Stephan Schmidheiny (born in 1947 in St. Gallen, Switzerland) is a Swiss business man and billionaire.
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Schmidheiny was born in St. Gallen, Switzerland, in 1947 and completed his Law studies with a doctorate at the University of Zurich in 1972. He started his business career at Eternit Niederurnen and in 1976 he was named CEO of the Swiss Eternit Group. Years later he diversified his investments, building up a multinational conglomerate of shareholdings by adding enterprises in the areas of forestry, banking, consumer goods, power generation, and the electronic and optical equipment. During this period he shaped many industries and became a renowned industrial architect. In recognition of this role, he became a member of the boards of directors of leading companies such as ABB Asea Brown Boveri, Nestlé, Swatch, and UBS AG.
In the 1980s he created FUNDES, an organization that supports the development of small and medium-sized enterprises in several Latin American countries. According to recent Swiss accounts, Stephan Schmidheiny began buying Chilean forest land in 1982, and he now owns over 120,000 hectares in Southern Chile, near Concepcion, landwhich the Mapuche Indians claim has been theirs since time immemorial. The Mapuche charge that some of the land Schmidheiny bought was stolen from them during the Pinochet dictatorship, using that regime's standard techniques of intimidation, torture, and murder.[1]
In 1990 he was appointed chief adviser for business and industry to the secretary general of the United Nations Conference on Environment and Development (UNCED), better known as the Rio de Janeiro Earth Summit of 1992. To better fulfill his mandate, he created a forum in which leading businessmen from all parts of the world developed a business perspective on environment and development challenges. This forum later became the World Business Council for Sustainable Development (WBCSD), an organization that today counts the world’s 160 most important companies as its members. Stephan Schmidheiny was elected Honorary Chairman.
In the 90s he also established the AVINA Foundation, which contributes to sustainable development in Latin America by encouraging productive alliances among social and business leaders and today is a leading player in that field.
After the creation of VIVA Trust in 2003, Stephan Schmidheiny retired from all of his executive functions, including his positions in GrupoNueva and AVINA. Furthermore, he has realised various book projects, among others the bestseller “Changing Course” which was translated into more than a dozen languages.
Stephan Schmidheiny has received a great number of prizes and distinctions in acknowledgment of his leadership and contribution to sustainable development: Among others, the Instituto Centroamericano de Administracion de Empresas (INCAE) awarded him a PhD Honoris Causa in 1993; he received the same degree from Yale University in 1996; and from both Rollins College and Universidad Católica Andrés Bello (UCAB) in 2001.
Schmidheiny was a major donor to the Peterson Institute in 2006.[2] His 1992 pamphlet Changing Course: A Global Business Perspective on Development and the Environment, argued that eco-efficiency and sustainable development were good for business.
Stephan Schmidheiny was awarded the Philanthropy award in 2007 at the PODER-Green Forum, organised by PODER and the Boston Consulting Group.
A biography of Stephan Schmidheiny “Sein langer Weg zu sich selbst – Erbe – Unternehmer – Philanthrop“ was published by Stämpfli-Verlag in 2009.[3]
Bilanz a Swiss magazine for economics put his fortune at nearly GBP 1.9 billion in its December 2008 issue despite the donation of over USD 1 billion in 2003.
Stephan Schmidheiny and the 88-year old Baron Luis Jan Marie Ghislain De Cartier De Marchienne from Belgium, were charged for allegedly negligent behavior in exposing Eternit's workers and citizens to asbestos. The legal proceeding began at the Palace of Justice, Turin, Italy on December 10, 2009. The trial was a mass civil action in which some 6,000 people were seeking damages over the deaths of around 3,000 people who worked at or lived near Eternit’s plants in Italy. After years of investigation, the Prosecutor Raffaele Guariniello and his team acted on behalf of 2,619 former Eternit employees from the Italian factories in Casale Monferrato (Province of Alessandria), Cavagnolo (Province of Turin), Rubiera (Province of Reggio Emilia) and Bagnoli (Naples) and 270 family members or local residents who received para occupational or environmental exposure to Eternit asbestos. The prosecution requested the maximum sentence of 12 years imprisonment and demanded eight more years be added on the grounds that asbestos can trigger ailments decades after exposure. On July 4th 2011 at the Turin court of justice, near the end of this trial, the Prosecutor asked for a 20 year term in prison for both Stephan Schmidheiny and Cartier de Marchienne. The prosecution’s five-year inquiry determined that the two executives were effectively responsible for Eternit’s Italian operations at the time of the contaminations in the 1970s, a claim rejected by the defence team.[4]