
Unit 1 gives micro-enterprises and VET learners a practical start on sustainability. It covers core concepts, hands-on practices, the EU policy context, and how to measure progress so that businesses can grow and stay competitive.
What this unit covers
- Topic 1: Understanding business sustainability — the triple bottom line (people, planet, profit) and why it matters for long-term success.
- Topic 2: Practical application — energy efficiency, waste reduction, water saving, sustainable sourcing, and building a supportive culture.
- Topic 3: Regulation & stakeholders — the EU landscape, incentives, and clear ways to engage customers, staff, suppliers, and the community.
- Topic 4: Measuring performance — KPIs, lifecycle assessment (LCA), and ESG reporting to link action with results and competitiveness.
Objectives and learning outcomes
By the end of Unit 1, learners will:
- Understand key models (circular economy, shared value) and how to balance environmental, social, and economic factors.
- Apply eco-efficient practices (waste, energy, sourcing) and draft a simple sustainability plan for their business.
- Navigate basic EU rules and use available incentives; communicate progress to stakeholders in plain language.
- Use metrics (e.g., energy use, waste rate, carbon footprint) to track impact and improve competitiveness over time.
Topic highlights
1) Understanding sustainability
Sustainability in business means operating in a way that supports ecological balance, social equity, and economic viability. The triple bottom line helps firms frame choices that are good for people, planet, and profit, not just short-term gains.
2) Practical actions you can start now
- Energy: run a basic audit; switch to LEDs and efficient HVAC; consider on-site renewables to cut bills and price risk.
- Waste: redesign processes to prevent waste; substitute materials; set up simple recycling and reuse with staff training.
- Water: fix leaks, set targets, and build staff habits; small firms can save costs and support local conservation.
- Sourcing: choose suppliers with sound environmental and labour standards; audit and improve over time.
- Culture: leadership matters — embed values, celebrate small wins, and involve the whole team.
3) Regulation, incentives, and engagement
- EU context: waste, eco-design, labour rights, and data protection shape how small firms operate — and create opportunities.
- Incentives: grants, tax reliefs, and programmes (for energy efficiency or renewables) can ease upfront costs.
- Stakeholders: use short updates, simple dashboards, and social channels; transparency builds trust and reduces risk.
4) Measuring what matters
- KPIs: energy per unit, waste diverted, water use, carbon footprint.
- LCA: assess impacts from raw materials to end-of-life to guide better design and purchasing.
- ESG reporting: basic, right-sized reporting can support finance, tenders, and brand reputation.
Case studies you can learn from
- Solar at scale: rooftop PV across sites to cut emissions and costs while supporting climate goals.
- Small food producer: organic sourcing, low-waste production, and community projects tying growth to values.
- Circular upcycling: turning a by-product into new food or materials, reducing waste and building a loyal customer base.
These examples show that sustainability can reduce costs, open markets, and strengthen brands — even for small producers.
Try the quick assessment
Unit 1 includes a short quiz on core ideas — from the triple bottom line to renewable energy and ethical sourcing — with an answer key for self-check. It’s a simple way to confirm understanding before moving on.
Key terms at a glance
From carbon footprint and circular economy to LCA, ESG, and stakeholder engagement, Unit 1 provides concise definitions you can reuse in reports, training, and team meetings.
How to use Unit 1 in your business or classroom
- Pick one focus area (energy, waste, water, or sourcing) and set a 60-day target.
- Create a simple scorecard with 3–5 KPIs your team can track monthly.
- Map your incentives — list local grants or supports you can apply for this quarter.
- Share progress with customers and suppliers; short, honest updates build credibility.