on the technical solutions, but this often requires large investment & only delivers half of the savings.


Best practice STRATEGY tells us: 

  1. First focus on lean conservation measures to minimize costs & right-size investments.
  2. Then, think about more efficient & clean energy technologies you can invest in.
  3. Finally, use green energy supply options to lower the carbon impact of your energy use (#EnergyHiearachy). 


Put PEOPLE first at the heart of success 

Save 5-20%+ energy consumption by involving and engaging people (#EnvironmentAgency).

People approaches yield high ROI (#CDP reports say > 124 kgCO2/$ spent & IRR >72% for behavior change measures).

The ‘Big 3’ Ideas to help you deliver success:

  • Clear Business Sense                                                                          Whatever it is we do, it needs to perform. Target improvements in sustainability and link them to measurable business benefits.
  • Make it Easy                                                                                           We are all busy people; for best results, our actions need to be quick & intuitive; eventually the driving of continual improvement needs to become friction free.
  • Create the 'Win Win'                                                                                People love emotive connections. Tap into these to drive continual improvement, to make sure improvements stick and to create a 'Win Win' for those involved.

What’s going to drive this for you? What’s going to make it rewarding & fun?

How are we going to deliver continual & sustainable improvements longer-term?

This university Big Green event generated 300+ energy saving ideas & actions to help kick off an energy savings through people campaign; the resulting action plan was local, unique & effective, and importantly owned by the people involved.

Step 1: Engagement

Center on engagement to get commitment and setup a vision to kick off with

Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful committed citizens can change the world; indeed, it's the only thing that ever has.

Margaret Mead

US Culture Specialist

What’s your current utilities bill?

For your organization and metered zones:

  • What areas are you targeting? Schedule your local sites, buildings and areas being targeted
  • What was your consumption for last year? This is for each utility source and area
  • Are there any expected changes that will impact on energy and water use?

What are the needs & expectations?

Talk to local top managers and other stakeholders:

  • Are there any energy and environmental policies in place?
  • Are there existing plans and budgets for improvement programs?
  • Does the organization use management standards? E.g. ISO 50001 for energy
  • What are the legal and other stakeholder requirements that apply?

It is essential key top managers are on board:

  • To understand opportunities, challenges & priorities
  • To ensure plans and roles are joined-up, approved and resources made available
  • To communicate the importance of better performance and savings made
  • To ensure buy in for performance measures and interest in the results
  • To celebrate success and say thank you to the everyday champions involved

We find many organizations still typically rely too much on awareness-raising campaigns and top-down standards & assurance processes, so miss out on potential results.


A starting vision:  Local Ownership

  • Personal Leadership taken on by local people throughout the organization i.e. not just the CEO and top managers. 
  • Empowered colleagues become committed everyday champions, using their local knowledge and creativity.
  • Local top managers and practitioners are the change-makers, setting up the local structures and support for change.
  • Colleagues and teams collaborate locally and learn from each other, turning themselves into Smart Savers and leaders.

Step 2: Accommodate inspiration

Target the Win for the colleagues and the community through accommodating inspiration 

It often starts with speaking to colleagues and finding out what they think and need.

How good is energy & environmental performance in practice?

  • Use the community of practice to start a conversation about highlighting reality.
  • Ask people about their attitudes, challenges and any ideas they may have to save energy and for being better.
  • Speak to suppliers and specialists about levels of performance, relevant factors that impact on energy use and the opportunities for improvement.
  • Consider using surveys to ask users about energy services, particularly about their working environment.
  • Raise awareness of related policies, benefits, roles and responsibilities and the impact of activities and behaviors.
  • Target the co-benefits and risks that will motivate colleagues to do more.

Anyone can be an everyday champion by typically spending 20 minutes a day thinking about & working on how to do things better.

Set-up regular Energy Time

  • Collaborate with significant users (with hands-on control of energy use), practitioners (specialists), ambassadors (who influence top management) and key connectors (who influence everyone else).
  • Assign local responsibilities, engage and create green sparks for colleagues to become champions for better performance.
  • Agree baselines to measure savings against – e.g. last year’s consumption.
  • Report monthly consumptions – add commentary for any relevant factors.
  • Communicate with colleagues through team talks, events, workshops, etc.
  • Track energy ideas and actions that save energy, water and other resource use.

Step 3: Coordination for better service

Coordinate your approach on continuing improving service and the Win for Customers


Target avoidable waste that adds no value

  • Recognize that most services consume more energy than needed, which then adds no more value to customers. This is what we call ‘avoidable waste’.
  • Coordinate local Energy Reviews to identify your overall areas of significant energy use based on customer value.
  • Involve staff who best understand the (changing) needs of customers.
  • Explore ideas and actions that significantly reduce consumption but also increase value for customers. Particularly target actions that also support colleagues' hearts and minds - the 'Win Win Win'.

Plotting energy demand and number of customers over 24 hours helped this business highlight that equipment is left on with no value generated to their customers. This understanding allowed them to target potential biggest impact savings to reduce consumption by over 50%; in the first year they saved 20%+ with more to follow.

Use streamlined ISO 50001 for coordinated continual improvement

  • Understand which actions add the most value to customers.
  • Focus tools to make difficult actions easier and procedures to cover only key gaps.
  • Get people to rethink services so energy is used more efficiently for customer requirements – ‘Do the right thing’.
  • Build a strong team with a good mix of expertise, local staff and managers.
  • Co-create the objectives, targets and plans that will lead to better service and overall energy performance.
  • Get colleagues excited by tapping into emotive connections and motivators.

Challenge why Energy is Consumed

Heating, ventilating & air-conditioning systems are typically the largest energy consumers in most buildings; many systems run for longer than needed.  A hospital reviewed the operating times of their HVAC systems & found that most could be switched off for 2 to 3 hours a day without affecting comfort, saving 10% in fan running costs >> These quick wins saved $107,000 a year & set up their catalyst for change.

Step 4: Coordination for better returns

Coordinate your approach to also deliver the Win for the business partners involved 


Focus coordination with Pareto 80/20

  • 80% of the results typically come from 20% of the ideas (#Pareto)
  • Focus performance indicators on a few targeted key objectives and targets which deliver clear business benefits.
  • Measure and verify impacts on metered consumption at high level – for sites, buildings and metered zones.
  • Monitor actions taken and ask for feedback from users to analyze energy performance, motivations and progress.
  • Use dashboards / trackers / apps to feedback and help people make quicker and better decisions, to reinforce actions and allow them to respond to significant deviations in energy performance.

Energy performance feedback for this restaurant demonstrates that energy consumption now correlates reasonably well with number of meals being cooked. Energy consumption has been halved compared to the energy baselines set

Coordinate communications to colleagues

  • Everything communicates during change; even doing nothing shows people what you expect them to do!
  • Use every day and consistent language and positioning across all the channels; be mindful of being too technical
  • Nudge, prod and persuade by making it respectful, positive, free-choice (if possible) and about self-discovery
  • Create stories out of the actions being taken and their related successes

Coordination for continually better value 

Too much equipment still runs 24/7. For escalators, the simple thing to do is to turn them off overnight, when not in use, & maximize this “off” time — this generates interest & quick win savings. Only then is it worth investing in run-on-demand controls to slow escalators down during lull periods. A local everyday champion can optimize the controls; savings of $1,000–$2,000 a year per escalator is often possible. Further savings can then be made by making the stairs more attractive to use than the escalator!

Step 5: Collaboration

Connect together teams to generate the Win Win and energize change 

big green ball

To help generate a local buzz here, a giant green ball randomly appears in different places, representing the Big Green challenge and literally putting the ball into their court.

Collaborate using local events

  • Local events can create drop-in interactive spaces within the heart of the operation.
  • Focus on action-oriented campaigns e.g. using opportunity sweeps or treasure hunts to facilitate teams to explore areas they know well.
  • The challenge is to come up with ideas and actions together (while injecting some fun into the process).
  • Key-connectors help bring teams together and make connections.

Develop Hearts and Minds that stick

  • Target co-benefits by tapping into motivation theories of Maslow or others.
  • Training for better skills and performance is often a key motivator for those involved.
  • Significant energy users also need to be competent in their knowledge and proficiency.
  • Use quick actions processes for campaigns.
  • Coaching helps colleagues to focus their efforts by understanding the challenges and developing their own solutions.
  • Gamification helps hone skills through iterative experience and instant feedback.

'Win Win' is a Good Thing

Lighting in buildings can still account for 20% of total energy costs. Staff working in a shopping facility targeted poor lighting that was receiving customer complaints. Upgrading the light fittings not only reduced energy consumption by 60%, saving $19,000 a year with a 2½-year payback, but also significantly improved the lighting ambience in that area; a classic “win–win” for those involved.

Step 6: Momentum

Put in place ways to develop momentum for continual improvement

  • Prioritize management practices which center on momentum. 
  • Regularly assess progress, your plans and activities – challenge current perceptions and push boundaries. Assess, adjust and try again.
  • Use regular forum meetings to share experiences, co-ordinate efforts and reinforce team work.  Learn from each other.
  • Try out new ways of doing business – use action-based continual learning, innovation and personal leadership.
  • Make recommendations for any updates to policies, objectives and allocation of resources, etc.
  • Create and share case-studies to show what people can do.
  • Remember it takes time to create lasting change.

Principles for a Community of practice that sticks

For critical mass, we need at least 2-5% of colleagues to be everyday champions to lock it all in.

  • Make it local - develop a strong local team, give everyone a compelling reason to get involved, and help them understand their local energy performance.
  • Make it focused - focus and coordinate efforts for the 'Win Win' while also giving it a sense of urgency.
  • Make it continual - reinforce and adapt for change, communicate and communicate again, and always ask what’s next?
  • Make it desirable - celebrate the ‘Win for All of us’ through benefits for energy and sustainability, the organization and for the people involved.
  • Make it theirs – develop and refine the solution so it belongs to everyone involved – follow your instincts; ultimately, you will know what works best for your organization…

Best of luck and enjoy the process!


The “Big Green” concept was born out of success of working with teams at an airport (2007-2010). We surprised ourselves delivering an average of 15% savings across the airport in less than three years; the best areas saving 30%+. Regular workshops and events helped turn discovery into success. Directors reinforced key priorities, celebrated industry awards and were confident in letting everyday champions lead it all up locally for themselves.

Written by James Brittain

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