Walmart Canada snags David Suzuki as keynote speaker

Walmart Canada has just announced that it is hosting a Green Business Summit which will bring together business leaders, government officials, NGOs and environmentalists on February 10, 2010 at the Pan Pacific Hotel in Vancouver.

What sticks out for me in the promotional video for the event:

is the following quote from recent Right Livelihood Award winner Dr. David Suzuki, who Walmart has secured as the summit’s keynote speaker:

“Because business can change the world faster than anyone.”

What I am unclear about is whether he means for the good, or for the bad, particularly in light of some of his past utterances regarding the business world:

With CEOs looking at quarterly results and politicians looking at three- or four-year terms of office, the incentives for long-range thinking are not always clear.”

…the dinosaurs of the fossil fuel and other industries will go to great lengths to protect their interests.”

There are many other similar statements like this that Suzuki has delivered over his long and storied career.

In August, there was a fascinating interview between Suzuki and the other person featured in the video, David Cheesewright, the CEO of Walmart Canada. I found it very interesting to listen to Cheesewright skillfully sidestep Suzuki’s questions about growth:

“Does Walmart realize there are limits to the biosphere and how much you can grow?

“Is a company like Walmart, one of the biggest companies in the world, do you see limits to growth?”

Unfortunately for the planet, growth for Walmart is not all like the Central American example provided by Cheesewright.

In fact, strategies such as this are one of the driving forces behind vacuous consumerism and driving what people want, according to Suzuki in the interview. And in response, Cheesewright finally admits:

“Our business is embedded in needs, but we’re there to serve customers.”

Now while Suzuki might be pleased about Walmart’s three broad sustainability goals (100% renewable energy, eliminating all waste to landfill, sustainable supply chains), prompting his involvement with this summit, I am curious as to how his concerns about growth and consumerism have been adequately addressed by the corporation enough to justify his participation.

2 Responses to “Walmart Canada snags David Suzuki as keynote speaker”

  1. I’d be curious what our mate Suzuki has to say about WalMart’s appropriation and destruction of Native Burial Grounds…

    Blog: Wal-Mart Builds on a Native American Burial Ground….again http://j.mp/ywhF5

  2. Alex says:

    Walmart makes me sick.

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Thu Mar 18, 2010

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FACT OF THE DAY

An article titled Vancouver Politics by Paul Tennant in The Vancouver Book (1976), describes the entry of TEAM onto the civic political scene in 1968. TEAM, wrote Tennant, “sought to be a moderate reform group appealing to persons of all political ideologies.”

On their left was COPE (the Committee of Progressive Electors), also formed in 1968, and on their right was the NPA (the Non-Partisan Association), which had been a power in city politics for nearly four decades, and which “held that the affairs of the city should be run by those with the necessary knowledge and experience, i.e., those with a professional-managerial background, in order to run the city in a business-like way.”

The reformers, on the other hand, “felt that civic decision-making should be open to the public, with leadership coming from a cross-section of the population, and rule going to the working class majority. This group was concerned about land use, they advocated city control, and preferred to structure politics around the neighborhood concept.”

Quote OF THE DAY

“It was very diverse, and we got together by word of mouth. There were professors, business people, labor, lawyers and from all across the city. It was a coalescing of people around the idea we should do something.” – former City Councillor Setty Pendakur on the formation Vancouver’s reform movement and its political manifestation – TEAM – came into being in the late 1960’s and early 1970’s.

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