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CASESTUDY Sustaining a dream: Gerry & Petie Cooklin and South Cone The fine-furniture manufacturer based in Los Angeles, California and with production facilities in Peru and Argentina brings commitment to sustainability back to the Amazon and its people. by Mark Evertz To Gerry Cooklin, the business case for sustainable forestry and therefore a sustainable furniture industry is a nobrainer. Without trees there is no wood. Without wood there is no South Cone furniture. Without the furniture industry there would likely be no forests, particularly in his native Peru. “The more I researched this, the more I realized that making furniture using sustainable forest products is probably the best thing you can do for forests,” said Cooklin, the president and CEO of South Cone1, a Los Angeles-based fine furniture manufacturer with facilities in Peru and Argentina. “It’s good for the forests because it keeps them producing as forests rather than some other use; it’s good for manufacturers because they get the constant supply of wood and it conserves the biodiversity of forests.” According to Cooklin, this business case is largely met with apathy in the furniture industry, so he decided to be a vocal champion for sustainable forestry and forest products. In fact, that took the form of a missive last year to industry laggards – challenging old guard furniture manufacturers to change their old ways of doing business or risk ruining it for everybody. "I challenge the industry to stop destroying the environment 1 South Cone designs and manufactures fine home furnishings for the North American market, including suites and accents for the living room, dining room and bedroom. In addition to being the largest furniture maker in Peru, South Cone is the world leader in sustainable furniture manufacturing and has repeatedly raised the environmental benchmark. South Cone is headquartered in Gardena, CA. For more information, visit www.southcone.com. For more information please contact us at 503.224.2205 or at metafore.org 1 of 8 CASESTUDY and join me in developing cooperative, sustainable business practices that will meet the changing consumer demands for greater corporate responsibility," Cooklin wrote in an open letter to furniture manufacturers. Before dismissing Cooklin’s rant as a business ploy or some way to call attention to himself, consider this: If his peers do what he’s asking—use only wood from sustainably harvested forests around the world and consider using lesser-known wood species with similar performance characteristics instead of heavily exploited species like Mahogany—he stands to create a flurry of market activity and significantly more competition for the company he started nearly 20 years ago. “What made me take the time to stir the pot?” Cooklin pondered. “I call it the Power of Furniture. We are the ones creating the demand. We’re the ones that can ask our suppliers, ‘Hey buddy…Where is this wood coming from?’ “I’m trying to go for that slap in the face, saying ‘Yo! At least ask the question!’” exclaimed Cooklin. “If I can even get one tenth of one percent of the furniture makers out there to ask the question “Where is this wood coming from?” then I can begin to create a critical mass.” Adds Cooklin’s wife, Patricia “Petie” Cooklin: “Sure we’re creating jobs, and nice lives for people but the end goal is to preserve the environment and people, said Petie, also South Cone’s operations manager for North America. “We’re not competitive on that.” South Cone aims to stay in business to keep that mission alive by having an endless supply of wood to make its brand of high-end tables, chairs, bed frames and more from exotic hardwoods. South Cone is named after the cone shape of the southern part of South America where the company produces it products; namely Cooklin’s native Peru and Argentina. His company is driven from the top down and the ground up to become synonomous with sustainability in the furniture industry. With its 450 employees (320 in Peru, 80 in Argentina, 40 in Los Angeles, and 20 independent salespeople) South Cone is Peru’s largest furniture manufacturer and produces more than 75 percent of all furniture exported from there. The business that is helping For more information please contact us at 503.224.2205 or at metafore.org 2 of 8 CASESTUDY transform his homeland started 20 years ago after a bit of an epiphany. “I hired forest engineers from Peru and what I found out was shocking,” Cooklin recalled. “Eighty-five percent of the rainforest is burned down to clear the land and 12 percent of it is used for fire wood. That means that only 3 percent is logged and used because of its commercial value, and little if any of that commercial value is making its way to the indigenous people. “I thought ‘Oh my God…making furniture is actually a good use of forests rather than have it all go up in smoke.’” Cooklin was baffled by what he viewed as a waste of ecological value and forest resources that could serve his customers and countrymen. “If I can even get one tenth of one percent of the furniture makers out there to ask the question “Where is this wood coming from?” then I can begin to create a critical mass.” — Gerry Cooklin “There is a wonderful amount of biodiversity there and that’s why I’m so passionate about it; because to me there is no logic to our destroying forests or the Amazon. Only 1½ percent of the spec ies are known but there are hundreds of trees that are just as good—they just don’t have the brand name,” he says. “Mahoghany just benefits by being the Coca-Cola of the forest.” Cooklin says he found his niche here: For the forest and the power of industry to drive environmental and social progress. “Business can and should be a vehicle for positive change in the world by consciously seeking to engage in practices that are socially and environmentally sound.” With this newfound mission in the late 90s, Cooklin searched for a like-minded organization to partner with. “I didn’t find one that understood my desire to protect and employ the forests’ resources,” he recalls. For more information please contact us at 503.224.2205 or at metafore.org 3 of 8 CASESTUDY So he went on alone and formed his own nonprofit, PaTS, to complement his business mission. He targeted the Palcazu Valley of the Peruvian Rainforest, piggybacking on the work of The Nature Conservancy and its Peruvian partner Pronaturaleza (See sidebar on the next page). “I’m a firm believer in what the Hindus call Dharma or pursuing your purpose in life. Mine clearly is to restore the balance of nature. I’ve been given the tools to make a difference,” Cooklin said. And he’s seeing customers begin to be aware of their own impacts on the world. “Business can and should be a vehicle for positive change in the world by consciously seeking to engage in practices that are socially and environmentally sound” — Gerry Cooklin "Consumer awareness is quickly shifting, with the growing interest in organic food and the dramatic rise in energy costs," Cooklin wrote in the letter to the industry. "It will be only a short time before this translates to the furniture industry. Companies who are adopters now will reap the benefits when the tipping point comes. “The Amercan public is changing its attitude about purchasing. Consumers are becoming increasingly aware, and demanding to know that the products they buy reflect their own personal values of social and environmental responsibility," he added. That willingness to go out on a limb is garnering notice in environmental circles as well. Liza Murphy for one sees Cooklin as a valuable asset in the molding of public opinion on the issue of sustainable forestry. “South Cone has really taken a leadership position in the furniture industry. They are constantly working to identify new sources and community-based enterprises that make it all come together. They’ve really got the whole package,” said the Rainforest Alliance’s manager of forest product marketing. For more information please contact us at 503.224.2205 or at metafore.org 4 of 8 CASESTUDY “Because of their efforts and prosteletyzing, the furniture industry is sitting up and paying attention, particularly on issues related to PaTS on the back for a job wellsustainability. There is managed certainly now a Partnerships and Technology for Sustainability (PaTS) greater is a small, non-profit organization based in Peru that awareness and emphasizes applying a business approach to achieve momentum.” sustainability. Daphne Hewitt, also from Rainforest Alliance, added that the organization is working with South Cone in three distinct areas: workshops for furniture manufacturers and others in the sector to highlight sustainable forest product use in business; promoting certification through the SmartWood program, now with COCs (Chain of Custody certifications) in all of its facilities (Peru, Argentina and L.A.); and working on benchmarking, analyzing its supply chain South Cone, a high-end furniture manufacturer with a long-standing presence in the U.S. market, founded PaTS in 2001. This non-governmental organization is charged with the mission to promote forest sustainability and the well being of present and future generations by bridging global markets with responsible forest management. According to the South Cone Web site, PaTS differs from most environmental organizations in that it links the concept of sustainability with wealth creation, closing the gap between natural resource management and markets. It provides consumers who want to contribute to rainforest conservation an effective vehicle for this resource preservation. Since its inception, PaTS has been working with the Yanesha people of the Palcazu Valley in Peru’s central Amazon region through the Sustainability Makes Cents Project. Through this project, PaTS trains Yanesha artisans to transform resources from their managed forests into finished products that command a much higher value. The Yanesha are skilled in carving a range of wooden accessories, including tableware, stools, and candleholders, as well as in creating naturally dyed and hand-painted textiles and wall art. South Cone completes the value chain by marketing these products in the United States. The project provides the Yanesha with a means to generate a reasonable income from their labor and natural resources, creating an incentive for them to continue to use their forests wisely. “One of the most rewarding things is meeting with the Artisans and seeing the satisfaction on their faces,” says Amy Smith, PaTS project director. “It was great to see that after that first group of seven people in a workshop started earning a steady income, enrollment in the workshops is 100 percent.” PaTS’s project portfolio also includes the LesserKnown Species Project (LKS), which identifies tree species for commercial use.This raises the value of forests, makes forest management more economically viable, and gives rainforest communities commercial options that are superior to slash-and-burn agriculture. For more information please contact us at 503.224.2205 or at metafore.org 5 of 8 CASESTUDY and progress on company goals related to sustainability. “I can’t say that I’ve worked with anyone who is as enthused as Gerry, says Hewitt. “South Cone is doing this from the CEO level on down. It’s usually something started by someone in the middle.” For Gerry it’s about working with people who share his views and unquenchable desire to make a difference, which is why he said Rainforest Alliance was the right match. “Tensie Whelan (Rainforest Alliance’s executive director) is a mover and a shaker,” said Cooklin. “They are organized and we have great chemistry with them. We think alike and we’re helping them make inroads in the area of sustainable furniture so it’s a win-win.” Another win-win, according to Petie Cooklin, is their alliance with ABC furniture in New York and Zimmer Associates International, who she says are perfect conduits to consumers because of their like-minded approach to sustainability in the furniture industry. “These are exactly the kinds of true partnerships that we want, where we find stores or other companies that transmit our message – South Cone: Live Sustainably – which really needs to get through to the end consumer,” she said. “Because of their efforts and prosteletyzing, the furniture industry is sitting up and paying attention, particularly on issues related to sustainability. There is certainly now a greater awareness and momentum.” — Liza Murphy Rainforest Alliance Bob Zimmer, CEO of Zimmer Associates International, a global sustainable design consultancy, said he is using South Cone products in several high-end hotel projects that will specialize in green building, interiors and social commitments in the communities where they will build. For more information please contact us at 503.224.2205 or at metafore.org 6 of 8 CASESTUDY “For us, it goes deeper than (just the end-product),” said Zimmer. “It is actually helping create a secondary economy for indigenous people. You can create a lot of social ills as a developer. We want to create opportunity. “As a result we’re working with companies that think like we do,” Zimmer continued. “Wherever we can, we’ll specify South Cone products in our buildings based on an alignment of values. It’s so important for all of us championing sustainability to support each other and what we’re doing.” It is that marrying of business operations and environmental and social pursuits that drives the Cooklins and their company to this day. “As we were developing our values as a couple, as thirtysomethings with all of this idealism, Gerry and I came to realize that we can affect change as individuals,” said Petie, adding, “but we are also business people who understand that it has to be profitable to be sustainable. I’m a daughter of people in the oil business, but I’m not rejecting my past. I am part of an evolution that uses the tools of capitalism wisely.” Gerry says his message to business people – whether they make furniture or anything else – is simple: “Being sustainable as a business is clearly doable and it’s the right thing to do,” he said. “It is becoming more and more apparent that businesses have to go in a more sustainable direction or they’ll become dinosaurs. The older business practices just don’t work anymore...you either do this or eventually you’ll go out of business.” Then, he softened up a bit. “Like anything new, it is hard at the beginning; to learn a new way of doing business,” he said. “But it becomes easier as you move forward every single day, knowing that what you’re doing is sustainable.” Key Observations—Adherence to values, collaboration, exerting influence Other businesses can draw important lessons from South Cone Trading Company’s approach to innovation, leadership and environmental stewardship. For more information please contact us at 503.224.2205 or at metafore.org 7 of 8 CASESTUDY 1. Change is catalyzed by leadership and a strict adherence— if not outright stubbornness—to stay true to the organization’s values. Gerry and Petie Cooklin are creative and flexible problem solvers, but their company’s values – to ensure business, environmental and societal sustainability through their responsible business operations – remain the constant regardless of challenge or opportunity. 2. Businesses can find an alignment between environmental and financial outcomes by viewing environmental and social issues as potential market opportunities. South Cone has a history of looking for ways of developing furniture or working with indigenous groups through its PaTS program to achieve their goals of making furniture sustainable, profitable and conducive to human well-being. 3. Collaboration across sectors can be highly effective when there is an alignment of desired outcomes. Wherever possible South Cone works with vendors that share their commitment to sustainability and often uses them as communications vehicles to convey the company’s message of “South Cone Lives Sustainably.” Company representatives acknowledged that they could not have made progress toward this goal alone, but that they were willing to forego certain partnerships that didn’t align with their company values to stay true to the mission of the organization. Gerry quickly added, however: “This is the ideal scenario. The truth is that not all of our vendors are committed to sustainability. Unfortunately, at this stage of things, working exclusively with sustainable vendors would make us too uncompetitive in certain areas, and we cannot afford that, but we are committed to use as much wood as possible and other components that are sustainable.” For more information on South Cone Trading Company, visit www.southcone.com. For more information please contact us at 503.224.2205 or at metafore.org 8 of 8