Wide Open World Sustainability, polycrisis, planetary boundaries, sustainable business models
Wide Open World Sustainability, polycrisis, planetary boundaries, sustainable business models

Building the world of tomorrow

THE FUTURE OF SUSTAINABILITY

Ethics, greenwashing, business-as-usual, Brundtland, sustainable development

LET’S SET THE RECORD STRAIGHT

You are being deceived. Businesses don’t take sustainability seriously. But sustainability should not be a question as it means to not compromise the needs of future generations.

If you are onboard the international space station and you are leaking oxygen, you would want to fix the leak swiftly. Not doing so is clearly not sustainable.

On planet Earth, irresponsible businesses are leaking our future through biodiversity loss, chemical pollution, carbon emissions and other key vital planetary systems. It is not sustainable.

Planetary Boundaries model, absolute sustainability, Sustainable business model

SAFE OPERATING SPACE

It should not be that way. We can feel sorry for our children or take action. At Wide Open World, we take action. We didn’t create the brand to move the needle, or sprinkle a bit of greenwashing sustainability dust on the status quo. It’s five minutes past midnight already. We wanted to rethink everything and answer a simple question: What is a sustainable business?

As with everything we do, we started with science. The planetary boundary science. A model that shows where the safe limit is to keep Earth systems ticking along. It’s the green circle on the diagram, the safe operating space. The sustainable space. The place where we should be.

Sustainability principles, Herman Daly, renewable, ecological economics

Sustainability principles

Our modern society has eroded the meaning of environmental sustainability. Conscious collection, eco-friendly, sustainable recycled plastics, carbon neutral, and so on. These slogans do not mean products are sustainable. Sustainable means the environment is maintained in a good enough condition over time to sustain society. The sustainability principles, formulated by American ecological economist Herman Daly, show broadly what this entails:

• Rates of use of renewable resources do not exceed their rates of regeneration.

• Rates of use of nonrenewable resources do not exceed the rate at which sustainable renewable substitutes are developed.

• Rates of pollution emission do not exceed the assimilative capacity of the environment.

Therefore, sustainability is a black and white concept. Either we deplete resources and increase pollution, or we do not. If we draw more water from a river than the water going in, we will dry it out eventually. If land keeps being converted to serve humans, biodiversity will disappear. If more fertilisers find their way into rivers than ecosystems can safely assimilate, rivers become dead zones.

Sustainability challenges climate change, biodiversity, pollution

The challenge

The folks at the Stockholm Resilience Centre developed the planetary boundaries model (thanks by the way). It gives us a view of where safe limits are at a global level but it doesn’t tell us how to rewire our economy. This is the greatest challenge humans have faced. Ever. This is where Natropy's APres business model comes in. It is developed from the planetary boundaries and offers a blueprint for businesses to achieve true sustainability. Businesses need to:

• Maintain global temperatures below 1.5°C of warming and stop the bioaccumulation of harmful substances into ecosystems (pesticides and plastics included).

• Prevent and reverse the destruction of natural habitats.

• Avoid artificial fertiliser run-offs into waterways and find sustainable alternatives (nature on steroids is an ecological mess and ethically dangerous for future generations).

This is not rocket science. It is a human story. A story of hearts and minds where humans need to rethink their relationship with the environment. A story where humanity needs to restore balance™.

Two big myths of sustainability today

Sustainability myths Greenwashing clothing lifecycle, from the refinery to the machine, wear to ocean waste and littered on the beaches

myth number one

Myth: Using recycled plastics is sustainable. Take something harmful from the environment. Melt it. Make something else with it. What not to like? We now know that plastics are harmful to life and most plastics can only be recycled once. And once recycled to make clothing or shoes, they cannot be recycled anymore. So brands using recycled plastics are trying to sell us non-renewable, unrecyclable toxic fossil fuel with a greenwashing gloss on it. They sell us a problem. Unless they accept to receive the products back for them to recycle. But they won’t. Because they can’t. So products end up in the environment, again. And recycled plastics are weaker, shedding microplastics even more. Cleaning the oceans, yes. Self-perpetuating the post-war addiction to plastics for non-essential items, no.

Sustainability myths Greenwashing Renewable, natural fibres in clothing, fabrics

myth number two

Myth: Using renewable crops to make clothing is sustainable. Isn’t “Natural” sustainable? Well, no. It’s like saying harvesting the Amazonian forest is sustainable because wood is renewable. Brands buy fibres, and fibres are commodities. Buying 50 tonnes of fabric made from eucalyptus trees or sugar cane doesn’t mean it is sustainable. For it to be sustainable, we should not harvest more than what can be renewed per year. And we should not cheat by clearing natural habitats to plant more eucalyptus trees. Deforestation is on the increase and animal species are going extinct because of this. Bypassing this system is hard, but we see it as a necessity.

When you start with land, you have the responsibility to maintain balance with the environment. Relinquishing is irresponsible and a threat to humanity. We take this very seriously at Wide Open World. #KnowYourLimits

how we solve this

ENVIRONMENTAL DAMAGE

Biodiversity collapse crisis, agriculture, deforestation, sixth mass extinction on Earth

Agriculture is responsible for the collapse of biodiversity, yet no one takes responsibility

1 in 4 species are threatened with extinction because ecosystems are being destroyed by agriculture. 90% of the world’s animal species will lose some habitat to agriculture by 2050. Natural fibres are sold as commodities, meaning that damage at source goes unchecked, and rising demand is directly threatening natural habitats. Businesses are causing the sixth mass extinction on Earth. The extinction rate of species is 100 to 1000 times what it was before the industrial revolution. And most brands do not know where the fibres they use come from. We can’t ignore this situation. We need to rethink everything.

CLIMATE CHANGE

Climate change crisis, CO2, global warming, fashion

The world is warming, with dire and irreversible consequences

Ice sheets melting, forests drying-up, weather patterns affecting people like never before. The situation is dire, making the future very uncertain. 10% of all global emissions come from the fashion industry, forecast to increase by 60% by 2030–We are out of time to tackle climate change. In less than a century, our society has increased CO2 concentrations to levels not seen for over 16 millions years. The CO2 we add to the atmosphere remains there for thousands of years, for over 30 generations in the future. As the CO2 gets slowly absorbed by the ocean, it makes it more acidic, risking to dissolve corals and the shells of crustaceans. The melting of ice sheets is probably irreversible and burning fossil fuels also increases the toxicity of the air we breathe. Fossil fuels have enabled tremendous progress but are humanity’s greatest curse. We are over the safe limit already, and keep burning them as if the economy mattered more than a liveable future. It is pure madness.

COMMODITIES

Commodities, ethics, biodiversity loss, negligence

Commodities support limitless growth thinking and allow businesses to avoid responsibility

What is a commodity? Stuff you buy as cheaply as possible without having to worry about how it’s made. Magic. If you don’t want to take responsibility for keeping nature in balance, it’s your perfect solution to limitless production. Cotton, sugar-cane, palm oil, wool, etc... all commodities. Problem? They are responsible for environmental damage and biodiversity loss. And natural fibres are no different. They are commodities, sold on the trade market. Their price fluctuates daily, and does not attract value for good sustainable practices. What does this mean? Farmers don’t know where the fibres they produce go and the ones focusing on the environment are at a disadvantage. It is a race to the bottom where only price matters. We don’t agree with this business model. It makes people disconnected from nature and hooks billions of people with unsustainable, cheap, raw materials.

STANDARDS

Fashion standards, knitwear Merino, OEKO-TEX, Bluesign, ZDHC, GOTS, ZQ, RWS

Standards shouldn’t be the escape card for taking responsibility

OEKO-TEX, Bluesign, ZDHC, GOTS, ZQ, RWS, .... Standards are everywhere. And let’s be honest, some are important. But they don’t mean brands are sustainable. They don’t mean animals are treated well. They don’t mean managers in the businesses audited once in a blue moon have the right ethics to do the right thing when no one is looking. And they don’t mean we should stop questioning. When you know that almost all standards are created by the industry for the industry, you understand they drive the best scalable solution. Not the right solution. The problem is we don’t want the status quo. We don’t want to move the needle. We want to join forces and do the right thing.

synthetics

Pollution crisis, Synthetics, plastics, toxic, oceans, harmful to biodiversity, microfibres, microplastics

Synthetics are an environmental disaster

A never-ending polluting cycle. Plastics are everywhere. More than a tonne enters the oceans every minute. Millions of marine animals are killed each year because of it. It is everywhere, from the bottom of the oceans to the pristine summits, in our food chain and in our lungs and blood. They release some 700,000 microfibres in every machine wash. There is mounting evidence they are toxic to life and responsible for reducing fertility. They are made with fossil fuels, the primary driver of climate change, and it is about time we regard them as a misguided use of a finite resource.

Recycled plastics are even weaker, responsible for more microplastic leaking into the environment. The United Nations are slowly moving toward a treaty to regulate them. Planet or Plastic? Buy natural where it makes sense. Leave the industrial revolution behind, step into the future.

so what is a sustainable business?

When we talk about sustainability, we mostly mean environmental sustainability. This means maintaining the condition of the environment within safe limits so that it can continue to sustain society, generation after generation. Therefore a sustainable business is a business that maintains the environment within safe limits, within ecological balance.

A good rule of thumb to gauge whether a business is sustainable is to ask this simple question which comes from Natropy's APres model:

What happens to the environment if the business benefits from infinite demand?

In our case, the answer is simple. We can't and won't serve demand. Environmental limits come first.

Responsible and ethical. Be honest

1. Take responsibility

First, a sustainable business must prioritise sustainability. Sustainability is what legitimises doing business. Not the other way around. Take responsibility. Go see, understand, and do what’s right. We’d rather close the business and go star-gazing on an island for the rest of our lives instead of causing environmental damage to make a profit.

We do not inherit the earth from our ancestors, we borrow it from our children.

There was a period of time after the industrial revolution when societies lost touch with nature. They overshot planetary limits quite badly. That was before. Après (meaning after in French), they started to re-acquaint themselves with nature. They realised that restoring balance with the environment was the foundation to a high civilisation, a civilisation that accumulates great wisdom without falling into the trap of greed and collapse. The APres model was born. Wide Open World was the first business in the world to show how to restore balance by accounting for planetary boundaries. That door remained open. Wide open. The rest is history.

There are pioneers in every industry building the future. And when it comes to sustainability in the clothing industry, we think it’s us. We exist to demonstrate that we can bring you the most awesome knitwear there is without compromising the future.
Sustainability matters. What it means should be clear because if it isn’t we are all in trouble on spaceship Earth. If we help spread the message, we think we’ve done a good deed already.

When you start with land, you have the responsibility to maintain a balance with the environment. Responsibility to operate within the sustainable space. Relinquishing is a threat to humanity. Join us, restore balance™.

#WideOpenWorldco #KnowYourLimits #LiveLife #RestoreBalance #SustainableFashion

Pass it on. Thanks.

our positive impact on this planet

Look at our Mission page for insights on how we restore a balance with the environment.

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