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on February 20, 2009 at 3:33:24 pm
 

 

Introduction

 

Reducing impact on climate change is a challenge many companies are trying to tackle.  Businesses need to take a leadership role in reducing carbon footprint across the globe.  Leading companies that develop a comprehensive strategy will save money, increase productivity and gain a competitive edge over those that fail to make any changes. The good news is many organizations are up for the challenge but many are unsure of where to begin among the myriad of activities on the table.

 

This paper proposes a framework to facilitate development of a sustainability strategy. The framework can be used to evaluate the overall scope of current sustainability initiatives, and identify and recommend new actions.  It can also be used to provide a structure for critical analysis of an organization’s existing sustainability strategy. The approach was developed from examples of programs at BT and from partners and suppliers that are committed to making a difference.

 

The framework may be applied to the economic, social and environmental sustainability of the communities in which companies operate. However, for consistency, this paper’s illustrative examples reflect environmental sustainability. Particularly, the examples are drawn from carbon emissions reduction.

 

Four broad dimensions of potential action are identified and represented diagrammatically by four concentric circles as shown in Figure 1.

 

 

 

Direct - the emissions due to the energy consumed and paid for by the company (directly or indirectly) to carry out its activities.

 

Products In Life - the emissions due to the energy consumption of a company’s products and services once in the hands of the consumer, or end-user.

 

Enabled Impact - the impact that a company’s products or services have on the energy consumption and emissions of the entity that utilizes the product other than the consumption of the product itself.

 

Inform and Influence - the opportunity to inform or influence stakeholders on environmental issues and their impact on the stakeholder and on the company.

 

The paper concludes that different industry sectors have contrasting material impact in different dimensions of the framework; that effective sustainability impact comes from taking a consistent approach across all the material dimensions for that company and that most attention should be focused on those segments that are most material.   The corollary being that taking conflicting positions on sustainability in different dimensions can be a strong indicator of what has become known as greenwash.

 

 

Direct Impact

 

The bullseye of the illustration depicted in Figure 1, represents the direct impact that a company has on environmental sustainability. It is defined by the emissions due to the energy consumed and paid for by the company (directly or indirectly) to carry out its activities.

  

Direct emissions are probably the best known of the four dimensions in this framework and are most commonly considered to be defined by the greenhouse gas emissions (GHG) guidelines. This includes carbon emissions resulting from on site power generation, electricity consumption, fuel usage, travel fleet operations and other activities that are directly carried out by the corporation or on its behalf.  Objectives are quantifiable and there are a growing number of consultancies and software packages that specialize in collecting and presenting this data.  Measurable objectives can be set using intensity or absolute targets with many organizations now aiming to be carbon neutral by a certain date.  

 

Partly because of these available structural approaches, direct emissions are where companies often focus their initial attention.

 

For example, at BT, using UK reporting guidelines, direct carbon footprint was reduced from 1.6M tonnes to 0.6M tonnes between 1996 and 2008.  This was achieved through a combination of business process change, energy efficiency measures and renewables.

 

A significant proportion of that reduction has been enabled by vendors.  This is reflected in the supplier wedge shown in Figure 1.  For example, as part of the BT’s 21st Century Network design, work with vendors enabled an increase in the operating temperature of network data centers and so a reduction in the energy consumed.  [see sidebar ‘Thinking Out of the box’]  PepsiCo has a comprehensive engagement program with its vendors which includes an annual sustainability summit, support from PepsiCo consultants to develop environmental plans, a vendor questionnaire and a commitment to recognize and reward vendor action on sustainability priorities.

 

ICT1 companies tend to have smaller direct footprints than those in transport, manufacturing and energy, so why focus so much attention on this dimension of action?   Direct emissions reductions provide the experience and mandate for a company to actively work with its customers and other stakeholders on other ways to reduce their emissions.

 

Products In-Life

  

Products in-life comprises the emissions a company’s products and services have once in the hands of the consumer, or other end-user. While the products of some industry sectors have little or no energy consumption in use and so very minor in-life carbon emissions, others have significant in-life emissions. The fuel or electricity used to power these products is paid for by the end-user and so is the end-user’s direct footprint.  The consumer has some control over consumption; leaving a computer on standby or switching it off, speed and acceleration in a car, using rechargeable or disposable batteries, etc. However, although the consumption may be significantly influenced by the end-user, the manufacturer is very much complicit in the emissions (or other environmental impact) through the availability of the product, the way it is designed and the guidance provided for its use. 

 

For many businesses, product in-life emissions can be far greater than direct emissions.  Looking at the 2006-07 corporate social responsibility report from Ford shows that their direct emissions in 2005 were about 8M tons CO2.  In contrast, product in-life emissions - through the fuel usage of their on road fleet across the world were about 407M tons.  For a telecommunications company selling routers and phones, direct and product in-life 

emissions are of a similar order of comparative magnitude to each other. For a clothing company, whose product does not consume energy once in the hands of a customer, in-life emissions may be zero.

 

Where in-life emissions are significant, actions can be taken by businesses to reduce them. Ford’s sustainability report identifies the actions they are taking, and all enlightened ICT companies are working to reduce the consumption of their products and give the end user more control in reducing consumption though such features as standby modes.

 

As with direct impact, suppliers can also play a significant role in reducing in-life impact. While many companies outsource their product manufacturing, this does not diminish their responsibility for specifying the product characteristics.  For example, early in 2008 BT started a six month program to replace the entire range of DECT2  phones with a new line of phones with about half the energy consumption of their predecessors.  This resulted from working with vendors in the prior year on product redesign. Hence, in the chart, the supplier wedge intrudes into both the direct and product in-life categories.

 

For industry sectors with little or no impact in this category, focus should remain on direct emissions.

 

Enabled Impact

 

Enabled Impact is the third concentric circle.  In contrast to in-life impact, which addresses the energy consumption of the device or service itself, enabled impact focuses on the impact that a product or service  has on other aspects of the energy consumption and emissions of the entity (the individual, company or community) that utilize the device or service.

 

BT completed a study with Forum for the Future in 2004, which showed that the rollout of broadband services increased the propensity of customers to buy and to use a range of other energy dependent electronic equipment.  While that equipment included computers and peripherals not purchased from BT -- so not in-life impact - their usage was enabled or even encouraged by our rollout of broadband, hence the term enabled impact.

 

Fortunately, in the ICT sector this increased energy usage is more than offset by a beneficial impact of the ICT industry as a whole.  Many papers have been written on the positive enabled impact of ICT services3. The best known example is using teleconferencing instead of traveling for meetings. The teleconferencing service requires electricity to power it and so has an associated emissions burden. But, compared to the emissions reduction resulting from avoiding travel, that burden is small.  The side bar “ICT Sector as an Enabler” describes some of the many other examples of enabled benefit in the ICT industry.  Estimates of the enabled beneficial impact of the industry range from 5 times to 15 times the burden of the industry. Actions with the enabled dimension are therefore among the most material ways in which the ICT industry can impact global emissions.

 

There are many examples of products and services with enabled benefits outside of the ICT sector ranging from a lubricant that improves the energy efficiency of a production line to a sophisticated process reengineering consultancy service.   Opportunities for action in the enabled dimension tend to fall into one of three categories (1) efficiency improvement of an existing service (2) substitution for a more energy intensive service and (3) environmental services.

 

Inform and Influence

 

The outer ring of our framework is the opportunity to inform and influence the actions of others for the purpose of reducing negative impact on the environment.  Unlike the earlier three categories, this one cannot be quantified.  However it is equally as important. A company’s actions to inform and influence its stakeholders can help remove the hurdles which companies sometimes find themselves facing where scope of action is restricted by

the real or perceived limitations placed on them by shareholders and customers. The wrong actions in this area can also be the test of what has become known as ‘greenwash’.

 

Inform and influence can be considered with respect to all of a company’s stakeholder groups including customers, employees, government and shareholders.

 

Opportunity to inform public opinion is probably the most material opportunity to impact climate change for media and communications companies.   NewsCorp is probably one of the best examples of a media company taking a public stance on this.  In addition to commitments to reduce their own carbon footprint NewsCorp have made a public commitment to

 

“Engage our employees, our business partners and our audiences on the issues of energy use and climate change”

 

Companies with a well recognized consumer brand name also have a significant opportunity to inform customer and public opinion.  This can take the form of publicizing their own commitments and activities, providing tools, such as carbon calculators, and even providing marketing incentives for the public to take action. 

 

BT uses its brand in the UK to engage the general public through a range of tools including calculators, games and competitions.

 

Xerox provides a calculator designed to document the impact of the services provided by the company that allows customers to make a quick, Web-based assessment of how-to advice on smart ways to make offices greener. 

 

Similarly, Nortel’s energy calculator is a more explicit demonstration of energy savings for competitive differentiation.

 

For the employee stakeholder representative engagement efforts include grass roots programs, websites and competitions, among others.  Walmart has a PSP (Personal Responsibilities Program) which includes encouraging employees to put forward plans for improving sustainability in stores.  BT runs a program called carbon clubs. 

 

What are the most engaged companies doing in the employee space?  They are educating their people not only on the actions they can take in the workplace, but about those they can also take at home and in other aspects of their personal lives.  At BT, staff is encouraged to take action outside of the workplace through a Living Lightly program.  HP provides a subsidy and a program to incentivize employees to implement solar installations at home.

 

Traditionally, most companies have focused their government interactions on activities that are deemed core to their immediate business.  As climate change and other areas of sustainability become more top-of-mind, we are seeing that focus broaden.   In the UK, for example, a group of prominent companies, including BP, BT, Ford and Barclays, formed a Climate Change Task Force under the auspices of the Confederation of British Industry to present the corporate perspective on climate change to government leaders. According to their report:

 

“The best question for the business community is whether we can be certain that climate change presents a substantial risk; a risk that will have a profound impact on society and the economy? To this the answer is clearly 'yes'. And so, as with all substantial risks, it is vital to mitigate the danger……..Any response to the threat of climate change requires three components for success. Politicians must give much greater priority to the subject, and not just on an 

ad hoc basis. Consumers have to be empowered to make the right decisions and need to be given the facts to make informed judgments. And business must become green to grow.”

 

This initiative represents a compelling example of the role of business in informing and influencing government in this area.

 

Informing shareholders is vital to ensure their understanding and support for key actions.  For many companies that are active in this area, this is accomplished through the annual sustainability report. Statements such as follows from the 2008 sustainability report of Omron, Japanese manufacturer of sensing devices and control systems make unequivocal the company’s position on a key sustainability issue and help inform the views of the shareholder;

 

“As reported by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), the fight against global warming is considered to be one of society’s most urgent issues. Reflecting this belief…….we are determined to promote anti-global warming measures as our most important management objective……..“.

 

Companies often state that they can take only as much action as their shareholders and customers will tolerate and as government legislation will enable. But those same companies are able to inform and influence those stakeholders. In fact they are often expert at doing that through core competencies in marketing, employee communications, government relations and investor relations.  Including action in the inform and influence category is a critical component of a comprehensive sustainability program.

 

Conclusion

 

The framework identifies four discrete segments of a holistic approach to sustainability. As the examples hopefully illustrate, different industry sectors have different material impacts against the four categories of the framework.  The biggest impact of a food and nutrition company is direct emissions – and much of that might be due to supply chain.  The auto industry, in contrast, has its biggest impact through product in-life emissions.  A telecommunications company like BT has the greatest impact through its positive impact on enabled emissions and a media company like NewsCorp, in turn, through its ability to inform and influence the public.

 

Companies should be able to quantify their impact in each of the first three dimensions and map their activities against the materiality of that category. Such an analysis will help identify what organizations should be doing and contrast this with what they are doing in each space.  The top priorities and gaps will become evident.

 

The framework also serves as a tool for testing whether a company is truly consistent in its approach to sustainability. While action is not required in every category on a specific issue, inconsistent action across the categories of the framework deserves careful attention.  In most cases, a company should consider starting its activities

in the central category to gain knowledge and experience, and work outwards from there.  Skipping action within a category may be appropriate because there is no impact in that space, but it may also indicate lack of commitment.

 

Also important is inconsistency between action in the outer ring of inform and influence and action in the three inner rings.  Action in inform and influence that is intended to improve sales or brand, without equivalent level of action in the three inner categories effectively defines ‘greenwash’ in the environmental sustainability arena.  Companies guilty of this form of misrepresentation present a green façade to their stakeholders, while operating in a manner that pays little or no heed to the actual impact of their actions.  Likewise,   positive action in the central ring/s while continuing material negative actions in outer rings; lobbying against appropriate regulation or reducing direct footprint while continuing to produce ever less efficient products for example, is counterproductive for the environment and should be called out by stakeholders.

 

This framework is intended to provide a consistent model that allows for introspection within a company, comparison with companies within a sector and across sectors and critical analysis from external observers. In so doing it strives to add to the tools available to continually improve sustainability within the business world.

 

 

 

 

 

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