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Tim Draimin

Social Innovation Europe Initiative Launched in Brussels :: wbc-inco.net - 0 views

  • On March 16 and 17, 2011, Social Innovation Europe was launched in Brussels. Funded by the European Commission, Social Innovation Europe will create a dynamic, entrepreneurial and innovative new Europe. The time has come for Europe to embrace the broad concept of innovation and set an example globally. By 2014, Social Innovation Europe will have become the meeting place - virtual and real - for social innovators, entrepreneurs, non-profit organisations, policy makers and anyone else who is inspired by social innovation in Europe. Through a series of gatherings, and a new online resource, Social Innovation Europe will: connect projects and people who can share experiences and learn from each other; develop an easily accessible resource bank - so you can find about other projects, organisations and ways of working; develop a resource bank of up to date policies at local and national levels and provide information on funding opportunities; facilitate new relationships between civil society, governments, public sector institutions and relevant private sector bodies develop concrete recommendations in financing and in upscaling/mainstreaming of social innovation in Europe Download the conference report.
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    Social Innovation goes mainstream in Europe as European Union launches SI Europe March 2011 conference with presentations by Geoff Mulgan, Vickie Cammack of Tyze, many others including José Manuel Durão Barroso, President of the European Commission. His speech included: SPEECH/11/190 José Manuel Durão Barroso President of the European Commission Europe leading social innovation Social Innovation Europe initiative Brussels, 17 March 2011 Ladies and Gentlemen, It is a pleasure to be here and see all of you around this very important issue - how to pursue our dialogue on social innovation. I would like to thank Geoff Mulgan and Diogo Vasconcelos for their kind invitation and also to congratulate them together with Louise Pulford for having won the call to set up the pilot initiative "Social innovation Europe". I also would like to thank DG enterprise for having organised this launch event today. As you know the Commission is fully involved. Lázsló Andor was with you yesterday. Máire Geoghegan-Quinn will be with you today, so this idea of innovation is indeed a major issue for the Commission I am proud to lead. Europe has a long and strong tradition of social innovation: from the workplace to hospices, and from the cooperative movement to microfinance. We have always been a continent of creative social entrepreneurs who have designed systems to enhance education, health, social inclusion and the well-being of citizens. By nature social innovation is an ever-evolving field to keep pace with fast-changing challenges in society. But what concretely do we mean by social innovation? I think it is important to recognise that this concept is not yet fully accepted in the political debate. I think social innovation is about meeting the unmet social needs and improving social outcomes. It is about tapping into the creativity of charities, associations and social entrepreneurs to find new ways of meeting pressing social needs, which are not adequately met
Tim Draimin

Impact Capital is the New Venture Capital | Entrepreneur the Arts - 1 views

  • Impact Capital is the New Venture Capital
  • By Sir Ronald Cohen
  • Broadly speaking, capitalism does not deal with its social consequences. Even as communities grow richer on average, so the gap between the “haves” and the “have-nots” increases. For example, since the mid-1970s, both the USA and UK have actually become less equal rather than more equal. In the long post-war boom many governments did make significant headway in ameliorating the consequences of social inequality. This can be seen in levels of investment in areas such as health and in critical performance measures such as life expectancy. Nevertheless, governments, despite their best efforts and even in the best of times, have not been able to resolve all social problems.
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  • Commentators on one side of the political spectrum attribute this failure to the lack of resources available to the state and to the state’s reluctance or inability to act appropriately. Commentators on the other side attribute government’s shortcomings to the inherent inefficiency of the state itself. The truth is that the political process, which focuses on short-term gains, does not favor long-term, preventative investment of the type required to address major social problems.
  • The social sector, which is also called the voluntary, non-profit or third sector, has done its best, with the support of philanthropic donations and government, to address the social problems that fall through the gaps in government provision.
  • Some argue that the social sector’s problem is that it is significantly under-resourced. Others argue that the insufficiency of resources is in part a consequence of the sector’s reliance upon philanthropy — from foundations and from individual donors — that can be unpredictable. Both critiques may be correct: the social sector has a problem in accessing capital, often because of a lack of a reliable revenue stream, and, as a consequence, it is inefficient, especially in respect of building sustainable organizations, securing funding and utilizing assets to support large-scale activity.
  • Recent moves to make the social sector more efficient, by focusing on improvements to the management of both the donors and the recipients of grants, are an important development. The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation applies rigorous criteria to the assessment of the performance of organizations in receipt of its grant funding. Michael Dell’s philanthropic work is similarly rigorous. Their goal, according to Harvard professors Robert Kaplan and Allen Grossman, is, essentially, “to find and fund the Microsofts and Dells of the non-profit sector.”
  • In fact, such moves are more necessary than ever, as deficit-ridden governments seek to pass greater responsibility onto the shoulders of the social sector. An example of this is the UK Coalition Government’s strategic objective to foster the “Big Society.” In essence, the Big Society agenda seeks to pass a significant portion of responsibility for social cohesion back to the community via the voluntary sector, and, at the same time, to confer greater legitimacy upon such community work and to provide incentives and support for it. However, the social sector as currently constituted is unlikely to be able to address the scale of the social need; or, to put it another way, to meet the scale of the social challenge.
  • This is where social entrepreneurs come in. We know that entrepreneurs create jobs and foster innovation. In that sense, they already make a substantial social contribution. But entrepreneurs have special qualities that could make a significant beneficial impact were they to be applied to social issues. The entrepreneurial mindset embraces leadership, vision, the ability to attract talented people, drive, focus, perseverance, self-confidence, optimism, competitiveness and ambition. To these one might add an appetite for taking informed risks, an unwavering focus on results, a willingness to take responsibility, a grounded sense of realism, astute judgment of opportunities and people, and a fascination with the field of enterprise in question. The engagement of entrepreneurs in the social sector, bringing in their wake high expectations of performance, accountability and innovation, could lead to significantly increased social impact.
  • Could the social sector be transformed to allow the emergence of entrepreneurs from within its own ranks and attract social entrepreneurs and capital on a large scale? The answer is yes, provided that we can create an effective system to support social entrepreneurship, by linking the social sector to the capital markets and introducing new financial instruments that enable entrepreneurs to make beneficial social impact while also making adequate financial returns for investors. Given these conditions, it is possible that social entrepreneurs and impact investors will significantly fill the gap between social need and current government and social-sector provision. Indeed, were social enterprise to achieve significant scale, it would transform the social sector and lead to a new contract between government, the capital markets and citizens.
  • In this process, charitable, institutional and private investors, attracted by the combination of social as well as financial returns, would bring into being a new asset class: impact investment. In a recent report, JP Morgan came to the conclusion that impact investments already constitute an emerging asset class: “In a world where government resources and charitable donations are insufficient to address the world’s social problems, impact investing offers a new alternative for channeling large-scale private capital for social benefit. With increasing numbers of investors rejecting the notion that they face a binary choice between investing for maximum risk-adjusted returns or donating for social purpose, the impact investment market is now at a significant turning point as it enters the mainstream… We argue that impact investments are emerging as an alternative asset class.”
  • This new asset class requires a specific set of investment and risk-management skills; it demands organizational structures to accommodate these skills; it must be serviced by industry organizations and associations; and it must encourage the development of standardized metrics, benchmarks and even ratings. As has been observed by the impact-investment firm Bridges Ventures in the UK, such an asset class should provide welcome diversification for capital markets: at times of economic stress, price-sensitive business models appropriate to lower income neighborhoods can prove more resilient and also find wider applications in the mainstream market as both margins and consumer spending power are squeezed.
  • Not surprisingly, politicians as well as academics, entrepreneurs and investors are paying increasingly close attention to these developments. In the US and in the UK, and now also in Canada and Australia, steps are being taken to provide social entrepreneurs with access to the same kinds of resources as business entrepreneurs. The USA’s Social Innovation Fund ($173 million) and the Investing in Innovation Fund ($644 million) are notable examples; as is the proposed creation of the UK’s Big Society Bank. In Canada, the Federal Government recently received the report of the Canadian Task Force on Social Finance, whose recommendations include requiring public and private foundations to devote a proportion of their funds to mission-related investments; clarifying fiduciary obligations so that pension funds and others can invest in social programs; introducing new financial instruments for social enterprise; and marshalling government support for social enterprise, directly through seed investment and business support services and indirectly through fiscal engineering.
  • How likely is it that such steps will succeed? In answering this question, we would do well to consider that the global economy faced a similar moment of challenge and opportunity in the 1970s and 1980s, when many of the most familiar names in the post-war corporate world started to decline and shed jobs, among them General Motors, American Motors, Courtaulds, ICI, Smith Corona, Olivetti, US Steel, Bethlehem Steel, Kodak and International Harvester. The question then was: what would take their place?
  • What took their place was a new wave of business enterprise helped by venture investing, mostly focused on high-tech industries. This is the wave that brought us Intel, Cisco, Oracle, Microsoft, Apple, Sun Microsystems and Genentech. The hi-tech wave has since swept the world, taking us into the embrace of Google, Wikipedia and Facebook and ushering in a communications and information revolution based on global access to information from multiple sources. It has thereby profoundly changed global culture.
  • Just as hi-tech business enterprise and venture capital, working in tandem, have attracted increasing numbers of talented risk-takers since the 1970s, so social enterprise and impact investment are now attracting a new generation of talented and committed innovators seeking to combine new approaches to achieving social returns. Social enterprise and impact investing, in short, look like the wave of the future.
  • About Sir Ronald Cohen Sir Ronald Cohen is chairman of Bridges Ventures and The Portland Trust. He chaired the UK’s Social Investment Task Force and the Commission on Unclaimed Assets and he is a founder-director of Social Finance. Until 2005, he was executive chairman of Apax Partners Worldwide LLP, which he co-founded in 1972.
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    Sir Ronald Cohen's overview of the emergence of the impact investing space, including references to Canada the Canadian Task Force on Social Finance.
Tim Draimin

Banking on the 'big society' | Social enterprise network | Guardian Professional - 0 views

  • With the plans for the development of a "big society bank" endorsed on Monday, government has never put social enterprises so squarely at the heart of its policy-making. This year alone, the big society bank will receive an unprecedented £260m to invest in intermediary organisations, compared to the £360m that was injected into the social investment market by the Labour government over 13 years. Despite this, growing a social enterprise that covers its costs and genuinely helps vulnerable people remains an almighty challenge.
  • The Big Society Bank is clearly good news but obstacles still remain and social enterprises will need to pick fights judiciously if they are to respond to the tough problems facing society. The bank will enable intermediaries to offer cash as capital investment not revenue.
  • While the Big Society Bank offers investment for growing larger social enterprises, it does not help those organisations become investable. Other investors looking to scale social enterprises have already struggled to find organisations that are ready for investment. Ethical bank Triodos had to close a large fund for social enterprises last year after only being able to make one investment. Investors report that only 16% of the social enterprises that approach them are investable.
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  • While the Big Society Bank will offer capital to help social enterprises scale, it may not provide the right kind of capital for new, potentially ground breaking, ideas. Ambitious start-up ventures require investment to test their models and start paying their way. The Big Society Bank will not be issuing grants so it looks unlikely that intermediaries will, in turn, be able to offer the kind of "soft capital" required to new social enterprises. Largely avoiding the world of social investment, the successful graduate teaching programme, Teach First, secured its founding investments from businesses, government agencies and charitable foundations. This diverse range of sympathetic supporters sacrificed financial return to give the untested vision of Teach First a chance. Other successful start-ups continue to cobble together the finance they need rather than waiting for social investors to meet their needs.
  • To attract investment to scale, an enterprise needs a clear strategy, a robust model for generating revenue, and economics that scale (or, as the enterprise grows it will simply become bigger, and not better). This is tough; entrepreneurs often need support from some of the 100-plus organisations – identified in the NESTA-commissioned report, Growing Social Ventures – that are dedicated to supporting Britain's 65,000 social enterprises improve, expand or become more resilient. For example, Scottish social enterprise Working Rite was supported by the Young Foundation to develop a financially sustainable business model before it could attract capital to its apprenticeship-style work preparation programme, even though it had achieved better results for youngsters from tough backgrounds than its larger, commercial competitors.
  • While we welcome the Big Society Bank, the government needs to level the playing field in the ever-tighter fight for government contacts. Shrewd social entrepreneurs – like those behind Enabling Enterprise, Teach First and Working Rite – will need to continue to scrape around for risk capital, and scramble to build robust business models under innovative services. From on high the government declares that social enterprise is critical to the success of the big society, yet on the ground it can feel like "soft privatisation".
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    Article places new Big Society Bank finance offering in context of the range of support new ventures need...
Annie Malhotra

Reclaiming the Investment Dialogue for Social Entrepreneurs - Social Edge - 0 views

  • Supply and demand. A simple framework for market analysis that can reveal complex insights.  The social capital market is no exception to that rule. Recent years have seen an explosion of funds flowing into this space, increasing the supply of growth capital available to social entrepreneurs to new levels. However, within this same market, the number of social businesses ready and able to demand these funds has not kept pace. While fund creation continues at rapid speeds, the market reality for most fund managers continues to be an insufficient pipeline of investable projects in which to place this capital.  Even a basic course in economics suggests who should hold the bargaining power here – those demanding the social capital, a.k.a. the social entrepreneur.  But if this should be the case, why have the conversations on social investment been overwhelmingly dominated by investors? They dictate investment terms, develop a common investor language, create burdensome due diligence requirements for investees, force “cookie-cutter” financing instruments on complex business models, and demand an endless list of documentation. The social entrepreneur is left catering to their wishes, often sacrificing their main reason for existing in the first place – creating social impact.
Tim Draimin

Stories That Matter | Axiom News - 0 views

  • Finance Learn How Social Finance Can Work in Communities Newly-released guide to increase understanding of finance tools that generate social and monetary impact
  • There is a new resource available for people interested in learning about social finance in Canada, and beyond.
  • Aptly named Your Guide to Social Finance, the online publication spearheaded by Social Innovation Generation (Sig) offers people both quick and in-depth answers for how social finance works, who’s involved and who’s eligible.
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  • Joanna Reynolds, project lead and program director of the SiG division Causeway, says the guide is targeting social entrepreneurs and anyone interested in social ventures to explain how social finance can support the opening, operation and expansion of organizations pursuing social and environmental outcomes. According to Reynolds, it’s the first guide of its kind to provide these tools in a convenient format.  “There isn’t anything like it in the world, as far as we know, in terms of an accessible and hopefully easy-to-understand resource for people to learn about social finance,” Reynolds tells Axiom News. The project took nearly a year and a half to complete and involved a number of collaborators like SocialFinance.ca, Ashoka Canada and the B.C. Centre for Social Enterprise.  Bruce Mau Design was engaged in the creative process, and Reynolds credits the internationally-recognized design firm along with volunteer Helen Yeung for challenging the group to keep the content accessible to diverse readers. Reynolds says a major asset of the guide is the section featuring social finance stories, in video and article format, which can build greater awareness of the possibilities for social finance. “The purpose of the guide is to really tell stories of social finance at work. We feel that a great way to understand social finance is through examples and illustrations so people can see this is what it is, and it applies in these kinds of ways,” says Reynolds, who adds most people would be unaware of the organizations listed in the guide. Since launching the resource, Reynolds says they’re receiving great feedback, and people are excited the content is available. She’s encouraging people involved in social finance to submit their comments and any new projects they’re working on, as the guide will be updated. SiG is also planning to promote the resource to community organizations and networks that could benefit from the information. Reynolds adds this is part of SiG’s vision to move social finance from an innate and mostly uncoordinated sector to its next stage of growth — a co-ordinated and accessible system. To read Your Guide to Social Finance, click here. If you have feedback on this article please contact the newsroom at 800-294-0051 or e-mail camille(at)axiomnews.ca. Login or register to post comments Axiom News: Change is our product. News is our process. Click here to learn how. Front Page NewsStrengths Movement Cincinnati Summit Who We Are Our Services Our Clients Resources Contact
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    Axiom article explaining the new guide to social finance...
Peter Deitz

Coming in from the 'Dark Side' - Down to Business Blog - 0 views

  • The lazy yet dominant financial market preconception of social entrepreneurs is of fluffy tree-hugging do-gooders who couldn't cut it in the 'real world'. Indeed, my peers from business school and the financial markets in the City still think I am simply going through a 'charity phase' and will eventually return to the fold. But I'm not going to. I have been lucky to come across a pioneering market place and I'm signed up for the duration. Social enterprise is about sustainability, financial viability, commercial solutions to social needs. It is not about inefficiencies of investment, or the black hole of grant donations. The guys at SOCAP in San Francisco name this space the intersection of money and meaning. What are we at UnLtd doing to help increase the awareness of this intersection? For a start we've just launched the Big Venture Challenge to accelerate the entry of business angels into the social investment market place. We are looking to find 25 of the most ambitious social entrepreneurs with scalable ventures - and then 'de-risk' any investments by providing matched funding and some high calibre support from ourselves, Accenture, Deutsche Bank, Coutts, Thomson Reuters, Hogan Lovells and others.
  • This is certainly an international phenomenon, albeit operating at different paces throughout the world, but with clear exporting/importing of talent, knowledge and experience: The UK market place has been swamped with interest in how to replicate our own work with both government-led as well as private delegations from Canada, Vietnam, China, Thailand, Japan, Australia and Continental Europe just in recent months. UnLtd ourselves now have three sister organisations, which operate different business models, but with the same vision of helping social entrepreneurs in India, Thailand and South Africa, with many more in the offing. Similarly, the UK's School for Social Entrepreneurs has expanded to Australia and has many more international partners queuing up. Volans is now operating out of London and Singapore.There is the Global Impact Investing Network and the Global Impact Investing Reporting Standards coming out of the US but with international intentions (it's in the names!)There are (formative) social stock exchanges/trading/donation platforms in the US, Singapore, Italy, Brazil, UK, South Africa, KenyaThere is a well established European Venture Philanthropy Association, with a sister organisation opening in SingaporeWe have SOCAP Europe for the first time bringing a US conference to The NetherlandsThere are also a glut of crowd-funding mechanisms evolving to avoid traditional financial machinery, harnessing the Facebook generation: Kiva, MyC4, CrowdCube, Profunders, Buzzbnk, Ethex, Markets for Good.
Peter Deitz

Social Entrepreneurs 2011: How a Business Can Change the World - 0 views

  • A special report on the innovative business models social entrepreneurs are inventing
  • special
  • In the pages that follow, we shine a light on this new universe of social entrepreneurship. First, we meet Fred Keller, the founder of Cascade Engineering, a $250 million Michigan plastics manufacturer, who recently turned his business into a B Corporation, the highest standard for socially responsible businesses. Then we investigate five more business models—and meet the entrepreneurs who have adopted them.
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  • An Eye Bank Bets on Best Practices SightLife, a Seattle-based nonprofit eye bank that extracts corneas from organ donors and distributes them to transplant centers around the world, is one of the largest such facilities in the U.S., with 96 employees and more than $14 million in annual revenue. It supplies nearly 5,000 corneas for transplant a year. But it wasn't always that way.
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    Inc Magazine covers social business. Have a look at the six articles the've just published.
Peter Deitz

ALEX WOOD: Social Finance: a Conservative opportunity? | iPolitics - 0 views

  • For a new Conservative government looking to make a tangible and lasting mark on our society, there would seem to be no better alignment of values and opportunity than that represented by the burgeoning social finance movement. It represents a ready-made opportunity, rooted in values of community-building, support for small scale entrepreneurship, and the role of private investment in delivering public good, that the government would do well to seize.
  • At its core, social finance (or its semantic cousins: “impact investing”, “mission-based investing”, etc.) is about incenting innovation. Let’s face it, we all assume that the large challenges facing our society (things like child poverty, climate change, health care, etc.) can only be solved by government or big corporations.
  • The Task Force, in its report, identified a number of concrete steps that governments could take in this regard, primarily around the tax treatment of such investments. As an example, the report points out that Canadian foundations are specifically prohibited under the Income Tax Act from conducting any “unrelated business activity”, while similar provisions in the U.S. and U.K. tax codes have been removed in recent years. Canadian governments have indicated a growing level of interest in the potential that social finance holds. The federal government made a supportive statement for social finance in its 2010 Speech from the Throne, and provinces like Nova Scotia and Quebec have set up their own social finance funds. Ontario very recently inaugurated a Social Innovation Wiki, through which social entrepreneurs can share lessons on things like access to capital.But governments can and should do more, starting with the federal government. The upcoming Speech from the Throne would seem a perfect opportunity for a government looking to define its vision for the country to re-affirm the potential of social finance, and to lay out a roadmap for how Canada will move forward on this opportunity.
Peter Deitz

Jonathan Greenblatt: Social Impact Bonds Bring Social Innovation to the Bay State - 0 views

  • Late last week, Governor Deval Patrick and the Commonwealth of Massachusetts quietly released a Request-for-Information (RFI) on an esoteric new public financing concept. The state cautiously issued its RFI without much fanfare. No trumpets or flags, just an understated press release announcing its interest in the issuance of a Social Impact Bond.
  • Let's be clear: SIBs are not a silver bullet. The very nature of a capped return probably means that SIBs will need to be kick-started by philanthropists and other "impact-first" investors with PRIs before they gain mainstream acceptance. Unlike conventional fiduciaries, philanthropists more easily can square SIBs with their investment priorities. Nonetheless, if this model is proven to work, such experimental philanthropy might be viewed as the venture capital of an era of social innovation.
  • As the field evolves, we should expect to see a flurry of new groups seeking to design such public-private partnerships. Today the field is sparse. Social Finance, a US group launched by Sir Ronald and Mr. Blood, presently appears to be the only significant player in the field. But, many more will come as impact investors, social entrepreneurs and new intermediaries spring up to scale SIBs and launch new innovations.
adamspence

Selling up without selling out | Social enterprise network | Guardian Professional - 0 views

  • Ben and Jerry's ice cream sold to Unilever and Seeds of Change sold to Mars in the US. Closer to home, The Body Shop sold to L'Oreal and Green & Blacks sold to Cadburys.
  • The sales of these businesses have certainly generated rich financial rewards for the entrepreneurs that founded them but have done little to further the social missions of those businesses. The argument that somehow the positive values and social intent of these companies percolates through the multinationals that bought them is nonsense akin to trickle down economics. It also ignores the fact that these social businesses were acquired for commercial reasons and for their potential to generate significant profits into the future.
Tim Draimin

Hamilton: Green, RRSP-eligible community bonds coming soon - thestar.com - 0 views

  • Last October a young entrepreneur named Daniel Bida got together with a group of like-minded individuals and approached the management of the Toronto Zoo with an innovative idea.
  • They knew the zoo was interested in building a biogas facility that could turn manure from elephants, giraffes and other animals into renewable electricity and heat. They also knew that after several years of trying the zoo, despite its good intentions, couldn’t make it happen. The project it envisioned was simply too complex and risky for commercial investors.
  • Bida proposed a new approach: build a smaller, more manageable facility and open up investment to the broader community through the issuance of bonds.
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  • He was inspired after watching Toronto’s Centre for Social Innovation (CSI) purchase and retrofit a building using $2 million it had raised selling community bonds at $10,000 apiece. The bonds, which could be purchased by anyone, offered a 4 per cent annual rate of return over five years and were RRSP-eligible.
  • If the banks wouldn’t lend the money to a not-for-profit organization like CSI, then individuals who support the organization’s mandate just might. Tapping into CSI’s “social asset” proved a good gamble, as the community was quick to scoop up the bonds.
  • “This told me that the whole community bond thing was for real,” say Bida, convinced he could adapt the approach to support renewable-energy projects.
  • Their approach represents a low-risk investment for people who want to support “green” community projects and make some money, but who don’t want to spend thousands of dollars putting solar PV systems on their own rooftops.
  • Electricity from the plant will be sold into the grid under the province’s feed-in-tariff program, while waste heat could end up being pumped into a nearby greenhouse, potentially used to grow bamboo for the new pandas expected to arrive in 2014.
  • About 70 per cent of the project, or roughly $3.5 million, will be funded through the sale of community bonds that, like the CSI bonds, could be purchased through a self-directed RRSP. ZooShare hopes to offer bonds with a seven-year term and up to a 7 per cent annual return on investment.
  • For existing zoo members and those living within one kilometre of the zoo, the bonds will be sold in $500 units. Everyone else can pick them up for $5,000 each, unless they want to purchase a zoo membership. “We’re hoping this will sell more memberships for the zoo as a result,” says Bida, whose company ReGenerate Biogas is managing the project.
  • ZooShare is just one of several co-op ventures going the community bond route to raise capital for renewably-energy projects. Others include Options for Green Energy, SolarShare and WaterShare.
  • The zoo executives liked the idea and several months later Bida helped form the ZooShare Biogas Co-operative, a not-for-profit community co-op that plans to build a 500-kilowatt biogas plant at the zoo for about $5 million
  • t also offers a way for those without property, such as renters, or without the proper land or rooftop exposure, to participate in the feed-in-tariff program. Community bonds, in essence, make the FIT program more inclusive and get the broader population directly invested in their energy future, be it solar, wind, biogas or hydro.
  • “This idea of massive public involvement in the ownership and economic benefit of these projects is what we’ve all been working towards for the past 15 years,” says Deb Doncaster, executive director of the Community Power Fund, which supports community co-op projects with grants and low-interest bridge financing.
  • “All it will take is for one or two of these projects to be successful and the approach will take off.” Social media will certainly play a role. Facebook, Twitter and other social networking applications make it much easier for community co-ops to reach out to supporters. Spreading the word to the right people has become almost effortless. Still, a couple of barriers need to be overcome before you or I can purchase such bonds. For one, RRSP-eligible community bonds must be approved and registered with the Financial Services Commission of Ontario before they can be sold. Some say the commission is dragging it feet. SolarShare, for example, wants to issue community bonds in $1,000 increments that would offer a 5-per-cent return annually and be redeemable after five years. The funds raised from the bond issue will support construction of solar PV projects across southern Ontario. It’s all new territory for the financial services commission, which has proved a major bottleneck. “They’re tight on the resources needed to deal with this new landscape,” says Matt Zipchen, who as project manager for the Toronto Renewable Energy Co-operative is overseeing development of SolarShare. Zipchen says another roadblock is the banks. “These community bonds may be RRSP-eligible, but whether or not your bank will let you hold them is another question,” he says. “Banks are finicky about them. We’re just starting the process with the banks to see which ones will hold these bonds and which won’t.” It will all get sorted out over time. Indeed, all it will likely take is for one big bank to break from the pack before others start to follow. If demand for community bonds is high enough, that will likely happen. That’s what SolarShare, ZooShare and others are counting on. Tyler Hamilton, author of the upcoming book Mad Like Tesla, writes weekly about green energy and clean technologies. Reach him at tyler@cleanbreak.ca
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    Toronto Star shows how the idea of community bonds is taking off!
adamspence

Stock Exchanges for Local Businesses - WSJ.com - 1 views

  • Local stock exchanges once were common but faded as face-to-face trading shifted to electronic platforms and the biggest U.S. stock-exchange operators acquired smaller rivals. Among the few remaining exchanges, the former Philadelphia Stock Exchange is now an options exchange owned by Nasdaq OMX Group Inc. A minicomeback might be around the corner. In April, Hawaii lawmakers agreed to begin examining the state's securities laws to possibly create a "locally focused, Hawaii-based stock exchange." David Fisher, an economic development and business consultant involved in the effort, says the electronic-only exchange would help Hawaiian investors keep their money closer to home, while connecting local entrepreneurs with capital. Honolulu's stock exchange shut down in 1976. In Toronto, organizers of the Social Venture Exchange, or SVX, are expected to launch this summer a specialized exchange to link institutional investors with local companies having a social or environmental impact. The fledgling market is backed by Toronto Stock Exchange owner TMX Group Inc. Local exchanges are also in the works in Europe, Africa and Asia.
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    Wall Street Journal article on the development of local stock exchanges in North America.
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