Gunter Pauli, 2010

The Blue Economy innovations are inspired by nature and provide tools for achieving true economic sustainability. Economic solutions are integrated into hole systems models that are compatible with Nature’s solutions: how to resolve the complex problems. Successful future industries – according to the Blue Economy principles – should reexamine the basics of science and find innovative solutions that apply the law of physics first.

The Blue Economy permits to respond to the basic needs of all with what we have. As such, it stands for a new way of designing business: using the resources available in cascading systems, where the waste of one product becomes the input to create a new cash flow. In this way, jobs are created, social capital is built and income rises – while the environment that provides the basis for our lives is no longer strained and polluted. Thus, we can evolve from an economy where the good is expensive, and the bad is cheap, to a system where the good and innovative is affordable.

To achieve this vision, thousands of innovations were screened and hundreds identified which imitate natural ecosystems and their efficiency. 100 of those innovations were presented as a Report to the Club of Rome in 2009. About one third of those 100 innovations has already been implemented in companies around the globe, one third is in prototyping status and one third has been scientifically proven but requires further research to create market-ready products. This new economic structure is able to provide 100 million jobs within a decade, if we truly understand and apply the principles of the Blue Economy

 Download document
Go to webpage