
Public
release date: 5-Mar-2009
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Contact: Lisa Lee
lisa.lee@cdproject.net
44-207-415-7196
Carbon Disclosure
Project
The first ever global
collaboration on climate change between major organisations and their
suppliers demonstrates the need for increased supplier awareness of the
regulatory, physical and general risks that climate change poses to their
business. Of 634 suppliers surveyed globally by the Carbon Disclosure
Project (CDP), only 58% considered that climate change posed a risk to their
operations, while one third said it posed no risk, showing there is still a
lack of understanding from suppliers of the business threats from climate
change.
Cadbury, Colgate-Palmolive,
Johnson & Johnson, Juniper Networks, P&G, Unilever and Vodafone are amongst
the 34 member companies (listed below) using the CDP system to request major
suppliers report on their carbon footprint and climate change strategies in
order to maintain a resilient and sustainable supply chain. The findings
from the 2008 CDP Supply Chain Report, written by PricewaterhouseCoopers
LLP, were released today in New York.
Between 40-60% of
organisations' total greenhouse gas emissions** are recognised as residing
outside their direct control and are found within the supply chain through
activities such as processing, packaging and transportation. It is therefore
critical that senior management understand climate change risks within their
supply chain and how suppliers are managing those risks.
This CDP process is the
first to bring together the huge purchasing power of global corporations to
provide a standard reporting model for suppliers to advance carbon
disclosure in the supply chain. Suppliers were invited to complete an
information request examining their carbon risks and opportunities,
emissions, reduction targets and plans, governance and product lifecycles.
634 suppliers responded globally, with the proportion of response rates from
invited suppliers highest from North America.
Suppliers to the 34 member
companies span multiple sectors and countries. The report indicated that
Asian suppliers are using governance and employee incentives to drive
positive action in carbon and climate change activity. Of the 77 responding
suppliers based in Asia, 66% cite board level responsibility for climate
change issues, above the 54% average. In addition 39% of responding Asian
companies reported the use of employee incentives, which can be a key lever
for change. Internal board level ownership and understanding of climate
change risks and opportunities is vital to make real progress. However
supplier engagement on climate change in Asia differs significantly by
country, with Taiwan and Japan dominating the sample and India, China and
Thailand demonstrating much lower response rates.
J.T. Wang, Chairman at
Acer, a global IT corporation headquartered in Taiwan commented: "Acer has
used CDP Supply Chain to identify suppliers' understanding of energy and
climate change, to verify the potential climate risks in the coming
carbon-constrained age and see opportunities for innovative carbon
management within the supply chain. It was notable that there was a high
level of engagement and interest from our Asian based suppliers who were
willing to work with Acer towards becoming climate-friendly suppliers."
The respondent suppliers
represented a cross section of industries, with the largest single group of
respondents (31%) in Industrials. Other industries included Retail (Consumer
Staples and Consumer Discretionary), Information Technology, Materials,
Telecoms, Utilities, Health Care, Financials and Energy.
Frances Way, Head of Supply
Chain at CDP said: "Procurement teams worldwide must take a role in
developing more sustainable business practices and embed the issue of
climate change into an organisation's core operations. Risks posed to a
company's supply chain from the impacts of climate change include extreme
weather events, water scarcity, regulation and associated cost volatility.
Companies must take steps to mitigate the impact of these risks to their
business.
"However, with the current
lack of awareness and preparedness on climate change risk there is a clear
requirement for greater collaboration with suppliers to create transparency
and also encourage a willingness to improve. This can only be done through
long term relationships, where ideas are shared and solutions developed in
partnership. Collaboration is vital if organisations are to future proof
their business."
Alan McGill, partner,
PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP sustainability and climate change practice
commented: "The report is demonstrating that sustainability governance,
planning and reporting is not a 'nice to have' – it can be the difference
between whether you win or maintain your business with major corporations.
"Business improvement, cost
reduction, long term business risk management and reduction: these are the
benefits of applying the same discipline and rigour of traditional business
processes and reporting to the supply chain. This CDP report is giving
senior management the tools to start the conversation within their own
company and with their suppliers."
The report findings confirm
that corporations do not see dealing with climate change as a one way
street. The aim of member companies through this year's CDP Supply Chain
Report was to raise supplier awareness around the importance of tackling the
business impact of climate change. Discussion on waste or emissions
reduction, product improvement, and risk management means cost and product
improvement benefits can be shared by both parties.
David Walker, Director of
Environmental Sustainability at PepsiCo commented: "The main accomplishments
achieved by participating in CDP were raising supplier awareness and driving
the supplier initiatives of establishing long-term goals and strategy
setting; suppliers now realise that climate change performance is important
to us."
Few large businesses have
yet developed an effective way of truly addressing climate change impact
within their supply chains, but it is vital that they lay the groundwork now
so they are prepared for future reporting and emissions reduction targets.
The report provides guidance for companies on managing carbon and climate
change in their supply chains, including:
###
Note to editors
**The McKinsey Quarterly
2008
The Carbon Disclosure
Project (CDP) is an independent not-for-profit organisation holding the
largest database of corporate climate change information in the world. CDP
gathers data through its annual Information Requests on behalf of 475
institutional investors with a combined asset base of $55 trillion,
purchasing organisations and government bodies. Since its formation in 2000,
CDP has become the gold standard for carbon disclosure methodology and
process, providing primary climate change data to the global market place.
CDP Supply Chain was formed
in 2007 and is a collaboration of global corporations who have extended
their climate change strategies beyond their direct corporate boundaries and
are engaging with their suppliers via CDP's annual Information Request.
More than 2,000 major
corporations around the globe report their greenhouse gas emissions and the
risks and opportunities posed by climate change through CDP.
The Carbon Disclosure
Project is a Registered Charity (no. 1122330). In the United States, CDP's
sponsor liaison is Rockefeller Philanthropy Advisors, which provides CDP
with 501(c)3 charitable status.
Member Companies
Acer; Boeing; BT Group;
Cadbury; Carrefour; CELESC; Colgate-Palmolive; Dell; Exelon; FIJI Water;
Heinz; HP; IBM; Imperial Tobacco; Johnson & Johnson; Johnson Controls;
Juniper Networks; Kellogg Company; L'Oréal; Merrill Lynch & Co; National
Grid; Newmont Mining; PepsiCo; Procter & Gamble; Prudential; Reckitt
Benckiser; Royal Mail; SSL International; Tesco; Unilever; Vale; Vodafone.
About PwC
PricewaterhouseCoopers (www.pwc.com)
provides industry-focused assurance, tax and advisory services to build
public trust and enhance value for its clients and their stakeholders. More
than 146,000 people in 150 countries across our network share their
thinking, experience and solutions to develop fresh perspectives and
practical advice. PricewaterhouseCoopers has a 15 year track record of
advising clients on sustainability and corporate responsibility issues
across its assurance, tax and advisory practices. In the past eighteen
months, the firm's dedicated sustainability and climate change practice has
doubled in size.
Additional contacts:
Joanna Lee
joanna.lee@cdproject.net
T: +44 (0)20 7415 7199; M: +44 (0)7919 074 926
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