
Never one to mince words, Richard Branson is continuing his work via his non profit Virgin Unite. The NGO has partnered with Carbon War Room, another Branson venture, to award five business leaders what it calls the “Screw Business as Usual Awards.”
The SBAU awards were announced earlier this week at the
Rio+Social gathering, part of the many concurrent events going on this week at Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Virgin Unite asked a group of partners, which included the pan-European charity United Postcode Lotteries, to identify leaders who put both planet and the people at the heart of how they conduct business. And so the winners, who should not be of any surprise, are:
The late
Ray Anderson, Interface: Anderson (pictured right), founder and chairman of Interface, passed away last August, but his
legacy as an unrelenting champion of the environment will not be forgotten anytime soon. In 1994, before many people even uttered the word “sustainability,” Anderson insisted that environmental stewardship be at the core of Interface’s business.
Segun Saxena, Clean Star Mozambique: This
ethanol cookstove venture is helping farmers earn a solid living, freeing families from charcoal independence and is snapping the vicious cycle of deforestation, food insecurity and harm to the public’s health in Mozambique.
Eben Bayer, Ecovative: Polystyrene, or Styrofoam as it is known, is still not recycled in many municipalities and has its own detrimental effects on the environment. Bayer and Ecovative have completely disrupted the packaging industry with a
mushroom-based alternative that companies including Dell now use.
Jochen Zeitz, PUMA and PPR Group: Few would have thought a decade ago that sporting apparel companies would lead the charge towards
more sustainable practices, but PUMA has been a leader. From its
environmental P&L statement to working with its
supply chain on transparency issues, PUMA pushes the envelope. And then you have the return of those
retro sneakers, only with less toxins and more responsibly sourced textiles.
Dennis Hunter, Ygrene: Retrofitting buildings is not cheap but pays environmental and financial dividends in the long run. To that end, Hunter and
Ygrene is financing such projects across the United States, allowing property owners to do their part to build a cleaner local environment with minimal hassle from banks.

Richard Branson telling us how it's done
Do you have someone who should be on the “Screw Business as Usual” award list or should receive an honorable mention? Share them with us.
Published Friday on Triple Pundit. You can follow Leon Kaye on Twitter.
Photo of Ray Anderson courtesy
Interface.
About The Author
Leon Kaye
Leon Kaye is the founder and editor of GreenGoPost.com and its advisory division,
GGP Media.
Contact him to discuss how he can work with your organization or event.
His focus is making the business case for sustainability and corporate social responsibility (CSR).
He writes for San Francisco-based
Triple Pundit,
Inhabitat and now
The Guardian, for which he writes about corporate responsibility, water, and green building. He has also written for AIA's
Architect Magazine.
Leon works out of Fresno and Silicon Valley, California, and when he has free time, he enjoys hiking, gardening, cooking, weightlifting, and planning his next trip to one of the 60 countries he has visited. He has an MBA from USC's Marshall School of Business and is also a proud graduate of the University of Maryland-Baltimore County (UMBC) and Cal State-Fresno.
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