LEGO Group has become the most recent corporate giant
to tie its compensation packages to progress toward its climate goals —
specifically, reducing its operational carbon emissions. But LEGO’s move is
unique in that it’s applying the new performance-management program not just to
its senior leadership — the toymaker will now incentivize and reward its entire
global, salaried workforce for contributing to its carbon-reduction targets.
In a recent
post, the
company revealed details of a new annual KPI aimed at engaging its colleagues
around the world in helping achieve its goal of reducing its absolute carbon
emissions by 37 percent by 2032 and achieving net zero by 2050.
“We have a new annual KPI to encourage colleagues to help make a positive impact
as we lower emissions across our factories, stores and offices," the post explains. "The KPI measures
carbon from our operations (scope 1 and 2 emissions) and one scope
3
emission category (business travel) and compares this with how many bricks have
been manufactured over the same period to get a carbon-intensity metric that we
can track.
“From 2024, a portion of our salaried employees' bonus payments will be tied to
annual emissions. Over time we will expand it to cover scope 3 emissions, as we
progress towards our goal to become a more sustainable business.”
A growing number of companies — including
Chipotle,
Nike,
Mars, Ralph
Lauren, Microsoft and Danone
— have committed to tying executive compensation packages to various social and
environmental KPIs. But as As You Sow pointed out
in its 2022 Pay for Climate Performance
report,
the devil is in the details of these commitments; inclusion of a measurable
climate metric and measurable pay in the long-term incentive plan — such as
linking CEO pay to quantitative emissions-reduction performance — are key to
ensuring the necessary impact and accountability.
While LEGO didn’t disclose that level of detail, including all salaried
employees in the new climate-performance management program bodes well for
broader engagement from the over 18,000
people who directly affect
LEGO’s performance on the ground — and while lower-level employees might
struggle to understand how their actions and choices could help move the needle,
their everyday operational decisions across the globe could add up to major
impacts across the company.
“Inside most businesses, only a handful of people with ‘sustainability’ in their
title consider climate issues as part of their workday. But the scope and scale
of the climate challenge calls on all of us to find our inroad,” Jamie Beck
Alexander, then-Director of Project Drawdown’s
Drawdown Labs, said in 2021 when
it released Climate Solutions at
Work
— a free playbook that aims to help global employees, regardless of their role,
step into their power and shift the private sector achieve substantive climate
action as quickly, safely and equitably as possible.
In the meantime, LEGO continues its multi-pronged
approach
to meeting its climate goals — which, on the product front, includes increasing
the sustainability of the over 60 billion bricks produced per year through
ongoing R&D into viable plastic
alternatives,
and increasing the circularity of existing LEGOs through take-back and
recycling
programs.
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Sustainable Brands Staff
Published May 21, 2024 8am EDT / 5am PDT / 1pm BST / 2pm CEST