Archive for the ‘Life Cycle Analysis’ Category

Waste Footprint and Sustainable Suppliers

Thursday, September 15th, 2011

It is important to have conversations with your suppliers in order to learn about their sustainability efforts, as well as to find information on how their products align with your company’s sustainability priorities. There are several sustainability issues relevant to products in any industry. One of those is waste footprint.

A waste footprint is the amount of waste produced by sourcing ingredients and materials, manufacturing and processing, and transportation.1 A supplier can reduce the amount of waste it produces, and it can also take steps to reduce the amount of waste produced by the consumer.

First, suppliers can reduce the amount of packaging they use, which cuts down the amount of waste disposed by consumers. Suppliers can also design packaging to lower the chance that foods goes bad.1 There are a variety of ways for companies to address their waste footprint. The important thing is to ask questions and find out what your suppliers are doing.

1http://www.greenbiz.com/news/2010/06/09/sainsburys-tests-new-technology-trim-food-waste

Campbell Soup Company Sets Updated Sustainability Goals

Friday, September 9th, 2011

Campbell Soup Co. recently released an update to its corporate social responsibility report outlining steps it has taken in CSR and identifying the goals it has set to achieve by 2020.

Among its CSR Corporate Imperative 2020 Destination Goals, are to cut the environmental footprint of its product portfolio in half as measured by water use and CO2 emissions per ton of product produced.

This destination goal has a series of supporting goals which include:

  • Reducing energy use by 35% per ton of product produced and sourcing 40% of the energy used by the company from renewable or alternative energy sources;
  • Recycling 95% of waste generated on a global basis;
  • Eliminating 100 million pounds of packaging from Campbell products;
  • Delivering 100% of global packaging from sustainable materials (renewable, recyclable, or from recycled content);
  • Reducing water use by 20% and energy use by 30% per ton in its top five agricultural ingredients.

Campbell Soup Company approaches CSR with a four-pronged, “nourishing” approach. Not only is it “Nourishing Our Planet” by cutting the environmental footprint of its product portfolio in half, as measured by water use and CO2 emissions per product, its other initiatives include “nourishing” customers, neighbors and employees.

It plans to do this by increasing the nutrition and wellness profile of its products, achieving 100% employee engagement in CSR and sustainability and by “measurably improving the health of young people in their hometown communities by reducing hunger and childhood obesity by 50%.”

Integrating sustainability into the entire company and community creates a framework where all stakeholders become aware of corporate social responsibility and sustainability initiatives and presumably will consider those when making purchasing decisions.

How are your employees engaged in sustainability?

1http://www.campbellsoupcompany.com/csr/pdfs/Campbells_2011_CSR_Report.pdf

Sustainable Packaging Takes a Front Seat

Friday, July 15th, 2011

A new global survey from DuPont of more than 500 packaging professionals shows that the need to package food, consumer and industrial products in a more sustainable and affordable way dominates the worldwide packaging industry.1

The results indicate that finding sustainable, cost-effective solutions to reduce packaging’s environmental footprint is the most important goal across the globe, especially in the food and beverage industries.1 There is not a one-size-fits-all strategy that works for every company. However, DuPont’s survey shows that there are multiple approaches companies can take to find sustainable solutions.

Of all survey respondents, 65 percent said their sustainable packaging efforts were focused on design for recyclability or use of recycled content; 57 percent are focused on weight reduction; 41 percent are focused on renewable or bio-based materials; and 25 percent are focused on compostable materials.1

As you can see, there are many pathways available to improve packaging sustainability. Choosing the right one for your company requires collaboration across your value chain. What approach does your company take to sustainable packaging?

1http://www.packagingdigest.com/article/518152-Survey_Global_packaging_community_stays_focused_on_green_.php

Taking a Resource-Focused Approach to the Supply Chain

Friday, July 8th, 2011

Ask some business leaders why their companies are pursuing sustainability and you might get the same answers over and over. “It’s good for the environment. It’s good for our corporate image. It’s the responsible thing to do.” These are important reasons, but are they the best reasons?

According to Deloitte Consulting, true sustainability leaders recognize the business value sustainability can create and they know how to capture it. Instead of pursuing sustainability simply because they are supposed to, sustainability leaders take a resource-focused approach to sustainability and the supply chain.1

By creating a resource-efficient supply chain, companies can significantly reduce costs by decreasing their use of energy, materials or water. To be most effective, however, sustainability needs to be an integral part of your company’s end-to-end operations.1 This means going beyond internal commitments and making sustainability a part of every step of your business.

If your company is just going through the motions of sustainability, you are missing out on potential cost-savings and not delivering full value to your shareholders. You are also missing an opportunity to strengthen your company’s overall brand image.

How can your company start investing in a resource-efficient supply chain?

1http://www.deloitte.com/view/en_US/us/Insights/Browse-by-Content-Type/deloitte-debates/fa4e135d9aadf210VgnVCM1000001a56f00aRCRD.htm?id=us_email_debates_051211

Unilever Ranked as Top Global Company Committed to Sustainability

Friday, May 27th, 2011

A recent poll by SustainAbility and GlobeScan shows Unilever holds the top spot for global companies most committed to sustainability. Sustainability experts from government, non-profit, academic and business sectors were asked to name the company they viewed as “committed to sustainable development, seeing strategic advantage in pursuing policies and actions which go beyond the requirements of environmental and social legislation.”1

There are a variety of reasons why these companies are seen as leaders in sustainability. The top three reasons from the SustainAbility poll were: a commitment to sustainable values; sustainable products or services; and integration of sustainable practices into a company’s business model. These factors can be used by companies to do self-evaluations of their own sustainability efforts and find areas that need improvement.

1http://www.environmentalleader.com/2011/04/12/unilever-leads-sustainability-rankings/