Helping customers
develop the capacity for sustainable management could be the best way for primary-industry
companies — and countries — to differentiate themselves
Around the world, natural resources companies — producers of
agricultural staples, oil and gas, lumber and wood products, basic chemicals,
and many minerals — are facing unprecedented volatility in supply and demand.
The global population is poised to reach 9 billion by 2050, and much of the
growth will be in emerging markets. Millions of people in China, India, Latin
America, and Southeast Asia are entering the middle class for the first time,
increasing their demand for energy, housing, and transportation. At the same
time, because of economic turbulence, rapid technological change, and the
ever-present dynamics of gluts and shortages in most resource industries, there
is no guarantee that the price of raw materials will continue to rise. Adding
to this uncertainty are concerns about the impact this growing demand will have
on the environment.
These challenges suggest that we need a new way to think about natural
resources — a shift in mind-set from simply managing resources to practicing
resource leadership. Resource producers have always been constrained by their
view that the primary goods they sell are commodities with which they compete
on the basis of price alone; their customers determine how they should be used.
That approach, however, has led producers to the status quo: a largely reactive
position with a short time horizon, and little opportunity to differentiate
themselves from competitors.
Resource leadership, in contrast, entails thinking strategically about
natural resources from the moment they are pulled from the earth through to
their end use. This form of leadership is rare in all too many industries. It
involves the ability to see the complex interdependencies of the natural
resources system; to engage key stakeholders upstream, downstream, and across
sectors; and to promote innovation with economic and ecological benefits within
the resource system. Resource leadership thus represents a shift from
short-term thinking to stewarding resources for the long term.
Imagine a company that embraced this new model. As a resource producer
at the beginning of the value chain, it would contribute solutions and
expertise — culled from working directly with the materials at the earliest
stages — in collaborating with its customers to find cost savings, reduce
waste, and improve service. The expertise developed this way would also lessen
the impact on the environment, by helping all users, starting at the source,
operate more effectively, with less waste.
To succeed, resource leadership requires a partnership-oriented model,
in which the producers and consumers of raw materials have a mutual interest in
process and product innovation. The producer helps the consumer identify cost
savings and access technological innovations throughout the value chain, and as
a result can charge slightly higher prices without feeling vulnerable to
lower-priced competitors. A business model with a mutual commitment to the
stewardship of resources could work, but only when there is a high enough level
of trust between these two groups.
A growing number of companies, both producers and users of natural
resources, are recognizing the potential value of this approach. For example,
Air Canada, the national Canadian airline, has set out to dramatically improve
its performance amid competition from low-cost carriers and pressure from
rising fuel costs (its fuel bill in 2011 was more than US$3 billion). It needs
to look for ways to replace or improve legacy practices that hinder
profitability. The airline industry may also be faced with carbon taxes linked
to emissions limits set by the European Union Emissions Trading Scheme, a
multinational cap and trade system for all planes using E.U. airports. The
program went into effect January 1, 2012; first payments are due in 2013.
To this end, the company has established a department focused on
achieving fuel savings and carbon emissions reductions. Air Canada has
recognized that alternative fuels (such as biofuels) can help the airline meet
its energy requirements while reducing emissions. The airline’s leaders believe
that partnering with alternative fuel producers or suppliers to create economic
and environmental solutions could be financially advantageous and reduce the
company’s exposure to fuel price volatility. A scenario in which the airline
industry would be willing to pay a small premium and commit to a significant
steady demand for alternative fuels would promote the development of new
technologies; reduce the financial burden of carbon taxes; and, in the long
term, create a lower-cost, sustainable, reliable, and ecologically friendly
solution to the airlines’ energy requirements.
Business leaders have often tried to adopt this way of thinking, but
they have largely found they cannot do it alone. A resource leadership approach
can be implemented only through intensive attention not just throughout a
company, but throughout its network of producers, suppliers, regulators, and
customers. Such a consortium vastly increases the margin for creative
alternatives and innovation, and it distributes the costs of research and
development. This is where the importance of government policymakers comes into
play.
The leaders of resource-producing nations — such as Canada, the U.S.,
Australia, and Brazil — have tremendous opportunities to promote resource
leadership. These leaders can provide their national resource producers with
opportunities for shared research, distribution, and even marketing (imagine an
ad campaign, similar to “Intel Inside,” along the lines of “This product
contains Canadian resources developed with cradle-to-cradle care.”) They can
also generate tax and trade incentives for cross-sector collaboration in
industry clusters committed to improving stewardship of resources. Canada
already provides tax incentives for renewable energy enterprises. Resource
leadership initiatives could be included as part of these policies.
National projects like this can have global reach. Pioneering resource
leaders, having realized economic and ecological advantages in the initial
resource consortia within their own regions, can generate knowledge,
technologies, and practices with significant export value. The Netherlands, for
instance, has turned its experience with dikes and levees into a national
industry. About 2,000 Dutch engineering companies exist, often exporting their
expertise to customers in New Orleans, Dubai, and other waterfront areas.
It will take high-volume resource consumers in partnership with
resource providers — and supported by policymakers — to create this new
business model. Much of the intellectual, social, and commercial resource
leadership momentum has stalled in the past because of narrow political and
economic perspectives. But as the natural resource challenge reaches a critical
state, it is time to move past the old way of thinking.
Recent headlines only reinforce resource leadership’s game-changing
potential. A greater awareness of the big picture would enable policymakers and
resource-producing and -consuming companies to engage with other key
stakeholders: local communities and the grassroots politicians that represent
them. As we wrote this article in early 2012, President Barack Obama had
recently put on hold the TransCanada Corporation’s proposed Keystone XL
pipeline — which would carry primarily Canadian (and some U.S.) oil to
refineries in Oklahoma and Texas — because of environmental-impact concerns.
(In March 2012, Obama supported the expedited construction of the southern
portion of the pipeline, from Oklahoma to the Gulf of Mexico, reigniting the
debate.) Battles are also shaping up over several El Paso–based Trans-Mountain
Oil Company pipeline proposals aimed at sending Canadian oil to China. In these
cases, closer engagement among all relevant parties would have brought concerns
to the forefront earlier, and the groups could have worked together to come up
with possible solutions. Collaboration is as complex, time-consuming, and
costly as the science and engineering of pipeline technology. This is where
resource leadership can shine: It builds shared responsibility for jobs, oil
security, and environmental protection across all sectors.
By embracing this responsibility for the way resources are used,
natural resource producers can help the rest of the world learn to employ raw
materials wisely, and can safeguard their industries from competition. They can
also discover a new source of resilience: their own distinctive knowledge and
capability, which is one resource that is practically guaranteed to increase in
value.
Mary Stacey, Marilyn Taylor, and David Legge
strategy-business.comBusiness & Investment Opportunities
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