
NEI Offers Support and Drives Economic Resilience to Position Small Businesses as Transformative Forces in Sustainability

WAFA DINARO, EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR, OF THE NEW ECONOMY INITIATIVE, AND A LEADERSHIP COMMITTEE MEMBER FOR SUSTAINABLE BUSINESS NETWORK DETROIT
During an internship with a recycler in New York in 2020, entrepreneur and environmental scientist Madeline Miller watched as the waste materials from textile companies were being processed in the facility, and something entrepreneurial clicked.
In the “waste,” she saw home-building insulation that could be reused back home in Michigan while increasing energy efficiency in Detroit homes.
From there, NexTiles was born, a Detroit-based textile recycling company that produces EcoBlow – a nontoxic, eco-friendly building insulation made entirely of recycled pre-consumer fabric from manufacturers, particularly automotive interior suppliers, and fashion designers.
While her experience reflects the role small businesses can play directly in terms of creating eco-conscious products, every small business, no matter their product or service, can implement eco-friendly business practices.
Unfortunately, many of the same challenges that prevent small businesses from thriving in general – limited access to capital and lending; a lack of technical assistance in finances, marketing, and business planning; and the inability to tap into a business support network for grants and resources – will prevent them from reaching their full potential in sustainability.
Yet, nearly all the factors that help small businesses drive economic resilience position them to be a transformative force in sustainability.
SMALL BUSINESS DRIVES SUSTAINABLE ECONOMIC RESILIENCE
First, there are the sheer numbers. There are 33.2 million small businesses in the U.S. accounting for 99.9% of all businesses. They make up our largest employer group and accounted for almost two-thirds – or 17.3 million – of all jobs created from 1995 to 2021, according to the Small Business Administration. And they continue to grow, in 2022, there were more than 5.1 million new business applications filed.
Second, small businesses are nimble and can move quickly to drive innovation. They are fueled by their founders’ ideas and life experiences and are often created to provide solutions to real-world problems impacting friends, families, or communities.
Third, small businesses are invested in the social fabric of their communities and exist all around us, giving them nearly universal reach. They have a vested interest in their neighborhoods thriving that stretches well beyond business and adds further incentive for them to succeed.
At the New Economy Initiative, we’ve spent the past two decades building a support ecosystem that helps entrepreneurs, startups, and small businesses build a more resilient economy within their own communities and Southeast Michigan.
In the case of NexTiles, we provide funding to the Centrepolis Accelerator at Lawrence Tech University, which has played an integral role in NexTiles’ product development and growth. It is why we support similar nonprofit and locally grounded organizations that provide technical assistance, lending, and connections to small businesses throughout Southeast Michigan.
Sustainability is the next logical step in expanding our mission.
That is why the New Economy Initiative is pursuing a sustainability program to integrate with our traditional business support activities.
NEI SUSTAINABILITY PROGRAM GOALS
That program can accomplish a few major goals that will help small business play its role in sustainability by mirroring much of what we already do.
- It would include raising awareness about the bottom-line business benefits of sustainability that can be achieved through energy efficiency.
- It can help businesses identify how to integrate sustainable practices into their business plans that reduce waste while increasing efficiency and profits.
- It can help them access resources and grants available to increase sustainability.
Chief sustainability officer is one more a hat small business owners are asked to wear – we need to provide a small business ecosystem that empowers them to fulfill it.
Until we do, the collective power of our largest employer group to create a world that lasts for future generations is largely going untapped.
Source for data: https://www.uschamber.com/small-business/state-of-small-business-now
Be sure to subscribe to our newsletter for regular updates on sustainable business practices in and around Detroit.
Guest
- All
- Business
- Community
- Education
- Events
In November 2023, the City of Detroit enacted an Energy and Water Benchmarking Ordinance requiring buildings 25,000 square feet and larger to annually report their energy and water usage to the city. The policy focuses on transparency, giving building owners and city leaders insight into how buildings perform and where opportunities may exist to improve efficiency and reduce costs. SBN Detroit interviewed Maria Galarza, Deputy Director of the...
Detroit-based nonprofit Elevate focuses on the intersection of energy equity, housing stability, and workforce development. Through community partnerships and programs that connect residents with energy-efficiency upgrades, education, and job-training opportunities, the organization works to strengthen neighborhoods while helping families reduce costs and improve living conditions. SBN Detroit interviewed Shawna Forbes Henry, Director of Community Programs at Elevate, about the broader implications of energy access, the structural barriers communities...
The Green Business Lab, founded in 2002 by Samantha Svoboda, aims to help organizations strengthen decision-making about sustainability through immersive business simulations and strategic advisory services. Working with leadership teams across industries, the Lab creates structured environments where executives can explore how environmental, operational, and market forces intersect with core business strategy. Over more than two decades, the Green Business Lab has worked with companies toward moving sustainability...




