Stephan Schmidheiny
Stephan Ernst Schmidheiny (born 29 October 1947) is a Swiss industrialist, entrepreneur, and philanthropist who led the family-owned Swiss Eternit Group and pioneered sustainable business practices, including early efforts to substitute asbestos in manufacturing.[1][2] Schmidheiny assumed leadership of the Swiss Eternit Group in 1976 at age 28, following his father Max, transforming the construction materials firm founded by his great-grandfather in 1867 into a diversified multinational before selling his shares in 1989.[3][4] Upon taking control, he launched an innovation program for asbestos-free products in 1976 and publicly announced the company's exit from asbestos processing by 1981, funding research into substitutes amid growing awareness of health risks.[4][1] His entrepreneurial ventures extended to restructuring the Swiss watch industry via the Swatch Group in 1985, merging BBC and Asea into ABB in 1987, and founding Grupo Nueva in 1998 with investments in Latin American forestry and paper industries adhering to triple bottom line principles.[2][1] A key figure in global sustainability, Schmidheiny contributed to the 1992 Rio Earth Summit, co-founded the World Business Council for Sustainable Development, and authored Changing Course (1992), which popularized the concept of eco-efficiency.[1] His philanthropy, channeled through entities like the Avina Foundation established in 1994, has focused on sustainable development in Latin America, supporting small entrepreneurs and environmental initiatives with hundreds of millions in funding via the VIVA Trust created in 2003.[5][6] Despite these achievements, Schmidheiny has faced protracted legal scrutiny over asbestos exposure at Eternit subsidiaries, particularly in Italy, where courts have convicted him of environmental disaster and manslaughter for deaths linked to factory operations in the 1970s and 1980s, including a 9-year-and-6-month sentence upheld by Turin's Court of Appeal in April 2025 for negligence contributing to 392 fatalities in Casale Monferrato.[7][8] Earlier acquittals, such as by Italy's Supreme Court in 2014, were overturned in subsequent trials, reflecting ongoing disputes over historical responsibility despite his documented shift away from asbestos.[2][9]