Services & Expertise

Everdene Consulting provides technical advisory services in two related fields of practice:

  1. market development
  2. sustainable supply chain management

Market development involves working with suppliers in developing countries to improve their business practices, products and services, and market them effectively domestically and globally.  Sustainable supply chain management involves working with buyers in developed countries to better understand and manage social and environmental issues in their global supply chains.

How We Work. We bring a combination of professional community planning, business planning and project management expertise and experience to the areas of market development and sustainable supply chain management.  We draw on our record of success, proven case studies, and our network of colleagues and advisors to help you build your own customized approach.  We start by ensuring that the scope of work and deliverables are clear and connected to your ultimate goals.  We then strive to exceed your expectations and deliver smart recommendations that build on your unique strengths and resources.  Contact us today - we would be pleased to talk about how we can assist you with your program goals.

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RSS_1 Read Everdene Consulting's take on global sustainable supply chain and market development issues in the Everdene Blog

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Untitled-1Find out how others are building innovative programs and achieving sustainable impact - Case Studies

Latest Industry News

  • Greenpeace urges Facebook to dump coal power
    Greenpeace International executive director Kumi Naidoo says Facebook faces risks to its reputation and its bottom line. Photo credit: Greenpeace/Kristian Buus.

    A data center in Prineville, Ore., is at the heart of a campaign waged by Greenpeace urging Facebook to lessen its environmental impacts.

    The environmental group, along with about 500,000 Facebook users, is pressing Palo Alto, Calif.-based Facebook to switch to 100 percent renewable power to run its data centers. The Prineville facility—slated to be operational in 2011—would be powered by Portland-based utility PacificCorp, which Greenpeace says is powered disproportionately by coal.

    In a letter to Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg dated Sept. 1, Greenpeace International executive director Kumi Naidoo said Facebook has “an essential role to play in helping to drive the deployment of renewable energy sources,” and that ignoring the company’s environmental impacts poses a risk to “its reputation and financial health.”

    The organization says Facebook should commit to phasing out using coal-fired electricity to run its data centers; advocate for government policies that support renewable energy; and disclose its greenhouse gas emissions. Plus, Facebook should share its environmental policy on its website, Naidoo wrote.

    Facebook broke ground on the Prineville facility—its first company-built data center—in January. In August, it announced it was doubling the size of the project to more than 300,000 square feet to accommodate the rapid growth of its membership, which now numbers more than 500 million people worldwide. The company has highlighted the energy efficiency of the facility’s design, which includes an evaporative cooling system, and says it selected the Oregon site in part because the dry, temperate climate would contribute to the center’s efficiency.

    Facebook isn’t the only target of Greenpeace’s IT energy reduction efforts. In 2009, the organzation launched the Cool IT Challenge, to push tech companies to reduce their environmental impacts.

  • By the Numbers
    Paul Hawken

    Earlier this year, at the Sustainable Industries Economic Forum, Paul Hawken challenged us to take a look at the use of the gross domestic product (GDP) as a measure of the vitality of the world economy. After looking at some alternatives to the GDP, we drew the following comparison of two countries at different ends of the spectrum.

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