Ecotrust's underlying principle is that sustainability is best achieved
through the development of localised economies. To that end, it funds local and
sustainable projects that fall roughly under the headings of food and farms,
Native American, fisheries, and forestry.
On Wednesday, I sent Howard Silverman, a writer and analyst for Ecotrust, an
email. "How are you guys doing amid this Wall Street mess? Are you singed,
immune, engulfed? Please do tell."
Silverman promptly responded with a reply from Beebe. Speaking in particular
about Salmon Nation's headquarters, Beebe says, "The Natural Capital Center is
full and has been from day one. We're getting market rents, almost four million
visitors, and host to over 2,000 conferences. We turn down a potential tenant
every one to two weeks for lack of space." Sitting in the heart of Portland's
Pearl District, the Natural Capital Center is a nexus for the green community.
It hosts a farmer's market, retail shops including Patagonia, meeting spaces and
restaurants.
As mentioned, Ecotrust has focused on building a "conservation economy"
based on the principles of economy, ecology and (social) equality - what Beebe
describes as the three Es. In addition to his efforts in the Pacific Northwest,
"Ecotrust Australia was launched last week based on careful analysis of Ecotrust
and Ecotrust Canada as models for addressing native, community, environmental
and economic needs in Australia." Sighting Thomas Friedman's new book Hot,
Flat and Crowded, Beebe describes the Ecotrust economic communities as "
bioregional arks supporting hundreds of Noahs (local leaders) and trying to
inspire innovation around a new system-wide approach to conservation and
development".
In 2004, Beebe repurposed the phrase Salmon Nation from a book Ecotrust
published in 1999. It became a goal-defining phrase linking Ecotrust to the
conservation economy theme. The genius in this concept is that the founders
created a brand around a goal in which everyone in the Northwest can take
ownership. Even those who aren't investors or account holders can take pride in
the vision. Try that with Citibank, Merrill Lynch or Oppenheimer Funds, or any
other Wall Street firm.
ShoreBank Pacific: Support Sustainable Local Business
ShoreBank Pacific is the implementation arm of Salmon Nation, a retail bank
that services local depositors and makes loans to local businesses. Last spring,
I met ShoreBank's dry-witted CEO, Dave Williams. "My children remember the time
when I used to say recycling was a conspiracy to move garbage out of the
landfills and into our garage," he says. And now imagine Williams, this fiscal
conservative, running a green bank in the People's Republic of Portland.
"I understood the business reasons" for going green, Williams continues. "
It's the right thing to do. Secondly, you can't have a business where you're
going to go out, cut down all the trees, then shut down the mill since you've
harvested all the trees and now have to wait 40 years to begin again. It doesn't
work to harvest all the fish then shut down the canneries. So if you're looking
for sustainability, and you're looking for sustainable communities, you've gotta
have sustainable business, which means you've gotta do things in an
environmentally sensitive way."
In 1997, Ecotrust and ShoreBank Corp. formed ShoreBank Pacific, opening its
doors in a double-wide trailer as "the first commercial bank in the United
States with a commitment to environmentally sustainable community development."
It's a perfect example of what Ecotrust likes to do - start and/or support
unique businesses with a sustainable framework and spread the Salmon Nation
mission.
So how is the bank doing? I asked this as I read that Washington Mutual has
just been taken over by federal overseers.
"We, like many community banks, have avoided the mortgage mess, thinking that
there are a lot of folks in the mortgage business and we don't need to go there,
" Williams says. "Further, since we are privately-held and therefore immune from
the quarterly forces of tomorrow's earnings, we avoided the developer loans that
so many community banks went after to bolster earnings. And we have always felt
that buying the securities of the agencies is a mistake that would cause us to
incur their risk when it isn't something that we want to incur ourselves.
(Nevertheless, we) are very concerned about the tariff that we will need to pay
to the FDIC to rebuild the reserve fund for the folks who did play these games.
"As a result, we are very strong from a capital and liquidity perspective and
are being approached by banks that are in a little worse shape to acquire them.
"
Beebe sums up the bank's performance: "ShoreBank Corporation has taken in
almost $30 million in new capital investors recently versus bailouts on Wall
Street. Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley converted to bank holding companies
last weekend. That is what ShoreBank invested in almost 40 years ago - using a
bank holding company to coordinate the activities of multiple for-profit and
nonprofit subsidiaries, with various diverse sources of capital and revenue, all
towards the three E mission. ShoreBank is a "permanent development institution"
, self-funded, growing and profitable: now at $2.5 billion."
So having avoided the problems of the Eastern banking institutions, Williams
offers his take on one problem in the Wall Street model. "We think it is a
mistake to combine investment banks with commercial banks (made possible by the
repeal of the Glass-Steagall Act during the Clinton administration) because the
combination allows the combined banks to reduce borrowing costs well below where
they should be because the investment income covers the commercial costs," he
says. "This gives the combined banks a significant advantage over the solely
commercial banks.
"I'd just point out that if these institutions held a standard of doing what
is best for the community rather than their own pocket book, none of this would
have transpired. These were not sustainable practices, as we then knew and
events have subsequently confirmed."
Portfolio 21: Toward Smarter Dinosaurs and Sustainable Local
Economies
Portfolio 21 Investments is an investment firm founded by Carsten Henningsen
on the principle of socially and environmentally responsible investing. The
company's website describes its Portfolio 21 fund as "a global equity mutual
fund investing in companies designing ecologically superior products, using
renewable energy, and developing efficient production methods." Its goal is to
prosper in the twenty-first century by recognising environmental sustainability
as a fundamental human challenge and a tremendous business opportunity.
Portfolio 21 Investments divides its holdings into three categories, what
Henningsen describes as dinosaurs, smarter dinosaurs, and those companies that
are building themselves on a local-economy model.
Vestas Wind Systems in Denmark is an example of a smarter dinosaur, says
Henningsen. "They're going to have more demand for their product as the resource
funnel narrows, things get more unstable, and oil prices go up.
"We used to say, "How much do you want in bonds, how much do you want in
stocks, how much do you want in real estate, how much do you want in gold and
precious metals?" Now it's "what do you want in dinosaurs, how much do you want
in smarter dinosaurs, and how much do you want in sustainable local economies?"
The folks who optimise are going to do the best."
For the long term, higher returns will come from the local-economy models,
according to Henningsen. "The pendulum is swinging from Wall Street to Main
Street. Main Street will have a competitive advantage because of local
distribution, local marketing, local manufacturing, less transportation costs.
So, again, the question I put to Henningsen this week was, "How are you
doing?"
"Even green companies are not immune to the volatility of the world stock
markets. As of this writing, so far this year through September 22, 2008,
Portfolio 21 is on par with (or as negative as) the MSCI World Equity Index (the
fund's global benchmark) and the S&P 500 Index. Fortunately, Portfolio 21's
exposure to the financial services sector is only seven per cent compared to the
MSCI with 20 per cent in financial stocks. The other good news is that Portfolio
21's cash position is 16 per cent, which provides the fund with the opportunity
to purchase new stocks at lower prices."
Over the longer term, Henningsen elaborates: "At the end of September 2008,
the fund celebrates its ninth birthday. From inception on September 30, 1999 to
date, the fund has outperformed both the MSCI and S&P 500 indices. Perhaps
there is a green competitive advantage; however, it is not clear yet. As the
ecological crisis worsens and biocapacity constraints become more obvious, we
believe companies that are more resource efficient will continue their
competitive advantage."
Well, today I'm attending the West Coast Green expo here in San Jose where
keynote speaker Hunter Lovins has just downloaded a list of statistics
supporting the positive performance of "smarter dinosaur" companies. "Venture
firms poured a full $2.6 billion into 158 clean tech companies globally during
the third quarter of 2008," TreeHugger reported. "That's a 37 per cent increase
from last year, and 17 per cent increase over last quarter."
Henningsen sums up: "The other good news is that Portfolio 21 started 2008
with $270 million in assets and today, even with market declines of 17 per cent,
assets are at $260 million. This is because new investor money keeps coming into
the fund everyday showing increased demand for Portfolio 21's approach to green
investing."
Clearly, Green Street is in Better Shape
So, while Wall Street has suffered a meltdown that threatens credit flow
around the world, Green Street has been hit, but not badly hurt. It's in far
better shape to survive today's financial problems.
Green lenders, like Shorebank Pacific, are generally focused on local and
sustainable businesses, not home mortgages. While some business clients have
been hurting, green bank liquidity is generally better than those on Wall
Street.
The green investment funds, like Portfolio 21, are generally down this year,
but performing at or just above the world and US fund averages. Their one,
three, five and nine year averages are still outperforming the norm.
Green investments target companies that saw a resource shortage coming and
have made critical supply and distribution changes to deal with it. This makes
them less vulnerable to resource price shocks, like the recent spike in oil and
everything shipped using petroleum fuel. The smarter dinosaurs are evolving and
dealing, while the not-so-smart dinosaurs are struggling to survive.
An emphasis on local economies in the Salmon Nation model has also limited
exposure, as Portland and the Northwest are feeling less pain than, say,
Michigan or Ohio. Nevertheless, their investment portfolios also contain an
international component that acts as a cushion.
Lastly, the Salmon Nation model places emphasis on its citizen's common good,
rather than on just balance sheet performance. That means they run lean by
definition. These guys cannot be compared to the excessively compensated
executives of Wall Street who chase stock prices. We don't see the greed compon
ent that might otherwise push them to make irresponsible decisions.
Richard Seireeni is president of
The Brand Architect Group, Los
Angeles, a strategic brand consultancy with affiliated offices in Tokyo and
Shanghai.
He is the author of a forthcoming book on the marketing experiences of
more than two-dozen US green companies to be published by Chelsea Green
Publishing in February 2009. The book is titled
"The Gort Cloud" and describes the
invisible network that is powering today's most successful green brands.
This article first appeared at
Greenbiz.com
Comments
Have your say on this article