International Wineries for Climate Action (IWCA) has
joined the Race to
Zero campaign — a
United Nations-backed, global effort to rally leadership and support from
businesses, cities, regions and investors for a healthy, resilient, zero-carbon
recovery that prevents future threats, creates decent jobs and unlocks
inclusive, sustainable growth. IWCA becomes the first Race to Zero member
representing the wine and agricultural industry.
Launched on World Environment Day 2020 (June 5), Race to Zero aims to build
momentum around the shift to a decarbonized economy ahead of COP26 in November,
where governments must strengthen their contributions to the Paris Agreement.
All Race to Zero members are credibly committed to the same overarching
goal: halving emissions by 2030 and achieving net zero emissions by
2050,
at the very latest. To date, the campaign has mobilized a coalition of entities
with net-zero
initiatives
that represent more than 12 percent of the global economy — including 471
cities, 1,675 companies, 569 universities, and 85 investors.
“Whilst the wine industry is responsible for few emissions, it is one of the
agricultural activities most affected by global climate change,” said Nigel
Topping, UK High Level Climate Champion for COP26. “We are delighted to
welcome International Wineries for Climate Action into the Race to Zero, and
applaud their ambition to become Climate Positive by 2050.”
Founded in 2019 by renowned Spanish winemaker Familia
Torres and Jackson Family
Wines (JFW) —
one of the US’ largest wine producers, and the largest owner of coastal
vineyards in California and Oregon — IWCA is a collaborative working
group addressing climate change through innovative carbon-reduction strategies.
IWCA’s objective for all members is to achieve a 50 percent reduction in carbon
emissions by 2030 and to become climate positive by 2050 for Scopes 1-3
emissions. To bolster these efforts, IWCA recently released a Soil Health Report
for its members that provides a detailed summary of research and best practices
that IWCA member wineries are implementing to promote soil health and vineyard
carbon sequestration.
By joining the Race to Zero, IWCA will become a facilitator and champion within
the wine and agricultural industries to build momentum and support for immediate
solutions that help move wine producers and vineyard owners closer to becoming
climate positive. IWCA — currently comprised of 10 wineries from Australia,
Chile, New Zealand, Portugal, Spain and the US — says it will also
publish an annual report showing progress on its member wineries’ GHG emissions
status and goals, which is required by Race to Zero.
Gonzalo Munoz, Chilean High Level Climate Champion for COP25, stated: “As a
winemaker myself, I have a deep love and appreciation for this industry. It
brings me great joy to see wineries across the world coming together as the
first initiative of the agriculture sector in the Race to Zero emissions, and I
look forward to more companies engaging with nature-based solutions in our
journey to net zero.”
According to Julien Gervreau, VP of Sustainability at Jackson Family Wines, the
winemaker has been measuring its carbon footprint since 2008; and has reduced
absolute greenhouse gas emissions across Scopes 1-3 by 17.5 percent since 2015.
Following that progress, JFW committed to cut carbon emissions in half by 2030
and become climate positive by 2050, without the purchase of offsets.
“For us, this is one of the biggest initiatives our company has ever undertaken
and involves every aspect of our business, from light-weighting our wine
bottles, transitioning to more electric vehicles, and our significant
investment in renewable
energy,”
Gervreau said. “As the largest generator of onsite solar energy in the US wine
industry, Jackson Family Wines produces 8.6 million kWh of emissions free,
renewable electricity across 12 wineries — offsetting ~1,100 homes’ worth of
annual electricity use.”
Looking forward, Gervreau says Jackson Family Wines is developing bold
resiliency goals for 2030 and beyond to demonstrate agriculture’s ability to
create positive outcomes — with a focus on regenerative farming
practices,
holistic land management, water stewardship and social impact.
IWCA is open to any wine company that views climate change as a serious threat
and has demonstrated a commitment to help mitigate it.
Learn how your winery can qualify for IWCA membership
here.
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Sustainable Brands Staff
Published Apr 13, 2021 2pm EDT / 11am PDT / 7pm BST / 8pm CEST