Vancouver Sun

Wal-Mart sets environmen­tal blueprint

- ANNE D’INNOCENZIO

Wal-Mart is laying out its environmen­tal map for the next several years as it tries to satisfy customers who want green products at affordable prices.

The world’s largest retailer says it will seek to reduce emissions in its own operations by 18 per cent by 2025, and work toward adding no waste to landfills in key markets like Canada and the United States. It also plans to be powered by 50 per cent clean and renewable energy sources.

Wal-Mart’s goals, announced Friday by CEO Doug McMillon, follow a plan set in 2005 as the company sought to deflect criticism of its practices and burnish its image. Wal-Mart has extended its effort since then into its supply chain, which because of its size — more than 10,000 stores globally — gives it outsized influence on the overall industry. The retailer is under pressure from consumers, especially millennial­s, who want environmen­tally friendly items. Wal-Mart is looking at technology that will let shoppers scan food to learn its origins and other informatio­n, beyond just tagging products with “green labels.”

Kathleen McLaughlin, a WalMart senior vice-president, said she couldn’t estimate how much the programs will save or cost. While they have an impact on society, they also make good business sense, she said. Some areas of focus include:

SUSTAINABI­LITY: The company will use a combinatio­n of energyeffi­ciency measures and expand its use of clean and renewable sources to reduce emissions in its operations. Wal-Mart says it will be the first retailer to have an emissionsr­eduction plan approved by the Science Based Targets initiative in partnershi­p with the Paris Climate Agreement in December 2015. The Science-Based Targets initiative is a partnershi­p with World Wildlife Fund, World Resources Institute and others. Wal-Mart will also work with suppliers to scale back emissions by one gigaton by 2030, which it says is equivalent to taking 211 million cars from the road a year.

Wal-Mart says it hopes to be adding zero waste to landfills in Canada, Japan, the United Kingdom and the United States by 2025. It plans to refine how it buys food so less of it goes unsold, and any that does is converted to pet food or fertilizer­s or diverted to charities.

PRODUCTS: The company wants its private-brand packaging to be 100 per cent recyclable. It also plans to double sales of locally grown produce by 2025. It’s also working with suppliers and its privatelab­el products to eliminate certified synthetic colours and artificial flavours and get rid of other food additives where possible.

WORKERS: Wal-Mart plans to work with industry groups and others to ensure that workers globally in sec- tors like seafood, produce, clothing and electronic­s are not forced to pay fees to land jobs and are not taken advantage of by recruiting agents. It plans to train suppliers to monitor whether workers are being exploited.

Diane Regas, executive director at the Environmen­tal Defense Fund, says Wal-Mart deserves credit for more than meeting its sustainabi­lity commitment. “I think that surprises people,” Regas said, but added, “There is a huge amount more to be done.”

 ?? JAMES MASTERS ?? Wal-Mart is working toward adding no waste to landfills in markets like Canada and the United States by 2025 and plans to be powered by 50 per cent clean, renewable energy sources.
JAMES MASTERS Wal-Mart is working toward adding no waste to landfills in markets like Canada and the United States by 2025 and plans to be powered by 50 per cent clean, renewable energy sources.

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