Posted - January 31, 2013 - Jonathan Morris, Associate, Advisory Services - BSR
It is widely accepted that as a significant contributor to global
carbon emissions, the transport sector needs to make environmental
improvements in the pursuit of creating a low-carbon economy. Today,
around 4 percent of global emissions come from ocean shipping—about
equivalent to that of aviation. For global brands, this translates to
significant carbon impacts in their own supply chains: Up to 70 percent
of carbon emissions during a cargo journey come from the ocean segment.
While the International Maritime Organization has yet to establish a
regulatory framework for carbon emissions, the European Commission and
various national governments are leaning heavily toward implementing
mandatory data measurement, reporting, and verification mechanisms.
Indeed, in October 2013, France will enact a law requiring that all
carriers providing transport services to and from France provide the
carbon footprint of the transport service.
Leading global brands are now setting ambitious targets to reduce
emissions from their logistics networks—signaling the increasing
relevance of emerging regulations and other drivers. But how can these
brands understand and manage how and where to reduce carbon emissions
reductions in their logistics chains?
In a recent webinar hosted by partner 2Degrees Network,
BSR’s Transport and Logistics practice lead Angie Farrag spoke with
Willem Jan Beerthuis, Heineken’s global procurement buyer, and Mads
Stensen, Maersk Line’s global advisor for the environment and CSR, about
how their participation in BSR's Clean Cargo Working Group helps
them measure and report on the environmental impacts in ocean
transportation and across the modal chain. The speakers highlighted how
Clean Cargo allows them to measure these impacts in a credible,
consistent, and comparable way that enhances better business decision
making.
Post to be found at:
http://www.bsr.org/en/our-insights/blog-view/why-company-collaboration-on-shipping-emissions-is-increasingly-significant
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1 comment:
Hi, blog author here. First off, thank you for the repost! Would you be so kind as to change the company name to BSR (rather than "Business for the a Better World). BSR stands for Business for Social Responsibility. I would be happy to discuss further, if you'd like. Thanks. -Jonathan
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