Sightings | Alumni Profile
Nicholas School Alumnus Santiago Lobeira (MEM '99) Practices
Sustainability at Work and at Home p.2
by Lisa M. Dellwo
Because solar photovoltaic panels are so expensive,
the Lobeiras realized they could not live completely off the
grid. So they stretched their budget as far as possible to
buy energy- and waterefficient appliances. But they never
need to turn on their energy-saving light fixtures during
daylight and only rarely— on a cold December day—do they need
to use gas to heat water.
From concept to moving day, the remodeling project
took two years. The day after the workers finally left, Olivia
gave birth to Sabrina, their first child.
In the meantime, Lobeira had struck up an acquaintance
with Manolo Ruíz, a hotel manager who shared his interest
in sustainability, and the two decided to join forces professionally.
It took several tries and a bit of serendipity
to discover what they could do profitably to promote sustainability
in a weak Mexican economy. The two worked together first as
environmental consultants then as entrepreneurs selling solar
heating systems and worm compost. But the corporations they
were targeting had a responsibility to the bottom line that
superseded becoming environmentally responsible.
“Trying to sell worm compost in Mexico at this
time was a pretty complex challenge,” Lobeira recalls. As
a promotional strategy, the partners began giving away small
supplies of the substance—the byproduct of feeding kitchen
waste to redworms—with flower bulbs, in attractive packages.
“People loved it,” he says. And they wanted to buy more of
the “freebies” to use as gifts to friends and customers.
When they realized that their worm compost/seed
kits would sell, Lobeira and Ruíz had found their niche. Putting
all of their other business plans on hold, they began packaging
the kits and selling them to businesses for use as corporate
gifts. In August 2003, they incorporated as Sustenta Soluciones.
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