
Think Forward: Conversations with Futurists, Innovators and Big Thinkers
Welcome to the Think Forward podcast where we have conversations with futurists, innovators and big thinkers about what lies ahead. We explore emerging trends on the horizon and what it means to be a futurist.
Think Forward: Conversations with Futurists, Innovators and Big Thinkers
FIF Series EP 53 - EcoAwakening - Part 2 - Building Regenerative Systems
We explore eco-awakening, a supershift moving us beyond sustainability toward regenerative systems that restore, replenish, and heal our planet. This episode examines how businesses, governments, and communities can transform from simply reducing harm to actively creating positive environmental impact through regenerative approaches.
• Regeneration differs fundamentally from sustainability by focusing on healing systems rather than just reducing damage
• Regenerative agriculture rebuilds soil health and biodiversity while often improving yields and reducing costs
• Companies are embracing regeneration through circular supply chains and net-positive impact models
• Regenerative thinking requires systems thinking—seeing relationships rather than isolated outcomes
• Real-world examples include buildings that clean air, mushroom-based textiles, and ecosystem-restoring financial instruments
• The regenerative economy offers significant opportunities for entrepreneurs and innovators
• Each person can contribute by asking how their decisions affect broader systems
• Leaders can incorporate regenerative principles into strategy, design, HR practices, and product development
Join us next episode as we shift focus to "social quake" and explore how trust, institutions, and community structures are being transformed.
ORDER SUPERSHIFTS! bit.ly/supershifts
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Thank you for joining me on this ongoing journey into the future. Until next time, stay curious, and always think forward.
Welcome to the Think Forward podcast, where we speak with futurists, innovators and big thinkers. Come along with your host, steve Fisher, and explore the future together.
Speaker 2:Welcome back to Foundations in Foresight A Think Forward series. I'm Steve Fisher, and today we're continuing our deep dive into eco-awakening, the super shift that's reshaping our relationship with the planet and, honestly, with ourselves. In episode 52, we talked about how the global conversation is shifting from sustainability to something much deeper. We looked at how businesses, governments and entire societies are waking up to the fact that just doing less harm isn't enough. The world doesn't need slightly more efficient extractive systems. It needs systems that restore, replenish and regenerate. Econom needs systems that restore, replenish and regenerate Economies that work in partnership with nature, not against it. And that's where we're going today. In this episode, we're going to get into the how. If awareness is rising, how do we move from awareness to action? How do we build regenerative systems In business, in policy, in community and in the very infrastructure of daily life? Because here's the thing a truly regenerative future isn't just about changing our energy sources or reducing plastic use. It's about reimagining the entire operating system of human civilization. So let's talk about what that actually looks like and how you, your organization or your community can start building it.
Speaker 2:First, let's get one thing straight Regeneration isn't just a new word for sustainability. Sustainability, in many ways has been about doing less damage, reducing emissions, conserving resources, trying to slow down harm. That was a necessary first step, but it's not enough. Regeneration asks a more radical question. What if our actions could actually heal systems? What if a business could restore an ecosystem while making a profit? What if a building could clean the air, not pollute it? What if agriculture could rebuild topsoil and biodiversity instead of depleting it? This shift is already happening In agriculture. We're seeing the rise of regenerative farming, which focuses on soil health, carbon capture and ecosystem restoration. Farmers are using crop rotation, no-till methods, cover crops and animal integration to mimic natural systems. And it's working. Not only is the soil healthier and more resilient to drought, but in many cases, yields go up and costs go down.
Speaker 2:In business, companies are rethinking value creation through a regenerative lens. That means asking how do we create products and services that not only avoid harm but actually deliver net positive impact for people and planet? And this isn't just happening in niche startups. Large companies are starting to embrace regeneration as a strategic advantage. Some are investing in circular supply chains where waste becomes raw material for the next product. Others are partnering with indigenous communities and local stakeholders to co-create regenerative land use projects. Some are embedding regeneration into their brand purpose, their product design and their investment strategy. Because here's the truth In a world facing climate breakdown, ecological collapse and growing inequality, regenerative value is going to become one of the most important currencies of the 21st century.
Speaker 2:So how do we start building regenerative systems? It begins by seeing systems differently. Regenerative thinking is fundamentally systems thinking. You can't optimize for a single metric, like profit or yield, without understanding the impact on everything around it. The key is to look for relationships, not just outcomes. A regenerative business doesn't just look at its carbon footprint. It looks at its role in supporting local communities, building ecological health and enhancing long-term resilience. It treats the economy, the environment and society as interconnected living systems. One of the tools we've talked about in this podcast, the transform model, is incredibly helpful here, because building regenerative systems isn't about making incremental changes. It's about applying deep transformation across multiple levels Mindset structure, behavior and outcomes.
Speaker 2:The most effective regenerative efforts don't just tweak policies or products. They shift worldviews, they challenge assumptions about what growth means. They reimagine leadership, ownership and design. They operate from a place of interconnection, reciprocity and long-term thinking. And while that might sound abstract, we're seeing real-world examples every day. There are developers designing regenerative cities where infrastructure works like a forest, absorbing water, cleaning air, generating energy and supporting human well-being. There are fashion companies growing materials from mushrooms, algae and bacterial cellulose, creating textiles that biodegrade naturally instead of sitting in landfills for centuries. There are even financial systems being reimagined Regenerative investment funds, climate bonds tied to ecosystem restoration and new ownership models that share value with communities and future generations. This is what regeneration looks like in practice it's bold, it's imaginative and it's absolutely necessary.
Speaker 2:Now let's bring it closer to home. What does this mean for you, for your team, your organization, your career? It means we all have an opportunity and, honestly, a responsibility to start thinking regeneratively. Whether you're in business, design, education, finance policy or health, you can ask how do my decisions affect the systems I'm part of? Am I working with the grain of nature or against it? Am I contributing to resilience or extraction? You don't need to have it all figured out, but starting with better questions is a great first step. If you're a leader, you can bring these questions into your strategy sessions. If you're a designer, you can embed regenerative principles into how you frame a brief. If you're in HR or talent development, you can look at regenerative leadership practices, ways of cultivating teams and cultures that nourish people, not burn them out. And if you're an entrepreneur or innovator, well, this is your moment, because the regenerative economy is still in its early days. There is so much room to build. So here's the bottom line Eco-awakening isn't just a super shift.
Speaker 2:It's a reorientation of our values, our priorities and our design principles. The future isn't just about doing less harm. It's about learning how to do more good, about learning how to do more good. And that future is already being built by farmers restoring soil, by architects designing buildings that breathe, by entrepreneurs growing biodegradable packaging, by investors channeling capital into climate positive ventures, and by everyday people who are rethinking their relationship with the living world. So here's your challenge Look at the systems you're a part of. Where could regeneration happen? Where could you shift from doing less harm to actively restoring? Where could you go beyond sustainability and become part of a positive feedback loop that leaves the world better than it was? In our next episode, we're going to shift from ecosystems to social systems as we dive into social quake, how trust is being rewritten, how institutions are being challenged and new forms of community and power are emerging. Until then, keep exploring, questioning and, as always, think forward.
Speaker 1:Thanks for listening to the Think Forward podcast. You can find us on all the major podcast platforms and at wwwthinkforwardshowcom, as well as on YouTube under Think Forward Show. See you next time.