Hillary Symposium 2009 A Resounding Success
Live from the Hillary Symposium Trading Floor
June 5th, 2009
“…icons of our time…Julia Roberts, George Clooney….Al Gore – Global Warming is the theme of the whole (Vanity Fair) magazine – this is something very different. But we face a triple crunch, financial, energy and climate and we need, all of us, to respond.” Jeremy Leggett, the UK’s most prominent renewable energy CEO and the Hillary Institute of International Leadership’s international Laureate — 2009.
The best stories are those that defy convention and resolve conflict. The second annual Hillary Symposium did the first and had little need of the latter. It set out to model a cross-sectoral trading floor, based on the moot of a ‘Carbon Positive’ Christchurch city-state.
Leggett’s initial provocation as the Hillary Laureate was a graphic, and very powerful exploration of the coming together of three primary challenges, one which held his audience riveted throughout and in the Q&A that followed live from London. “As we head toward Copenhagen, we know what we’re capable of collectively, if we manage to get to tipping-points where progress in society occurs at the pace of epidemics — that’s what we have to angle towards…”
High level influencers across sectors had from the very fine ‘Crumpet Club’ breakfast to lunch to be strongly provoked, reflect and respond. By the time the first two of a six hour intensive series of provocations and reflections were done, no-one on the local ‘trading floor’ was debating the issue, or seeing the challenge as too hard — energy in the Crumpet Club’s intensive space was palpable — deals were being done. Business commentator Rod Oram and entrepreneur Melissa Clark-Reynolds followed Leggett’s initial provocation, laying out the opportunities for NZ and Christchurch. Oram described the nation’s ‘must-do’ next leap forward as sustainability, Clark-Reynolds called on government to get fully onboard for the December global climate round in Copenhagen — a breakthrough US/China climate deal at its core. And Excelerator Institute Director Lester Levy reminded participants of one of Leggett’s key assertions, “It’s not enough to say we care (mildly) — we are all leaders — and need to step up”.
A cacophony unfolded as the trading floor process got underway — senior players from EECA to CECC to Canterbury University, Ngai Tahu, City and Regional Councils, Alliance, Buddle Findlay, Synlait, National Bank to generation Z & Y jockeyed for opportunity and profitability — just what might Christchurch city-state do to become Carbon Positive? Nick Marsh reminded delegates the Danes have done it driven by the oil crash of 1973 — not rocket science, just a national imperative!
Then a pause — taihoa, for breath. Bishop Victoria Matthews eloquently articulating the ethics of challenging our behaviours, putting the planet’s health first. Ngai Tahu’s Sacha McMeeking on the need/opportunity to value cross-cultural conversation and Project Litefoot’s Hamish Reid re-posing a recurrent core question — what about Mom and Pop? — as his sports-star cohorts the Evers-Swindell twins, Michael Campbell and Conrad Smith talked in plain language about making a garden, offsetting travel emissions and changing light-bulbs. By lunch, the ‘carbon positive’ initiative outcomes flowed and two major themes emerged.
National Bank led the charge on Energy mooting new reduced-interest loans to match Government’s budget initiative. Trading with EECA and MfE on the policy and metrics, drawing in City Council on energy best practice and insulation beyond the building code, and professional service firms Buddle Findlay, KPMG and Deloitte responding with goodwill for the necessary support. Chamber of Commerce and CDC offered ‘form and function’ to sustainable start-ups. Ngai Tahu reflected on how this might be applied to its Wigram development – 2,500 houses to be built ‘just down the road’ in the next decade. Federated Farmers and Hikurangi Foundation’s Tom Lambie tied in progressing water as a key Canterbury issue — farming dams that can be models hill country storage, an energy, win-win-win – gravity pressurizing water for all of Canterbury, eliminating deep-well pumping and making irrigation electricity-neutral. And Air NZ chimed in with the development of bio-textiles for uniforms.
Generation Y & Z delegates from Wayne Francis Trust and Ngai Tahu challenged all sectors to help their 15% of the population forward with the global message of 350 ( 350 ppm the safest concentration of CO2 for all eco-systems), with October 24 the global celebration of this campaign. Inspired by the extraordinarily successful Obama campaign youth-base , they were invited to social network with LA-based Zaproot TV, the unconventional news show covering the modern Green Revolution with millions of viewers world-wide.
And finally Canterbury University’s deputy Vice Chancellor Ian Town — “The future is in the hands of the people we’re training today”. Finalising its sustainability strategy, he indicated new investment will be in extra-summer student-ships (a 50% fees for sustainability courses challenge coming from The Press’s own David Williams). Celebrating collaboration between UC and Lincoln University, more dialogue with all sectors was invited and an outcome may well be a think tank, where cross-sectoral ideas are debated, thrown around, and given back to this Christchurch, city-state community. All symposium content was web-cast and is available to all on HillarySymposium.com.
Given the Institute’s mission of leveraging exceptional mid-career leadership on Climate Change solutions (2008-12), its international event later this year in Leggett’s home-town, London, will continue momentum and progress from both will be fed into the Copenhagen mix in December. June 5th, Christchurch, 2009 celebrated the fact carbon-positive, economic opportunity from climate change is absolutely doable.
Institute Trustee and Symposium facilitator Peter Townsend thanked all for their contributions individually and as financial partners in the event and Hillary Summit Chair David Caygill’s closing acknowledgments reflected on the governor’s demonstrably fine choice of Jeremy Leggett as the Institute’s first Hillary Laureate and upon the day’s other key message. Leadership is needed from all levels of society, a sentiment with which Sir Ed would heartily concur.
Mark Prain, Executive Director, The Hillary Institute for International Leadership
June 5, 2009
From the programme: Nick Marsh is the Managing Director of Next Corporation. Nick studied at Nottingham, and Leeds in the United Kingdom, and received his PhD in Cross Cultural Industrial Psychology from Bath University. He was a member of the founding team of the Management
From the programme: Hamish commenced his career in marketing with Pepsi Co in 1990 followed by NZ Dairy Group and then Groupe Danone. In 1999 Hamish was transferred to Danone head office in Paris and latterly, London. In 2005 Hamish moved from client to agency-side to assist with the establishment of Saatchi & Saatchi’s London based sponsorship consultancy. Hamish founded his own business, WaypointOne, in 2006. Hamish became interested in environmental sustainability that same year and has since experienced a great ‘awakening.‘ His view is that sport and the world’s sports heroes have a role to play in transforming culture. “Sport touches the hearts of billions of people every day; people listen to their heroes and act upon their lead. It is through sports leaders that we hope to inspire change for the better.” Hamish moved to New Zealand from London in July 2008 in order to launch Project Litefoot – an environmental awareness and action campaign jointly founded with Michael Campbell. Seven prominent sports people lead Project Litefoot. Together, Project Litefoot Ambassadors hope New Zealanders will rise to the challenge by following their example, and in doing so, inspire people in other countries to do the same.
From the programme:
The Rt Rev’d Victoria Matthews was Bishop of Edmonton for 10 years from 1997 to late 2007, and Suffragan (Assistant) Bishop of Toronto from 1994-97. She narrowly missed being elected Primate of Canada in 2007. Announcing the appointment (March ’09) the Primate of the Anglican Church in Aotearoa, NZ and Polynesia, Archbishop Brown Turei, said he looked forward to welcoming Bishop Matthews into the church of these islands. “I’m sure that, with all her experience, she will make a good contribution to our life and witness,” he said.
From the programme: Lester Levy is the Chief Executive of The New Zealand Leadership Institute at the University of Auckland and Professor of Leadership at the University of Auckland Business School. A graduate of Medicine and an MBA with his formative management background in multi-nationals 3M and Beecham Research Laboratories, he is best known for leading a number of organisational performance transformations, as Chief Executive, in both the private and public sectors. He has previously been seconded to the Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet as a strategic advisor and has been awarded the King‘s Fund International Fellowship from the King’s Fund in London. Lester is a Fellow of the New Zealand Institute of Management and is the author of the book “Leadership and the Whirlpool Effect”. Over the past 15 years he has been a frequently invited speaker and presenter on the subject of leadership, in New Zealand and overseas.
From the programme: Melissa Clark-Reynolds is a mom, an environmental advocate, and an entrepreneur with 20 years of experience. Melissa founded GMV Associates Ltd, which was sold to Southern Cross Healthcare and became part of Fusion Insurance Services (NZ’s largest private Workers’ Compensation Insurer). She was the turnaround CEO of PayGlobal Ltd and INTAZ Ltd (two NZ software companies in trouble), and is a member of the GAV Trust (NZ Games, Animation and Video Effects Industry). Creative HQ, which has just selected her as an Executive in Residence, considers her one of Wellington‘s leading business minds due to her string of entrepreneurial successes. Melissa started her current venture, a kids’ virtual world called minimonos, in 2007, out of a desire to create games that have a positive impact on children. Grass-roots support for minimonos (via its Twitter account and its Facebook group) is growing, showing that the concept taps into an unmet need for parents. The virtual world asks some key questions: “How can we convey important concepts about sustainability without being preachy? What would a virtual world for kids look like if good values were already in the DNA and we could just concentrate on making it fun?”.
From the programme: Rod Oram has more than 30 years’ experience as an international financial journalist. He has worked for various publications in Europe and North America, including the Financial Times of London. Rod and his family emigrated from the UK to New Zealand in 1997.
From the programme: Social entrepreneur Jeremy Leggett is founder and Executive Chairman of Solarcentury, a leading European solar energy company, and founder and Chairman of SolarAid, a charity set up with 5% of Solarcentury profits. SolarAid (2006-present) teaches young Africans to make, sell, and use solar lanterns. It has raised several million pounds from individuals and organizations, and its Patrons are Cate Blanchett and Ian McEwan.






