Promote Environmental Awareness

SAGE Judging Criterion #7
- One of SAGE’s ten judging criteria addresses environmental awareness, as follows:

In their annual report and verbal presentation, how effective were the students in demonstrating that they understand the importance of being responsible stewards of the environment in a free market economy?

In a free market economy, producers of goods and services provide goods and services to consumers at the lowest possible prices. The concepts of supply and demand are at work here. In many cases, however, producers extract physical resources from the environment that can cause long-term damage to the environment, or they return harmful pollutants to the environment during or after production.



Grossman Award for Best Environmental Venture

Starting in 2008, Mr. Ken Grossman, his wife, Ms. Katie Gonser, and the Grossman/Gonser family from Chico, CA has provided funding for prize money that will go to the high schools SAGE teams that have started and operated the most effective environmental enterprises.  This award will be distributed to high school students who display the most creativity, innovation and effectiveness at launching environmental ventures. To learn more about this award, please click here.

What Does It Mean to Be a Socially-Responsible Business?

Socially-responsible businesses adopt strategies that provide a balance between economic success and environmental sustainability/restoration. As businessman and author Paul Hawken said in his 1993 book, The Ecology of Commerce: “The ultimate purpose of business is not, or should not be, simply to make money. Nor is it merely a system of making and selling things. The promise of business is to increase the general well-being of humankind through service, a creative invention and ethical philosophy.” Hawken argues that businesses and policymakers need to work together to find an “ecological model of commerce” so that everything that is produced can be reclaimed, reused, or recycled. As business transactions increasingly move beyond local and national borders, companies must be careful to consider both the economic and ecologic effects of its activities on all stakeholders.

SAGE judges scrutinize a team’s entrepreneurial and community service activities to determine how well it considered, and learned, the importance of this fine balance between personal economic goals and ecologic stability in the global community.