| | As a former philosophy student, I’m something of a lover of warped thinking and this is one of my favourites:
Something must be done.
This is something.
Therefore we must do it.
I’m sure the Greeks had a precise name for this but this wording comes from the classic British sitcom Yes Minister where it was known as the “Politician’s Syllogism” (as memories of my philosophy degree fade, I’m increasingly reliant on TV programmes to underline my points. The Simpsons is a goldmine).
The Politician’s Syllogism is everywhere, but nowhere more so than in the arena of climate change. Britain with windfarms! Let’s dig up all the crops and grow biofuel instead! Let’s offset our carbon emissions by giving money to people we know nothing about!
Even the most polite demurrals about the wisdom of all this activity are met with another bit of twisted logic:
I’m trying to do something about climate change.
You’re trying to stop me.
Therefore you’re in favour of climate change.
It’s a bit like trying to stop one of those eco-warrior bicyclists, head-down | |
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| | and wrapped in the impenetrable armour of moral authority: the latest trend among cycling fanatics is for bikes with no brakes.
It’s fair to say that whatever is happening to the planet as a whole, the climate of environmental discussion is already severely overheated. The result is a rash of unco-ordinated initiatives from individuals, governments and business and the flood of unintended consequences is only just beginning.
Where are consultancies in all this? Isn’t one of the key roles of the sector to disseminate knowledge and rapidly achieve consensus on what’s happening? Or, if you’re cynical, to jump on the nearest bandwagon and ride it into the ground?
Oddly that doesn’t seem to have happened: climate change seems to have caught the consulting industry flat-footed, and offerings are emerging slowly and in a piecemeal fashion.
Getting an overview of the situation has been next to impossible, so I’m indebted to climate researchers Verdantix (www.verdantix.com) for passing on their latest report, Green Quadrant Climate Change Consulting. I’d say it was essential reading | |
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| | for anyone considering either entering the market or looking for advice. The report contains a detailed analysis of the offerings of a broad range of firms, covering strategy houses, the Big Four, IT players and environmental specialists.
The picture that emerges is of a highly fragmented and immature market. Only one firm – ICF International – is considered to have an offering that is both broad and established. But in a world where opportunities are rapidly shrinking, this is an area where consultancy can rapidly get going – Verdantix reports that the firms operating in this area expect growth of up to 200% in 2008, as a combination of oil prices, legislation and consumer pressure drive more and more firms to seek advice in this area.
However, entering this market is not going to be easy. The buyers of climate change consultancy are generally not top executives but technical experts who already have relationships with established environmental consultancies. IT and strategy firms lack the technical credentials and consequently will struggle to stretch their brands into this area. The relative | |
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| | strength of McKinsey as a strategic advisor in this area rests on a two-year programme of thought leadership. Firms have therefore tended to enter the market along lines that make a plausible fit with their existing expertise: so IBM will “green” your data centre, while PwC will sort out your environmental taxes.
It’s a highly confusing situation for buyers, and one which Verdantix predicts will only get worse as more and more firms launch offerings. It’s going to be very easy for clients to get it wrong and, in my experience, most consultancy disasters have their roots in the buying decision. As we all know in consultancy, one horror story is worth a thousand successful engagements, so in a few years’ time, “green” consultancy could have a very bad name indeed. What’s more, clients seem unduly concerned with consultancies’ own green credentials, which seems to me to be missing the point entirely. If the guy can make your global supply chain carbon neutral does it really matter if he takes a couple of plane trips to do it?
What’s needed, in my opinion, is for everyone to sit back a bit and take stock (not that there’s the remotest chance of that | |
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| | happening). To go back to our original syllogism, we need to question that original premise even more. OK, something has to be done. Do we know what it is? And is it down to us to do it? Is this a moral imperative or a commercial imperative? One of the areas the report highlights is a severe deficit in strategic advice on how to adapt a business to deal with the effects of climate change, rather than the causes.
There’s a severe lack of joined-up thinking at the moment and I suspect that this is something the consulting industry will need to sort out, probably through a process of consolidation and acquisition. In the meantime, the situation is getting more than a bit ludicrous. I recently had a note through from my mortgage brokers to let me know that the whole process of remortgaging my buy-to-let had been carbon neutral. And there was me worrying about interest rates. But it did give me a smile, at the thought of some scorched and ragged figure of the future shaking his fist at the burning sun and shouting: “Damn those financial advisers! They wouldn’t listen!” | |
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