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Integrating environment for innovation Experiences from product development for paper and packaging 13th International Greening of Industry Network Conference INTEGRATION AND COMMUNICATION: A CLEAR ROUTE TO SUSTAINABILITY, 2-5 July 2006, Cardiff. Paula Kivimaa
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Integrating environment for innovationExperiences from product development for paper and packaging13th International Greening of Industry Network ConferenceINTEGRATION AND COMMUNICATION: A CLEAR ROUTE TO SUSTAINABILITY, 2-5 July 2006, Cardiff Paula Kivimaa Research Programme for Environmental Policy Finnish Environment Institute (SYKE)
Contents of the presentation • Why environmental integration? • Research approach and data • Findings from product development in paper and packaging • How environmental integration relates to organisations and innovation
Why environmental integration? • Innovation processes, generating environmentally harmful and benign innovations, are affected by many different factors (e.g. Edquist, 2005; Malerba, 2005) • Public policies have only a limited impact on innovation, especially on the product side • Thus, company activities are important • Environmental integration could be a potential tool for generating environmental innovations
Environmental integration in companies • Environmental integration in companies can be defined as: • Incorporating the principles of corporate environmental responsibility, not only in environmental divisions, but in all the divisions and activities of the company • E.g. product development • Related to whether principles are translated into action (coupling between principles and practice) or whether they are merely symbolic (decoupling between principles and practice)
Thematic interviews of company R&D and environmental representatives Content analysis of company environmental reports from 2005 Tetra Pak Stora Enso SCA A review of international trade journals Recorded group discussions Research approach and data • Purpose: • Identify different ways to integrate environmental issues in product development of P&P companies • Explore the potential implications of this to coupling/decoupling and to innovation
A framework for analysis • Five potential indicators of integrating environmental considerations into product development: • Environmental criteria in product design and development • The use of life-cycle assessments (LCAs) • Participation of environmental experts in product development activities • Environmental training of the personnel involved with product development • The purposeful development of environmental product innovations
Results (1) • Life Cycle Assessments (LCAs) • Commonly used for a long time • SCA: in the hygiene products division, not so much in packaging and printing divisions • SE: no formal routines, but a coordination team • Tetra Pak used since 1975 as an integral part of product development • Environmental training • In SE and UPM reports mentioned as part of corporate training programmes • Not explicitly mentioned in interviews
Results (2) • Environmental criteria • Tetra Pak and SCA: a stepwise system of product development, where environmental considerations as specific checkpoints • SE: a context specific approach, no predetermined checkpoints • Environmental expertise • Tetra Pak and SE: central experts • Tetra Pak, and occasionally SE: an environmental expert participating in a development project • SCA: an environmental committee but link to product development vague
Results (3) • Purposeful development of environmental innovations • Environmental considerations are implicit in the development of new products in the studied paper and packaging companies • More or less standard practice • In recent years, environmental issues have not been a driving force for new product innovations in the studied companies
Systematic procedures for environment in R&D projects Procedural approach Standardised approach Only project-specific R&D personnel used in R&D projects Central environmental expertise used in R&D projects Case-specific approach Expertise-based approach Case-specific consideration of environment in R&D projects Different approaches for integrating environment into product development
Organisational principles and practice • Discrepancy between company goals and institutional requirements may lead to situations where principles (stated in public) do no match the practice • E.g. difference between corporate environmental policies/strategies and actual practice of product development • Intentional decoupling between principles and practice can be termed as • Concealment tactics (Oliver, 1991) • Hypocrisy (Brunsson, 1993) • Decoupling may also result from a lack of capacity to conform (knowledge, time, resources)
Systematic procedures for environment in R&D projects May suffer from lack of people implementing principles Procedural approach Standardised approach Hypocrisy least likely to appear Only project-specific R&D personnel used in R&D projects Central environmental expertise used in R&D projects Case-specific approach Expertise-based approach Dependent on activities of selected people (human error) Decoupling, or coupling through bottom up flow of ideas Case-specific consideration of environment in R&D projects Links between organisational principles and product development
Conclusions • Environmental considerations are becoming standard practice in product development of the studied companies • But environmental issues rarely act as drivers for product innovations • Systematic procedures and central environmental expertise main means for integrating environment into product development • The appropriate strategy for integrating environmental considerations depends on the nature of the company, institutional requirements in place, and the aim of innovation activities • Because innovation processes are complex and context-specific