FUT URE GENERATIO N S
Hope floats TANAH SULLIVAN WADES INTO A SUSTAINABILITY DEBATE IN THE WORLDâS FASTEST-SINKING CITY by Andrew Bryan
M
s Tanah Sullivanâs (Class of 2005) commute through the bustling streets of Jakarta is a daily reminder of the lofty goals she has set herself at Indonesiaâs largest technology group. Picking her up for her daily trips will be one of two million drivers for Gojek, a company that comprises one half of the GoTo Group where Ms Sullivan is Head of Sustainability. Jakarta, a sprawling metropolis home to more than 10 million residents, is the worldâs fastest-sinking city. Scientists believe 95 per cent of it will be underwater by 2050, and that looming deadline helped drive Gojekâs first ever annual sustainability report in which the company committed to zero emissions, zero waste, and zero socioeconomic barriers by 2030. Even with full buy-in from leadership, the challenge for Ms Sullivan is shifting the companyâs immediate short-term cyclical focus to a long-term strategy. The stakes for the Indonesian capital and its inhabitants â including the Gojek drivers â are high.
âSUSTAINABILITY ONLY WORKS AS WELL AS EVERYONEâS BOUGHT INTO IT.â | 30 |
âJakarta is sinking pretty fast,â Ms Sullivan says. âSo why wouldnât we be preparing as best as possible our ecosystem, which consists of millions of drivers, users and merchants, because theyâre going to be the most impacted. By 2050, if 96 per cent of the northern city is underwater - and science says it will be - for sure thereâs going to be a disruption to our business model and to the livelihoods of the people in our ecosystem. My job is really to build the resilience of the company, platform and ecosystem to those types of risks, which have historically fallen through the cracks because theyâre not imminent financial risks. But if I donât do my job well, they will become financial risks. The bottom line for us is we want to be part of the solutions to these big, global challenges, and the investment now is going to be worth it because it reduces our exposure to these potential risks in the future. Weâre in big trouble if we canât demonstrate how weâre responding to the environmental, social and economic challenges across our ecosystem, because our ecosystem will suffer and our stakeholders alongside it.â GoTo Group comprises Indonesiaâs two most valuable startups - Gojek and Tokopedia. Gojek is an Indonesian ondemand multi-service platform and digital payment technology group with more than 170 million users across southeast Asia. Tokopedia is a technology company
specialising in e-commerce, with more than 100 million active users and 11 million merchants. Among the services offered by Gojek are mobility and logistics services with more than two million drivers, and itâs a service Ms Sullivan is well acquainted with. âI still take a Gojek every day, and a lot of the time theyâre facing really challenging times, especially because of the pandemic,â she says. âIf they donât get orders, thereâs an impact on their livelihoods which can be tough where they have families to support. If thereâs flooding in the city, which can happen often, that disrupts their ability to get around. Increasingly extreme weather and temperatures affects them disproportionately. I feel those things very, very personally, I always have. I spend most of my day advocating for better policies, tools and programs that the company can roll out in the service of the people who keep our engine running, literally and figuratively. Without these drivers, without these merchants, weâre nothing.â Ms Sullivan hopes the GoTo Groupâs sustainability efforts will not only shape the future direction of the company, but also help solve some of the challenges Indonesia faces. To achieve this requires sometimes difficult conversations and a lot of alignment with Ms Sullivanâs colleagues, articulating the need to implement change across the organisation.