Do Sustainable Business Practices Appear Expensive? Look to Biomimicry

1) Do the additional costs of green products pass muster with consumers?
2) Should the government take us further into debt to fund green R&D and to create incentives?
3) Can we “internalize the externalities,” i.e., get people to pay the true costs of the what they’re doing?
I would suggest a different approach — one taken by people like the Biomimicry Institute, who point out that learning from nature actually decreases costs — even if you don’t look at the long-term. Teaming with Ethical Impact, we at 2GreenEnergy are putting together as series of webinars for corporate sustainability folks that will lay out the net business advantages of learning from nature — a system that has been solving design problems quite effectively and efficiently — and incorporates a vision of what the environment needs to be like 10,000 generations hence.
The series will lay out:
• What business leaders can learn from natural systems and processes — as well as how they can do that
• The process by which business leaders can extract themselves from old-line thinking, and begin to think like the planet
• A set of paradigm-breaking exercises that stimulate new visions for business products, services, and processes — each inspired by 3.7 billion years of evolution
How does that sound?

i found this via a twitter search and encourage you to invite people from a free software background: they are very open minded. you might introduce this course on the ubuntu wiki: wiki.ubuntu.com