WHY KERING, HPE, UNILEVER LINK BUSINESS STRATEGIES TO THE SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT GOALS
Luxury
goods company Kering
has committed to several new environmental management goals across its 16
brands include Gucci, Stella McCartney and Puma.
The
company says this “next phase of its sustainability strategy” will be guided by
the UN Sustainable
Development Goals — a trend that is gaining traction as
corporations are finding environmental and financial benefits from
incorporating the SDGs into business strategies.
Sustainable
business models could open economic
opportunities worth up to $12 trillion by 2030, according to the
Business & Sustainable Development Commission.
Kering’s
new environmental management commitments include:
Using a
science-based approach to reduce carbon emissions from Kering’s business
activities by
50 percent
in scope 1, 2 and 3 of the GHG protocol by 2025. The company’s scope 3
emissions
include those
from upstream transportation and distribution, business air travel and fuel and
energy
use.
Addressing
all supply chain environmental impacts with a goal to reduce Kering’s
Environmental
Profit and Loss account by at least 40 percent, including the
“all remaining carbon emissions” — the company says these are scope 3 emissions
from purchased goods and services as well as raw materials at Tier 4 — as well
as water use, water and air pollution, waste production and land use changes.
Developing
a Supplier Index of Sustainability and ensuring Kering’s standards for raw
materials
and
processes are implemented by 100 percent of its suppliers by 2025. These standards
also
address
traceability, animal welfare, chemical use and social welfare. Promoting
sustainable
design and
minimizing the environmental impact of a product at every stage, from sourcing
and
manufacturing
to transportation and consumer use, and creating an open-source tool to assess
products
based on Kering’s standards.
Establishing
a materials innovation lab (MIL) focused on watches and jewellery that provides
access to sustainable material alternatives, similar to Kering’s
MIL for fabrics and textiles.
Expanding
its offsetting commitment to include a new “insetting”
approach to ensure that actions across the supply chain deliver
climate benefits as well as social value.
Kering
says its environmental impacts are already less than 45 percent of the global
average, based on businesses with comparative annual turnover. This is
according to the company’s most recent environmental
profit and loss report, which measures the environmental footprint
of Kering’s direct operations as well as across its supply chains, and placed a
monetary value on these environmental impacts.
The
company also pledged to develop an industry-leading performance metric system
that will measure achievement of the UN Sustainable
Development Goals.
“More
than ever, I am convinced that sustainability can redefine business value and
drive future growth,” said François-Henri Pinault, chairman and CEO of Kering,
in a statement. “As business leaders, we all have a crucial role to play … our
strategy outlines how we will redesign our business to continue to thrive and
prosper sustainably into the future, while at the same time helping to
transform the luxury sector and contributing to meet the significant social and
environmental challenges of our generation.”
Kering’s
commitment to link the SDGs to its business strategy follows a similar pledge
by Hewlett Packard
Enterprise — and several recent reports that find the SDGs open new
avenues for business growth across multiple sectors including infrastructure,
food and
agriculture, and information and
communication technologies, among others.
In
an HPE blog post,
Lara Birkes HPE’s chief sustainability officer and vice president, living
progress, highlighted the company’s RE100 commitment
to reach 100 percent renewable energy and its interim goal to source 50
percent of its total energy consumption from renewable sources by 2025. Both of
these advance Goal 7: Affordable and Clean Energy.
HPE
also takes a value-chain approach to mitigating its carbon footprint,
Birkes writes.
We know
that the use of our products represents the largest share (53%) of our
greenhouse gas emissions. What’s more, the majority of that footprint—mostly
related to carbon and water from energy consumption—gets transferred to our
customers during the use phase of our products. We work in support of Industry,
Innovation and Infrastructure (Goal 9) by delivering environmentally
sustainable IT through transformative products such as ProLiant servers, which
enable up to 20% energy savings. We are committed to increasing the
energy performance of our product portfolio by 30x from a 2015
baseline by 2025.
Unilever is another company incorporating sustainability into its
business plan, focusing on the SDGs.
“At
a time when our economic model is pushing the limits of our planetary
boundaries and condemning many to a future without hope, the Sustainable
Development Goals offer us a way out,” said Unilever
CEO Paul Polman in an earlier
statement. “Many are now realizing the enormous opportunities
that exist for enlightened businesses willing to stand up and address these
urgent challenges. But every day that passes is another lost opportunity for
action. We must react quickly, decisively and collectively to ensure a fairer
and more prosperous world for all.”
credit: www.environmental
leader.com
WHY KERING, HPE, UNILEVER LINK BUSINESS STRATEGIES TO THE SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT GOALS
Reviewed by Unknown
on
03:27
Rating:
Reviewed by Unknown
on
03:27
Rating:

No comments: