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announces its plans to accelerate its commitment to combat climate change with a pledge to achieve net-zero greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions across its own operations (Scopes 1 and 2) and supplychain (Scope 3) by 2040 in accordance with the Science Based Targets Initiative’s (SBTi) Net-Zero Standard. Tiffany & Co.
Without the intention to offend brewers, I think what helps is that our supplychain at Heineken is pretty simple. If companies with a simple supplychain cannot go to climate zero, then what can we expect from the more complex industries making more than 100 or 1000 different products or high tech or whatever?
Mondelēz 2022 Snacking Made Right Report Assessing Our Carbon Footprint We take a thorough approach following the internationally recognized Greenhouse Gas Protocol (GHG Protocol) Standards to calculate, annually, our total carbon footprint across our end-to- end supplychain, covering Scopes 1, 2, and 3.
Then we carried out research and analysis, much of it based on workshops that we led for other stakeholders and industry experts, including leading architects, national green building organisations, engineering firms and manufacturers for the construction industry. This is summarised on P100 of the report here.
It sought to identify best practices and solutions, including regulatory mechanisms and other approaches needed to design value chains that reduce negative international spillover effects – environmental, social or economic – particularly for developing countries. It contributed to the review of SDG 9 during the HLPF and the SDG Summit.
Plans for tree-planting programs have been postponed; workshops for sustainability employment training are on hold; and community gatherings for local environmental projects are on hiatus. . It also illuminated challenges and opportunities previously obscured in the blurred corners of complex and interconnected global supplychains.
It will seek to identify best practices and solutions, including regulatory mechanisms and other approaches needed to design value chains that reduce negative international spillover effects – environmental, social or economic – particularly for developing countries.
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