2016 Year of Organization for Change on
Energy, Climate Change Agreement and the Sustainable
Development post-2015 Agenda
EDI Energy Business Management
7th September 2016- The Hague, Netherlands
Adriaan Kamp
Energy For One World
Adriaan Kamp
2009- - Energy For One World
A practice on Global Change, Energy and
Leadership.
Program Director Executive Energy
(transition) & Leadership Education
20 years Industry/Shell International :
Upstream ( 5 Countries and HQ).
Contents of Session
1. Year 2015: Global Change, Climate Change and
the Sustainable Development Agenda post -2015
2. Year 2016: Organising ourselves for Change
3. Opportunities, Skills and our (Personal)
Leadership
2016 Year of Organization for Change on
Energy, Climate Change Agreement and the
Sustainable Development post-2015 Agenda
Prof. Jeffrey Sachs- Earth Institute:
The Age of Sustainable Development
9/1/2016
Clickable Video Presentation
Clickable Presentation
NASA Latest -September 2016
BP Energy Outlook 2035
9/1/2016
BP Energy Statistics 2016
BRIC:
It’s our time. Let us grow our
Economies and take care of
our people
You’ll fix whatever you want to
fix!
The West:
“If you do as I have done
it will be
a mess.”
Let us all change- rapidly
Let’s secure our nation,
people and planet
Emerging:
Will there be enough for
us?
Can i afford it?
Who will deliver it to me?
The poor:
When will we see
electricity and get
mobility?
Opec and GasPec:
You need us!
We can deliver your needs!
What is all that fuzz about
Availability and climate change?
12
2014
2030-2050
7 Billion
People
9 Billion
People
90 trillion
USD
economy
180-210
trillion
USD
225 million
oil eq/day
500- 750
million
oil eq/day
400 ppm CO2 and Carbon Budget
consumed for 2 degrees/ 21st century
??? ppm CO2 and
Climate Change Effects
2/1/2012 Energy For One World- All Rights Reserved
01.09.2016
Geopolitical shifts and re-alignments
• Economic and finance system change
and fundamentals
• A new technological era: 4th Industrial
Revolution.
• Global production systems & the rise
of new (multinational) corporations
• Social Changes (network economies),
and the quest for wealth justice
• Planetary boundaries/ Resource
Scarcities
• Demographic change and migration/
Changing labour markets
Global Change
PwC 1400 CEO Global View
Pope Francis and his Encyclical – on
Poverty, Stewardship and the
Environment
Living Planet Reports
G7 and the next 100 years
UN FCCC COP21 Paris (3)
Paris Agreement
UN FCCC COP21 Paris (3)
COP 21 Conclusion
22 ratifications
G20 Hangzhou
71st UN GA and COP 22
Year 2016 Agenda
How can we organize ourselves to support and achieve these
Three (3) Objectives?
1. Support the UN Sustainable Development Goals
2. Implement the Paris Agreement
3. Provide Energy to our Societies
Contents of Session
1. Year 2015: Global Change, Climate Change and
the Sustainable Development Agenda post -2015
2. Year 2016: Organising ourselves for Change
3. Opportunities, Skills and our (Personal)
Leadership
UN
Regional Blocks
Countries
Cities
Communities
Companies and Institutes
Co-alitions of the Willing
Sustainable Community Building
The Rise of a new middle-class ( 3 Billion) – in MegaCities
and more people live in Greater Tokyo (35m) than in all of Canada
The top 10 cities by population:
1. Tokyo, (34 million)
2. Seoul (24.4 million)
3. Guangzhou (24.2 million)
4. Mexico City (23.4 million)
5. Delhi (23.2 million)
6. Mumbai (22.8 million)
7. New York (22.2 million)
8. Sao Paolo (20.9 million)
9. Manila (19.6 million)
10. Shanghai (19.4 million)
All above fit comfortably into the list
Of Top-50 nations by population
Old and New Clickable Presentations
Vs 250 Bn USD investment
Click to Go To Website
Germany: An example how it works- in real
Clickable Access to Report
New Possibility Thinking (1)
Mission Innovation
New Possibility Thinking (3)
Largest Solar Farm (First Solar)
2 4 8 16 32 64 128 256 512 1024
2 yr 4yr 6yr 8 yr 10 yr 12 yr 14 yr 16 yr 18yr 20 yr
5 yr 10 yr 15 yr 20 yr 25 yr 30 yr 35 yr 40 yr 45 yr 50 yr
3500 hectares
160,000 homes
1,5 Bn USD
550 MW
8 million panels
New Possibility Thinking (4)
Largest Offshore Wind Farm’s
4
2 4 8 16 32 64 128 256 512 1024
2 yr 4yr 6yr 8 yr 10 yr 12 yr 14 yr 16 yr 18yr 20 yr
5 yr 10 yr 15 yr 20 yr 25 yr 30 yr 35 yr 40 yr 45 yr 50 yr
An offshore area of 100km2
175 wind turbines
Two offshore substations
Nearly 450km of offshore cabling
One onshore substation
630MW of electricity
Enough power for nearly half a million homes
New Possibility Thinking (6)
Tesla and Solar City- A New Value Proposition
New Possibility Thinking (5):
New distributed utility
Largest Ore Wind Farm’s
New Possibility Thinking (7)
Car-manufacturer, Carlos Ghosn
Electric Vehicles sales are
in direct correlation with
the number and amount
of charging stations
installed in a city, region
or nation.
It's a public-private
partnership. It's a matter
of trust. It's a matter of
convenience. But it
surely the way to go into
our Future.
(Carlos doesnot believe in fuel-celled LPV's. He
is truly committed to the electrification of self-
driving and navigating new car concepts)
Uber Google
New Possibility Thinking(8)
Smart Cities
The vision of “Smart Cities” is the urban center of the future, made safe, secure environmentally
green, and efficient because all structures - whether for power, water, transportation, etc. are
designed, constructed, and maintained making use of advanced, integrated materials, sensors,
electronics, and networks which are interfaced with computerized systems comprised of databases,
tracking, and decision-making algorithms. - U.S. Dept. of Energy, “The Vision of a Smart City”,
2000
Examples of New, Smart or Sustainable Cities:
• C40 – Vancouver, Oslo, New York, etc.
• Masdar, Abu Dhabi,
• New Songho City, South Korea,
• Gujarat International Finance Tec-City, India
• King Abdullah + Economic CitIES, Saudi Arabia
• e.g. China Tianjin Development
•
•PM Modi’s 100 smart cities
•King Abdullah Economic City, Saudi Arabia
New Possibility Thinking (9)
Better Architecture- Zero, Zero-Plus and more
9/1/2016
New Possibility Thinking (10)
RE-100 Group
New Possibility Thinking (11)
Energy Project Finance
New Possibility Thinking (12)
Finance, Banks and Insurers
Plan China (1)
Plan China (2)
• Deepen energy revolution by establishing a
modern energy system that is clean, low-
carbon and efficient.
• Build a coordinated and integrated energy
network.
• Control carbon emissions, honor climate
commitments and deeply participate into
global climate governance.
Plan China (3)
-- Quicken Belt and Road construction and expand win-win
cooperation to form a new comprehensive opening-up
landscape
-- Strengthen cooperation with international financial
institutions, push forward the Asian Infrastructure
Investment Bank and the BRICS New Development
Bank
Plan China (4)
and properly operate the Silk Road Fund. -- Build China-Mongolia-
Russia, China-Central Asia-West Asia, China-Indochina Peninsula,
China-Pakistan and Bangladesh-China-India-Myanmar economic
corridors, as well as the new Eurasian Land Bridge.
Plan China (5)
• PEOPLE'S WELL-BEING -- Lift 50 million
people out of poverty and build a moderately
prosperous society in all aspects.
• -- Fully implement two-child policy, with the
total population reaching 1.42 billion.
.
Plan California (1)
Plan California (2)
Plan California (3)
Plan California (4)
Plan California (1)
The Dutch New Energy Delta Plan
World Power Sector
(electricity only- ~30% world energy)- IEA, June 2015
58
From WEF/ Accenture: The energy architecture is an integrated
physical system of energy sources, carriers and demand sectors
shaped by government, industry and civil society.
The energy architecture on location is a reflection of the socio-
political, economic, ecological and business philosophies,
leadership and interests exercised on location.
The energy architecture in a country, region or global community is (ideally) to
serve (the rise of, establishment of) thriving sustainable societies- making
energy available, affordable and sustainable to all: balancing economic
interests with that of society and nature. Here and there. Now and in the
future.
59
Energy Architecture
Re-inventing Strategies/Relationships:
“X-Factor of Integration, Transition
and Transformation”
Renewables
Energy
Efficiency
Product Re-
designs
Energy
Architectures
Re-designs
Fossil
1 2
3
4
5
Levels of Maturity of Change
Integration- Transition- Transformation
• Level 1
• Level 2
• Level 3
• Level 4
• Change and No Change. Resistance to Change. Policy,
Administrative and Derivative Change (CO2 tax, ETS,
Accounting). Coal vs. Gas. Continued backroom lobbying
• Full Integration of Renewables (clean-tech, energy
conservations, smartness, etc.) in the Energy Architecture
- but not with a system change. Retained regulations,
ownership , revenue, tax and capital control structures
• Transition to a New Energy Architecture and Newly
shared socio-economic and corporate business models-
also in international trade
• Transformation of Economies and Societies. Eco-modernity
and New human consciousness
“Every Energy Company and Every Energy
Architecture in this world can be improved
upon in order to raise the availability,
affordability and sustainability of energy to
all”.- Adriaan Kamp, 2015
64
We are here- so mind the moment we are in!
Roughly Equals
Present
Oil & Gas Company
Jobs
Clean-Tech/ Renewables
Oil & Gas
The Present Big Elephant in the Room:
Suffering in Oil-Resource Economies
The Context We see Ourselves in
A New Business Worthiness Pledge
The United Nations Sustainable Development Goals provide a
once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to end poverty, combat climate
change and fight injustice and inequality. By applying
innovation, resources and expertise, I will pursue the business
opportunities inherent in building greener, more equitable and
inclusive societies
I am a business leader who knows that business cannot
succeed in societies that fail. I will do my utmost to be
businessworthy in all my efforts, and true to my business to
support the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals. I
call on my peers to do the same.
Country Categories
• OECD- USA, Canada, Europe, Japan, Australia
• (Richer, Resource based) OPEC/ GasPec
• China Inc., India Inc.
• Developing (without Resources)
• Developing (with Resources)
• Least developed. Poor.
Pathways for Jobs
Energy & Non-Energy
Mainstream
• Governments (1)
• Energy Corporates and Incumbents (2)
• New Entrants/ Innovators/ Game-changers (3)
• Non-Energy Sectors/ Green Growth/ UN SDGs (4)
1+2+3+4 +5= Hybrid Eco-system
Bottoms-up
• Community, Start-up Community (5)
No Jobs Plans
DubaiUnderstanding our Ways
•
New Jobs in Non-Energy Economy
Prof. Kotter: Organize to Change
197 countries need to change
Building New Bridges on
Energy & Sustainability
Focus – Impact- Meaning- Results
Contents of Session
1. Year 2015: Global Change, Climate Change and
the Sustainable Development Agenda post -2015
2. Year 2016: Organising ourselves for Change
3. Opportunities, Skills and our (Personal)
Leadership
One World. Many Needs. Many Views
“In Leadership- we are all
students for life”
Energy For One World- 2012, All Rights Reserved
Leadership Levels
• Managing Yourself
• Managing Others
• Managing complex change &
• Managing multi-stakeholders
MANAGING YOURSELF
Energy For One World- 2012, All Rights Reserved
“Only good can come from good”
Energy For One World- 2012, All Rights Reserved
What happy people know
Energy For One World- 2012, All Rights Reserved
Conquering the self
Energy For One World- 2012, All Rights Reserved
MANAGING OTHERS
Energy For One World- 2012, All Rights Reserved
“Manage others as you would
like to be managed yourself”
(golden rule)
Energy For One World- 2012, All Rights Reserved
Organizing people
9/1/2016
Ram Charan- Execute
Energy For One World- 2012, All Rights Reserved
The art of Entrepreneurs &
The art of Execution
Entrepreneurs are
in essence
Opportunity
Seekers and
Realizers.
Executors (Managers)
are the people who
can organize things.
They are inspired to
lead people in
performance and
serve and align
stakeholders.
•
Good is the enemy of Great
From Good to Great
Energy For One World- 2012, All Rights Reserved
Here’s the essence of the gospel of Greenleaf.
First and foremost, truly great managers
want to serve the people they lead. They do
this by supporting them rather than dictating
to them, and by assigning top priority to
employee well-being. Deceptively simple and
deeply profound.
Energy For One World- 2012, All Rights Reserved
Servant Leadership : a simple but o-so-powerful idea
Turning you 180 degrees and making you available for
growth
MANAGING COMPLEX CHANGE/
MULTI-STAKEHOLDERS
Energy For One World- 2012, All Rights Reserved
Energy For One World- 2012, All Rights Reserved
“Resistance to change falls when the benefits are clear”
Kotter on Change and
Organizations for Change
Can We Change?
Ernest Gundling...Understanding Cultures
and Relationships. The way it works
Energy For One World- 2012, All Rights Reserved
Core
Values
Cultural Dimensions
Global People Skills
CONSCIOUS
UNCONSCIOUS
Eco-
Conscious
 Moderated Consumerism
 Limits to Growth
 Cradle-to-Cradle, Bio-Mimicry
 Zero emissions
Nature First
Networked
Society
 Away with traditional country and/or
corporate borders : City-Hubs.
 Horizontal, cross-border
collaborations
 Cultural awareness and tolerance
Power to the People
 Expansion of wealth, ownership and new growth
 Continued Consumerism and Hedonistic life-styles.
 Short-termism, Schumpeter, Ayn Rand, Resilience
 A world of larger inequalities and divisions:
 Rich and poor. Have’s and Have Not’s
Money First
Shared
Capitalis
m
 A world of Power , Principles and
Politics
 Polarisation between Beliefs and/or
Power Blocks
 The Geo-politics of Emotions
Power to the Strongest,
First
Darwin
Techno
Modernity
 The world of Prof. Michio Kaku and
 Kurz Weill Singularity
 Game-changers and Disruptive
Innovations
 A world of Smart Cities, New Surprises ,
The Rule of Science &
Technology
 Conscious Capitalism
 The rise of new (global and business)
leadership: Gandhi’s and Mandela’s
 Neuroscience , psychology and spirituality
 Gaia, Oneness and Global Mind-set.
Transformative
leadership
Conscious
Humanity

Presentation for Executive Energy Class (EDI/Nyenrode)- 7 September 2016

  • 1.
    2016 Year ofOrganization for Change on Energy, Climate Change Agreement and the Sustainable Development post-2015 Agenda EDI Energy Business Management 7th September 2016- The Hague, Netherlands Adriaan Kamp Energy For One World
  • 2.
    Adriaan Kamp 2009- -Energy For One World A practice on Global Change, Energy and Leadership. Program Director Executive Energy (transition) & Leadership Education 20 years Industry/Shell International : Upstream ( 5 Countries and HQ).
  • 3.
    Contents of Session 1.Year 2015: Global Change, Climate Change and the Sustainable Development Agenda post -2015 2. Year 2016: Organising ourselves for Change 3. Opportunities, Skills and our (Personal) Leadership
  • 4.
    2016 Year ofOrganization for Change on Energy, Climate Change Agreement and the Sustainable Development post-2015 Agenda
  • 5.
    Prof. Jeffrey Sachs-Earth Institute: The Age of Sustainable Development 9/1/2016 Clickable Video Presentation
  • 6.
  • 8.
  • 9.
    BP Energy Outlook2035 9/1/2016
  • 10.
  • 11.
    BRIC: It’s our time.Let us grow our Economies and take care of our people You’ll fix whatever you want to fix! The West: “If you do as I have done it will be a mess.” Let us all change- rapidly Let’s secure our nation, people and planet Emerging: Will there be enough for us? Can i afford it? Who will deliver it to me? The poor: When will we see electricity and get mobility? Opec and GasPec: You need us! We can deliver your needs! What is all that fuzz about Availability and climate change?
  • 12.
    12 2014 2030-2050 7 Billion People 9 Billion People 90trillion USD economy 180-210 trillion USD 225 million oil eq/day 500- 750 million oil eq/day 400 ppm CO2 and Carbon Budget consumed for 2 degrees/ 21st century ??? ppm CO2 and Climate Change Effects
  • 13.
    2/1/2012 Energy ForOne World- All Rights Reserved
  • 14.
    01.09.2016 Geopolitical shifts andre-alignments • Economic and finance system change and fundamentals • A new technological era: 4th Industrial Revolution. • Global production systems & the rise of new (multinational) corporations • Social Changes (network economies), and the quest for wealth justice • Planetary boundaries/ Resource Scarcities • Demographic change and migration/ Changing labour markets Global Change
  • 15.
    PwC 1400 CEOGlobal View
  • 16.
    Pope Francis andhis Encyclical – on Poverty, Stewardship and the Environment
  • 17.
  • 18.
    G7 and thenext 100 years
  • 19.
    UN FCCC COP21Paris (3) Paris Agreement
  • 20.
    UN FCCC COP21Paris (3) COP 21 Conclusion
  • 21.
  • 22.
  • 23.
    71st UN GAand COP 22
  • 24.
    Year 2016 Agenda Howcan we organize ourselves to support and achieve these Three (3) Objectives? 1. Support the UN Sustainable Development Goals 2. Implement the Paris Agreement 3. Provide Energy to our Societies
  • 25.
    Contents of Session 1.Year 2015: Global Change, Climate Change and the Sustainable Development Agenda post -2015 2. Year 2016: Organising ourselves for Change 3. Opportunities, Skills and our (Personal) Leadership
  • 26.
  • 27.
  • 28.
    The Rise ofa new middle-class ( 3 Billion) – in MegaCities and more people live in Greater Tokyo (35m) than in all of Canada The top 10 cities by population: 1. Tokyo, (34 million) 2. Seoul (24.4 million) 3. Guangzhou (24.2 million) 4. Mexico City (23.4 million) 5. Delhi (23.2 million) 6. Mumbai (22.8 million) 7. New York (22.2 million) 8. Sao Paolo (20.9 million) 9. Manila (19.6 million) 10. Shanghai (19.4 million) All above fit comfortably into the list Of Top-50 nations by population
  • 29.
    Old and NewClickable Presentations Vs 250 Bn USD investment
  • 30.
    Click to GoTo Website Germany: An example how it works- in real
  • 31.
  • 32.
    New Possibility Thinking(1) Mission Innovation
  • 33.
    New Possibility Thinking(3) Largest Solar Farm (First Solar) 2 4 8 16 32 64 128 256 512 1024 2 yr 4yr 6yr 8 yr 10 yr 12 yr 14 yr 16 yr 18yr 20 yr 5 yr 10 yr 15 yr 20 yr 25 yr 30 yr 35 yr 40 yr 45 yr 50 yr 3500 hectares 160,000 homes 1,5 Bn USD 550 MW 8 million panels
  • 34.
    New Possibility Thinking(4) Largest Offshore Wind Farm’s 4 2 4 8 16 32 64 128 256 512 1024 2 yr 4yr 6yr 8 yr 10 yr 12 yr 14 yr 16 yr 18yr 20 yr 5 yr 10 yr 15 yr 20 yr 25 yr 30 yr 35 yr 40 yr 45 yr 50 yr An offshore area of 100km2 175 wind turbines Two offshore substations Nearly 450km of offshore cabling One onshore substation 630MW of electricity Enough power for nearly half a million homes
  • 35.
    New Possibility Thinking(6) Tesla and Solar City- A New Value Proposition
  • 36.
    New Possibility Thinking(5): New distributed utility Largest Ore Wind Farm’s
  • 37.
    New Possibility Thinking(7) Car-manufacturer, Carlos Ghosn Electric Vehicles sales are in direct correlation with the number and amount of charging stations installed in a city, region or nation. It's a public-private partnership. It's a matter of trust. It's a matter of convenience. But it surely the way to go into our Future. (Carlos doesnot believe in fuel-celled LPV's. He is truly committed to the electrification of self- driving and navigating new car concepts)
  • 38.
  • 39.
    New Possibility Thinking(8) SmartCities The vision of “Smart Cities” is the urban center of the future, made safe, secure environmentally green, and efficient because all structures - whether for power, water, transportation, etc. are designed, constructed, and maintained making use of advanced, integrated materials, sensors, electronics, and networks which are interfaced with computerized systems comprised of databases, tracking, and decision-making algorithms. - U.S. Dept. of Energy, “The Vision of a Smart City”, 2000 Examples of New, Smart or Sustainable Cities: • C40 – Vancouver, Oslo, New York, etc. • Masdar, Abu Dhabi, • New Songho City, South Korea, • Gujarat International Finance Tec-City, India • King Abdullah + Economic CitIES, Saudi Arabia • e.g. China Tianjin Development • •PM Modi’s 100 smart cities •King Abdullah Economic City, Saudi Arabia
  • 40.
    New Possibility Thinking(9) Better Architecture- Zero, Zero-Plus and more 9/1/2016
  • 41.
    New Possibility Thinking(10) RE-100 Group
  • 42.
    New Possibility Thinking(11) Energy Project Finance
  • 43.
    New Possibility Thinking(12) Finance, Banks and Insurers
  • 44.
  • 45.
    Plan China (2) •Deepen energy revolution by establishing a modern energy system that is clean, low- carbon and efficient. • Build a coordinated and integrated energy network. • Control carbon emissions, honor climate commitments and deeply participate into global climate governance.
  • 46.
    Plan China (3) --Quicken Belt and Road construction and expand win-win cooperation to form a new comprehensive opening-up landscape -- Strengthen cooperation with international financial institutions, push forward the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank and the BRICS New Development Bank
  • 47.
    Plan China (4) andproperly operate the Silk Road Fund. -- Build China-Mongolia- Russia, China-Central Asia-West Asia, China-Indochina Peninsula, China-Pakistan and Bangladesh-China-India-Myanmar economic corridors, as well as the new Eurasian Land Bridge.
  • 48.
    Plan China (5) •PEOPLE'S WELL-BEING -- Lift 50 million people out of poverty and build a moderately prosperous society in all aspects. • -- Fully implement two-child policy, with the total population reaching 1.42 billion. .
  • 49.
  • 50.
  • 51.
  • 52.
  • 53.
  • 55.
    The Dutch NewEnergy Delta Plan
  • 57.
    World Power Sector (electricityonly- ~30% world energy)- IEA, June 2015
  • 58.
  • 59.
    From WEF/ Accenture:The energy architecture is an integrated physical system of energy sources, carriers and demand sectors shaped by government, industry and civil society. The energy architecture on location is a reflection of the socio- political, economic, ecological and business philosophies, leadership and interests exercised on location. The energy architecture in a country, region or global community is (ideally) to serve (the rise of, establishment of) thriving sustainable societies- making energy available, affordable and sustainable to all: balancing economic interests with that of society and nature. Here and there. Now and in the future. 59 Energy Architecture
  • 61.
    Re-inventing Strategies/Relationships: “X-Factor ofIntegration, Transition and Transformation” Renewables Energy Efficiency Product Re- designs Energy Architectures Re-designs Fossil 1 2 3 4 5
  • 62.
    Levels of Maturityof Change Integration- Transition- Transformation • Level 1 • Level 2 • Level 3 • Level 4 • Change and No Change. Resistance to Change. Policy, Administrative and Derivative Change (CO2 tax, ETS, Accounting). Coal vs. Gas. Continued backroom lobbying • Full Integration of Renewables (clean-tech, energy conservations, smartness, etc.) in the Energy Architecture - but not with a system change. Retained regulations, ownership , revenue, tax and capital control structures • Transition to a New Energy Architecture and Newly shared socio-economic and corporate business models- also in international trade • Transformation of Economies and Societies. Eco-modernity and New human consciousness
  • 64.
    “Every Energy Companyand Every Energy Architecture in this world can be improved upon in order to raise the availability, affordability and sustainability of energy to all”.- Adriaan Kamp, 2015 64
  • 65.
    We are here-so mind the moment we are in!
  • 70.
  • 72.
  • 74.
    The Present BigElephant in the Room: Suffering in Oil-Resource Economies
  • 75.
    The Context Wesee Ourselves in
  • 76.
    A New BusinessWorthiness Pledge The United Nations Sustainable Development Goals provide a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to end poverty, combat climate change and fight injustice and inequality. By applying innovation, resources and expertise, I will pursue the business opportunities inherent in building greener, more equitable and inclusive societies I am a business leader who knows that business cannot succeed in societies that fail. I will do my utmost to be businessworthy in all my efforts, and true to my business to support the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals. I call on my peers to do the same.
  • 77.
    Country Categories • OECD-USA, Canada, Europe, Japan, Australia • (Richer, Resource based) OPEC/ GasPec • China Inc., India Inc. • Developing (without Resources) • Developing (with Resources) • Least developed. Poor.
  • 79.
    Pathways for Jobs Energy& Non-Energy Mainstream • Governments (1) • Energy Corporates and Incumbents (2) • New Entrants/ Innovators/ Game-changers (3) • Non-Energy Sectors/ Green Growth/ UN SDGs (4) 1+2+3+4 +5= Hybrid Eco-system Bottoms-up • Community, Start-up Community (5)
  • 80.
  • 81.
    • New Jobs inNon-Energy Economy
  • 82.
  • 84.
  • 85.
    Building New Bridgeson Energy & Sustainability Focus – Impact- Meaning- Results
  • 86.
    Contents of Session 1.Year 2015: Global Change, Climate Change and the Sustainable Development Agenda post -2015 2. Year 2016: Organising ourselves for Change 3. Opportunities, Skills and our (Personal) Leadership
  • 87.
    One World. ManyNeeds. Many Views
  • 88.
    “In Leadership- weare all students for life” Energy For One World- 2012, All Rights Reserved
  • 89.
    Leadership Levels • ManagingYourself • Managing Others • Managing complex change & • Managing multi-stakeholders
  • 90.
    MANAGING YOURSELF Energy ForOne World- 2012, All Rights Reserved
  • 91.
    “Only good cancome from good” Energy For One World- 2012, All Rights Reserved
  • 92.
    What happy peopleknow Energy For One World- 2012, All Rights Reserved
  • 93.
    Conquering the self EnergyFor One World- 2012, All Rights Reserved
  • 94.
    MANAGING OTHERS Energy ForOne World- 2012, All Rights Reserved
  • 95.
    “Manage others asyou would like to be managed yourself” (golden rule) Energy For One World- 2012, All Rights Reserved
  • 96.
  • 97.
    Ram Charan- Execute EnergyFor One World- 2012, All Rights Reserved
  • 100.
    The art ofEntrepreneurs & The art of Execution Entrepreneurs are in essence Opportunity Seekers and Realizers. Executors (Managers) are the people who can organize things. They are inspired to lead people in performance and serve and align stakeholders. •
  • 101.
    Good is theenemy of Great
  • 102.
    From Good toGreat Energy For One World- 2012, All Rights Reserved
  • 103.
    Here’s the essenceof the gospel of Greenleaf. First and foremost, truly great managers want to serve the people they lead. They do this by supporting them rather than dictating to them, and by assigning top priority to employee well-being. Deceptively simple and deeply profound. Energy For One World- 2012, All Rights Reserved Servant Leadership : a simple but o-so-powerful idea Turning you 180 degrees and making you available for growth
  • 104.
    MANAGING COMPLEX CHANGE/ MULTI-STAKEHOLDERS EnergyFor One World- 2012, All Rights Reserved
  • 105.
    Energy For OneWorld- 2012, All Rights Reserved “Resistance to change falls when the benefits are clear”
  • 106.
    Kotter on Changeand Organizations for Change
  • 107.
  • 108.
    Ernest Gundling...Understanding Cultures andRelationships. The way it works Energy For One World- 2012, All Rights Reserved
  • 109.
  • 112.
    Eco- Conscious  Moderated Consumerism Limits to Growth  Cradle-to-Cradle, Bio-Mimicry  Zero emissions Nature First
  • 113.
    Networked Society  Away withtraditional country and/or corporate borders : City-Hubs.  Horizontal, cross-border collaborations  Cultural awareness and tolerance Power to the People
  • 114.
     Expansion ofwealth, ownership and new growth  Continued Consumerism and Hedonistic life-styles.  Short-termism, Schumpeter, Ayn Rand, Resilience  A world of larger inequalities and divisions:  Rich and poor. Have’s and Have Not’s Money First Shared Capitalis m
  • 115.
     A worldof Power , Principles and Politics  Polarisation between Beliefs and/or Power Blocks  The Geo-politics of Emotions Power to the Strongest, First Darwin
  • 116.
    Techno Modernity  The worldof Prof. Michio Kaku and  Kurz Weill Singularity  Game-changers and Disruptive Innovations  A world of Smart Cities, New Surprises , The Rule of Science & Technology
  • 117.
     Conscious Capitalism The rise of new (global and business) leadership: Gandhi’s and Mandela’s  Neuroscience , psychology and spirituality  Gaia, Oneness and Global Mind-set. Transformative leadership Conscious Humanity