On Monday Unilever announced that since 2008 it has reduced greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions in its manufacturing and logistics operations by more than a million tons while also increasing sales by more than a quarter.
On Monday Unilever announced that since 2008 it has reduced greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions in its manufacturing and logistics operations by more than a million tons while also increasing sales by more than a quarter.
The milestone comes as part of the company’s Sustainable Living Plan, a 10-year initiative aimed at reducing environmental impact, improving health and well-being and promoting responsible supply chains. Much of the emissions reductions Unilever achieved came from improving manufacturing activities while also making logistic operations more efficient.
“Eco-efficiency isn’t just about reducing the environmental footprint — it also makes good business sense,” said John Maguire, Unilever’s Group Manufacturing Sustainability Director. “Since 2008 our eco-efficiency programs have avoided more than €300 million of costs. Almost €100 million in energy; €186 million in materials; €17 million in water; and €10 million in waste disposal. The benefits are very clear in a world where energy prices are increasing.”
Unilever says it plans to reduce overall energy use by improving the eco-efficiency of everything it does in its factories, offices and other operations. For instance, 100 percent of the electricity the company buys in Europe and North America comes from renewable sources.
A New Era for Brand Integrity: Navigating the Greenhush-Greenwash Spectrum
Join us as leaders from Republik, NielsenIQ, Conspirators, Henoscene, be/co, The Guardian and Room & Board analyze what newly expanded notions of brand integrity mean for brands, and how to be smarter about picking language choices that avoid the dangerous extremes of greenhushing and greenwashing — Thurs, May 9, at Brand-Led Culture Change.
The company now employs 30 biomass boilers across its operations both to cut waste and supply seven percent of its renewable energy. Unilever also built the UltraLogistik control tower in Katowice, Poland, which reduces GHG emissions by enabling more efficient coordination of thousands of transport movements across road, rail, sea and air.
To improve operation efficiency and decrease travel distance, Unilever is creating regional distribution hubs, which helped the company win a Marco Polo Grant of €5.7million to invest and develop sustainable transport of goods across Europe.
Unilever recently announced it now sustainably sources more than a third of its agricultural raw materials. In March, the company launched a new soup in France that was the first to publicize a key ingredient as sustainably sourced.
Published Apr 16, 2013 4am EDT / 1am PDT / 9am BST / 10am CEST
Managing Director, Sustainability & Social Impact
Deutsche Bank
Mike Hower is a sustainability communicator and connector committed to helping purpose-driven businesses and people unlock their full potential for positive impact. As founder and principal consultant at Hower Impact, he works with companies to translate sustainability strategy into stories that inform, engage and inspire investors, customers, employees, regulators and other stakeholders in the service of social, environmental and business goals. Through his Impact Hired initiative, he works to connect and engage corporate sustainability professionals at all stages of their careers.
(read more ...)