Defining green innovation, its impact, and cycle: a literature analysis
Cisneros Chavira, Pablo ; Shamsuzzoha, Ahm ; Kuusniemi, Heidi ; Jovanovski, Bojan
Cleaner Engineering and Technology
2023
17
100693
innovation ; environmental policy ; EU policy ; sustainable development ; literature survey
Technology
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.clet.2023.100693
English
Bibliogr.
"Organizations all over the globe are starting to address environmental-related matters with special emphasis. Several authors believe that for organizations to improve their corporate performance and remain competitive they must minimize pollution and use resources more efficiently. To achieve the previous, green innovations (GIs) ought to be implemented. A lot of knowledge about GIs and everything they entail has been generated over the years. Nevertheless, it is all scattered. There is no consensus among authors and three main concepts (green innovation, sustainable innovation, and eco-friendly innovation) are used interchangeably. Moreover, the advantages of GIs are dispersed within the vast world of information and oftentimes can only be found within articles or books concerning certain specific domains. Likewise, current means for implementing GIs seem to be a completely different topic and unrelated to GIs, as it is hard to find data concerning these in relevant articles. This article is a mere literature review aiming to summarize a topic of a great magnitude such as green innovations and to show what they are, what moves organizations towards them, how can they be achieved, what is being done both in the EU and Finland in that regard, and to and propose a framework to better understand green innovations."
The ETUI is co-funded by the European Union. Views and opinions expressed are however those of the author(s) only and do not necessarily reflect those of the European Union or the ETUI.