Every now and then someone comes along and inspires you. On the
Carbon MBA course, we're lucky to have master classes from people of all walks of life. We've had
Carbon specialists talking about Kyoto to finance directors discussing their company. All have been excellent, but none as inspirational as
Nic Frances. Frances is one of those people who have the ability to inspire all sorts of people in different ways. He has been a priest and then became a charity worker before losing faith in "doing good". He now calls himself a social entrepreneur, but has decided to sell his businesses and become an actor. Hardly bog-standard MBA stuff.
His book
The End of Charity highlights his journey from Jesus to selling to carbon credits in Mexico. It's well worth a read and I would jettison any MBA text book that has the word(s)excellence or value-added or blue skies or whatever the latest business jargon is in fashion.
He had a
failing business that he turned around by getting to grips with the Carbon market, and, indeed, made a very good carbon margin. In
Victoria in Australia, he realised that he could gain carbon credits by giving away low energy light bulbs. The price of carbon was A$10 a tonne, each pack of four light bulbs saved one tonne of carbon per annum and cost A$5 to distribute. The carbon margin being A$5/tonne. His failing business was saved. He did the same in the UK. In September last year he
distributed over 4 million light bulbs via the Sun newspaper. They gained carbon credits for the energy companies and he took a cut. According to external audits 85% of the bulbs are used. This means a
huge reduction in emissions.
So what? Well, no charity could match that nor could any government; in fact no organisation of any kind has matched what he has done to reduce emissions. And, it gets better:
Frances hopes in the next few weeks to have approval from the UN for his
Clean Development Mechanism (CDM) project in Mexico.
CDM projects, put simply, are carbon offsets. An energy company in the UK may miss its
EU-ETS targets and can buy emissions reductions elsewhere - in this case Mexico. There are skeptics about offsets, but they are highly regulated and will reduce global emissions AND reduce poverty. Frances' company - Cool NRG -is giving away 30 million low energy light bulbs to low and middle income households across Mexico starting in the city of Puebla. It is estimated it will cut 8.1 million tonnes of CO2 over ten years. It will also save US$165 million in lower energy bills AND save the Mexican government US $585 million in electricity generation infrastructure costs and US $200 million in reduced household electricity subsidy payments each year. Cool NRG make an IRR of 15% if the price of carbon is around €15/tonne. A lot more money is made if projections of the price of carbon rising to €30-€50/tonne in the next 5-10 years are correct.
Some interesting facts emerge from this: the saving to the Mexican people is the equivalent of one weeks income and the money saved is five times the annual US aid budget to Mexico. This is money direct to the people without NGOs or governments saying what it can be spent on.
It's a work of genius from an entrepreneur who wants to make money. Can Oxfam do this - yes they can, but they don't. Can any NGO do this - yes they can, but they don't. What some people don't like is that it makes a carbon margin; what they fail to understand is that "doing good" doesn't work. It needs to be both.