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Category: urbanization

General Motors’ new concept car for dense urbanization

Friday, 07 January 2011 10:23 Written by Eric Garland 2 Comments

General Motors EN-VThough General Motors has had a rough few years, what with bankruptcy, you couldn’t be blamed if you thought that the company was just trying to get through the short term. It may surprise you, then, to hear that the company was actually one of the world’s most reliable sponsors of foresight, constantly scanning science, tech, demographic and ecological trends to inform new products and practices.

The press release for the Electric Networked Vehicle, pictured here at the CES show in Las Vegas, sounds like it was penned directly by a futurist:

Shanghai – By 2030, urban areas will be home to more than 60 percent of the world’s 8 billion people.  This will put tremendous pressure on a public infrastructure that is already struggling to meet the growing demand for transportation and basic services.

General Motors and its strategic partner, Shanghai Automotive Industry Corp. Group (SAIC), share a common vision for addressing the need for personal mobility through a radical change in personal urban transportation.  They are exploring several solutions for tomorrow’s drivers.  Among the most promising is a new vehicle form called EN-V.

I look at it and think it taps two megatrends – urbanization and aging populations. You can see it equally comfortable to zip around downtown Ho Chi Min City or the adult retirement/entertainment community.

And cripes – LOOK AT IT. This is futurist bait!

Storm Cunningham: Revitalize the world for a living

Saturday, 11 December 2010 15:54 Written by Eric Garland 1 Comment

For a decade, our friend and colleague Storm Cunningham has been ahead of the curve on all things green and sustainable – so far ahead, in fact, that his work in restoration and revitalization almost has nothing to do with those overused marketing tropes. Storm’s work declares that if you want a better, healthier, more prosperous world, you don’t sustain what already doesn’t work, you restore places and make them vital. You don’t need to achieve elaborate engineering and magical green algae juice jetfuel to make the world a better place – just start by improving things, right where you, in all ways ecological, economic and social. This can be fixing up houses, improving school systems, restoring aquifers to being healthy parts of the ecosystem – anything that is the opposite of the entropy that plagues our post-industrial world.

In this talk for TedxMidatlantic, Storm has four huge, important messages for the future:

  • Sustainable development is at least 200 years too late.
  • We, and future generations, can make the world healthier, wealthier and more livable, for a living.
  • The process of revitalizing our ecosystems and communities is finally becoming a rigorous discipline with the proper tools and education.
  • Restoring the world can also restore peace.

Yup, huge messages. When you’re done with this talk don’t forget to pick up copies of Storm’s two great, in depth books on this emerging discipline The Restoration Economy and reWealth.

Cities: the real driver of future economic prosperity

Monday, 24 August 2009 20:36 Written by Eric Garland 0 Comments

For the first time ever man is becoming a majority urban creature. It’s hard to overestimate this change. Since the Fertile Crescent in 10,000 B.C., cities were only a fraction of human population, even if they were the centers of technology and culture. Humans throughout history have been mostly villagers, mountain people, hunter/gatherers.

In 1800 only 3% of humans lived in cities. Most people never saw a city, and the vast majority didn’t trust city folk when they came to town. They earned nasty terms like “city slicker” and “vilain,” which is just old French for “city slicker.”

By 1900, in the midst of the Industrial Revolution, only 6% resided in urban areas. Plenty of economic opportunity was to be had in the fields and in the mines of the countryside. Manufacturing and intellectual work still represented a minority of the jobs available.

Now in 2009, more than half of humanity lives in cities. Upward of 88% of all economic activity happens in cities – and this is increasing. Job opportunities in the countryside are disappearing as the knowledge economy makes physical capital less valuable and makes innovation the main driver of competitiveness.

Not all cities are created equal. Amsterdam, San Francisco, Singapore, Hong Kong, and Paris are monuments to culture, economic vitality, and learning, blessed by sufficient infrastructure and social stability. The urban future also means Lagos, Nigeria, Mexico D.F., Cairo, Egypt, Manila, Philippines, Calcutta, India, and more – cities of five, ten and twenty million inhabitants with critical sanitation problems, insufficient water, crumbling roads, and few jobs for the refugees from even deeper rural poverty.

For this reason Competitive Futures took a closer look at the future of what is likely to be our most common environment, the urban area. Enjoy.

Competitive Futures STEEP Report: The Urban Future

View more documents from Eric Garland.

Interview for Korea’s KRX Magazine: Small, smart companies and more

Monday, 12 January 2009 12:38 Written by Eric Garland 3 Comments

With the release of Future, Inc. in Korean and Chinese, I’ve had the great opportunity to do interviews with Asian business magazines. I find that they ask more interesting, more insightful questions than many of their Western counterparts, so they are often fun interviews. The only problem is, once they are translated, I have NO IDEA what they said.

I just finished an interview with Korea’s KRX Magazine, which covers the Korean stock market and business in general, and I decided to post the whole text in English, so someone can appreciate it.

The questions:

Companies have hard time in business due to the global financial crisis. What new trends can we look for?

The most important trend is away from the philosophy of growth at all costs. For years, particularly in the United States, management has followed a typical playbook – get big, quickly, through borrowing money from private venture capital or public offerings. Then, you can go national or international, reaching bigger markets and gaining leverage over vendors and distributors. Once you have leverage over vendors and distributors, you cut costs by firing excess employees and force downward price pressure on the market. With the extra cash from operating expenses, you buy more national or international companies. For around forty years companies have repeated this formula.

The theme here was BIG BIG BIG. The problem with “big” is that it sometimes comes at the expense of “smart.”

Read more ...

Rebuilding America to Inspire People

Friday, 09 January 2009 15:10 Written by Eric Garland 0 Comments

I loved Jim Kunstler’s forecasts for 2009, as dire as they were. And then I was particularly struck by this talk from TED, which is a couple years old. He talks about restructuring and rebuilding America as a series of inspiring places.

Since institutions need remaking anyhow, we should turn our attention not toward stimulating the cadaverous and non-functional, but toward the creation of the inspiring.

About the blog

This is the official trend blog of Competitive Futures, a management consultancy that provides trend research and analysis for business and government around the world. Here, we update you on interesting trends we see as part of our work for our clients.


For managing partner Eric Garland's new author and speaker blog, please consult and bookmark http://www.ericgarland.co

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