product carbon footprints and supply chain …...and value of product footprinting advertisinggpg...
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The Geneva Association___________________________3rd CR+I Seminar 2011
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Product Carbon Footprints and Supply Chain Innovation
Jan Van der Ven
Agenda
Introduction to the Carbon Trust
PAS2050 i i d d l tPAS2050 origins and development
Practical application: labels and certificates
Examples
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The Geneva Association___________________________3rd CR+I Seminar 2011
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Our mission is to accelerate the
move to a low carbon
economy
3 3
We deliver tangible results
£3bnWe have:
Helped our customers cut 30 Mt CO2
Established the Carbon Trust Standard and Carbon Reduction Label Pioneered energy efficiency loans: £71m interest-free loans offered to SMEs during
£3bnin energy cost savings for our customers since 2001
loans offered to SMEs during 2009/10Launched £350 million fund for low carbon refurbishments of commercial buildings
The Geneva Association___________________________3rd CR+I Seminar 2011
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Our activities span multiple areas
Specialist advice and finance
Standards and accreditation
Investing in early stage low carbon companies
… over 10 years
Founded in 2001
Developed PAS 2050 and Footprint Expert guidance and tools
Global leader in product carbon footprint certification
UKAS accredited, independent and impartial
Dedicated team of certification professionals
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The Geneva Association___________________________3rd CR+I Seminar 2011
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… now reaching into South East Asia
ecoWise, a Singapore based renewable energy and environmental solutions provider, became a partner in China UK Low Carbon Enterprise this partner in China-UK Low Carbon Enterprise this year
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… with a base in Singapore
Geocycle Singapore Pte. Ltd.: largest used copper slag recycling plant in Singapore
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The Geneva Association___________________________3rd CR+I Seminar 2011
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… synergies in China
Chongqing ZhongtianElectronic Waste M t 12 Management: 12-year exclusive concession to collect, recover, process and dispose of electrical and electronic waste in Chongqing Chongqing Municipality
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… and activities in Malaysia
Sunrich Integrated: Malaysia based tyre
t d d bb retreader and rubber compound manufacturer
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The Geneva Association___________________________3rd CR+I Seminar 2011
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Agenda
Introduction to the Carbon Trust
PAS2050 i i d d l tPAS2050 origins and development
Practical application: labels and certificates
Examples
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The world’s CO2 flows are aligned with flows of goods and commodities
Total Flows (GtCO2)
4.6
2.4 10. Europe to North AmericaOther
3%
47%10
2004 Data
0.8
2.2
2.0
1.8
1.6
1.4
1.2
1.03. China to Rest of Asia
4. Russia to Europe
5. Rest of Asia to Europe
6. North America to Europe
7. China to Japan
8. Africa to Europe
9. Rest of Asiato North America
7%
6%
5%
4%
4%
4%
4%
8
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
9
Note: Rest of Asia excludes China, Japan and IndiaData includes flow of Scope 1-3 (direct, indirect and upstream) emissions arising in region of export that are embodied in trade flows to the region of importSource: Carbon Trust Analysis; CICERO / SEI / CMU GTAP7 EEBT Model
0.6
0.4
0.2
0.0
1. China to North America
2. China to Europe
9%
8%
~50% of the carbon flows are in commodities and ~50% in products
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The Geneva Association___________________________3rd CR+I Seminar 2011
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By 2025, the UK’s imports could have as much carbon embodied as its domestic production
900
1,000Consumption(low decarbonisationworld)
Emissions(MtCO2)
908870
844844845
CAGR (92-25)7% 17% 25% 31% 36% 43% 49%
200
300
400
500
600
700
800
world)
Production
Net imports
Consumption(high decarbonisationworld)
463
340-444(73-96%)
499
304-371(61-74%)
844
540
269-304(50-56%)
844
584
246-261(42-45%)
845
632
213(34%)
730
608
122(20%)
663
619
43(7%)
0.7%
(0.9%)
7-8%
1.0%
0
100
200
2025202020152010200419981992
Note 1: Declining UK production emissions based on CO2 reduction involved in UK achieving 2020 carbon budget for CO2e reduction of 34% vs 1990 levels (Committee on Climate Change)Note 2: Growth in imported emissions based on continuation of historic growth in UK trade balance, and varying degrees of decarbonisation in the exporting countries. In the “high world decarbonisation” scenario it is assumed that the emissions intensity of exports from Brazil, Russia, India and China (BRIC nations) decline in line with the targets noted in the Copenhagen Accord (2009), that exports from the EU and other Annex I nations decline in line with the EU’s target to reduce emissions by 20% from 1990-2020, and that exports from the rest of the world achieve decarbonisation of the order of half that achieve in the BRIC countries. In the “low decarbonisation” scenario is assumed that the EU hits its targets as stated in the “high decarbonisation scenario”, that all other Annex I nations and the BRIC nations achieve half the level of decarbonisation as in the “high decarbonisation” scenario, and that the rest of the world does not decarbonise at allSource: Carbon Trust Analysis
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2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012
PAS 2050 is the world’s first published standard
PAS 2050
WRI/WBCSD
ISO 14067ISO 14067
EU Methodology
Sustainability Consortium
14= review published
= published
The Geneva Association___________________________3rd CR+I Seminar 2011
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PAS = Publicly Available Specification
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Footprint Expert is a practical guide
Guide
Framework
Calculators
Database
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The Geneva Association___________________________3rd CR+I Seminar 2011
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Code of Good Practice provides additional guidance
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Agenda
Introduction to the Carbon Trust
PAS2050 i i d d l tPAS2050 origins and development
Practical application: labels and certificates
Examples
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The Geneva Association___________________________3rd CR+I Seminar 2011
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Demonstrate your commitment to reduce the footprint of your product over 2 years
The Carbon Reduction Label engages customers
Commitment Explanation
Optional Number
Consumer Action
The Carbon Reduction Label can be used in more than one way
On pack Point of sale Online Sales
literaturePress
release
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The Geneva Association___________________________3rd CR+I Seminar 2011
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Product carbon footprint certification provides multiple benefits
Certify greenhouse gas emissions of products and services for all stages of the value chain (to PAS 2050; Code of g ( ;Good Practice; Footprint Expert)
Enable low-risk communication of the results to customers
Provide comparability over your product range
Identify and understand carbon hotspots in your supply chain
Raw material Product manufacturing
Distribution & retail Consumer use Disposal &
recycling
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Local teamin partnership with Carbon Trust
Carbon Trust Footprinting Certification Company
Product footprinting involves a local team and centralized certification
Train Footprint Certify Communicate
Certify footprints to:PAS 2050Footprint ExpertTM
Create footprints:Choose top productsCollect data using standard guidelines for
Code of Good Practiceg g
consistency/ accuracyBuild product model using Footprint ExpertTM toolkitExpert advice, support, and training provided by the Carbon Trust
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The Geneva Association___________________________3rd CR+I Seminar 2011
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The Carbon Reduction Label is licensed in 19 countries
Over 5,700 productsSales ~ £3 billion / year
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y
Agenda
Introduction to the Carbon Trust
PAS2050 origins and development
Practical application: labels and certificates
Examples
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The Geneva Association___________________________3rd CR+I Seminar 2011
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45%of UK consumers
Consumer carbon consciousness is growing
56%of UK consumers say they
say they would be prepared to stop buying their favourite brands if they refused to commit to
i th i
Source: Carbon Trust research, March 201125
of UK consumers say they would be more loyal to a brand if they could see that it was taking steps to reduce its carbon footprint
measuring their product's carbon footprint
47%of say they are more likely to buy labelled y ygoods of identical quality
1 in 5say they would buy a say they would buy a labelled product even if it cost more!
Source: Carbon Trust research, March 2011
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The Geneva Association___________________________3rd CR+I Seminar 2011
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Consumer goods: Coca Cola
Recognised the importance and value of Product FootprintingAdvertising campaign to g p gincrease recycling, based on footprinting results
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Consumer goods: Walkers
Products: Assorted single-packet crispsOutcome: Identified that 59% of carbon
emissions were outside their operations and 41% inside
Reduction: Recertified footprint shows 7% reduction on 2007 footprint
Highlights: Saved £400,000; reinvested in further carbon-saving i iti tiinitiatives
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The Geneva Association___________________________3rd CR+I Seminar 2011
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Retailer: TESCO
Products: Over 500 own-brand productsOutcome: Providing consumers with low-
bon p h ing hoi ecarbon purchasing choicesIdentifying energy and money saving actions for end users
Highlights: Key part of continued commitment to reduce emissions of products by 30% and to help customers reduce their own footprints by 50% t e o ootp ts by 50%by 2020
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Supply Chain Analysis: Allied Bakeries
Products: Kingsmill Great Everyday White, Tasty Wholemeal, and 50/50 loaves
Outcome: Detailed supply chain analysis used as basis for cost reductions and efficiency improvements
Highlights: Working with suppliers to reduce road miles of raw inputs
Shifting to local production to reduce logistics costs and carbon emissions
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The Geneva Association___________________________3rd CR+I Seminar 2011
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B2B products: Suzano Papel e Celulose
Products: Assorted pulp and paper products
Outcome: Gained full understanding of carbon hotspots in pulp and carbon hotspots in pulp and paper production
Highlights: First pulp and paper products company in the world and the first product of any kind from Latin America to be awarded the Carbon Reduction Label
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Premium Products: New Zealand Wine Company
Products: 750ml bottles of Mobius Sauvignon Blanc wine
Outcome: Gained full understanding of carbon hotspots in wine life cycle
Highlights: First wine in the world and the first product of any kind from New Zealand to be awarded the Carbon Reduction LabelReduction Label
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The Geneva Association___________________________3rd CR+I Seminar 2011
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Industrial Products: CEMEX
Products: Bagged and bulk Rugby cement
Outcome: Carbon Reduction Label demonstrates progress in reducing manufacturing process carbon
Highlights: Measured cradle-to-grave footprint of cement incl ding cement, including extraction of raw materials, manufacturing, distribution, use, and disposal
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Accelerating the move to a low carbon economy加速向低碳经济的转型