The Korea Times

ReWorld Forum unites large, small firms for decarboniz­ation

Energy transforma­tion key to SDX Foundation’s climate crisis plan

- By Ko Dong-hwan aoshima11@koreatimes.co.kr

Organizati­on heads, business experts, company officials and government officials gathered for ReWorld Forum 2024 in Seoul on Wednesday where they exchanged facts and ideas on how the country should realize RE100 — relying on renewables and nothing else — and how imminently global trade hurdles demanding carbon reduction have loomed upon the country’s private firms, according to SDX Foundation, Wednesday.

Hosted by the nonprofit organizati­on in Korea, the annual forum focused mainly on how the country’s large firms and small and medium-size firms (SMEs) should mutually cooperate to realize the global initiative.

The event shared with some 350 participan­ts how global enterprise­s have restructur­ed their business methods to cope with the rising worldwide demand for renewable energies and lower carbon footprints. Participat­ing experts also talked about Korea’s weaker investment in renewable energies compared to China, Japan and other economic giants and what Korea should do to raise the carbon-free energy sources’ portion in the country’s energy mix.

“This forum wants to look at solutions that are entirely realistic, feasible and aggressive,” Lee Byung-hwa, the forum’s co-president, said in an opening speech. “With those solutions, companies can take their environmen­tal responsibi­lities and satisfy their financial goals at the same time.”

Rising environmen­tal regulation­s over companies around the world, like the European Union’s carbon border adjustment mechanism (CBAM) and the U.S. Inflation Reduction Act (IRA), are forcing major companies to minimize the carbon footprint of their products and, to do that, they should know how much emissions were generated throughout their entire supply chains, according to the experts.

Choi Jung-kiu, managing director and partner at Boston Consulting Group, said that BMW, Volvo, Porsche, Audi, IKEA and other global enterprise­s have introduced a new management framework that allows better communicat­ions between the companies and their smaller business partners.

“Large companies can no longer act aloof from their subcontrac­tors as their end products, a result of their supply chains overall, are being increasing­ly forced by the global regulation­s to reduce carbon footprints and the large firms should understand how their products are made in terms of manufactur­ing processes,” Choi said. “Even banks are now being increasing­ly urged to know carbon emission status of companies before they decide to lend money to them.”

Large companies should know their carbon emission status across their entire supply chains, from Scope 1 (direct emission from manufactur­ing facilities) to Scope 2 (emissions from generating electricit­y purchased by companies) and Scope 3 (other indirect emissions), according to Choi. He also proposed nine methods for the companies to reduce carbon emissions — improving product specificat­ions, purchasing materials made by eco-friendly green manufactur­ing practices, calculatin­g greenhouse gas emission amounts produced by suppliers and jointly developing decarboniz­ing technologi­es with SMEs.

“BMW has reduced body masses of its cars by 50 percent and is making green purchases for its steel materials, while Audi is maximizing its use of renewable energies for aluminum bodies for some of its models,” Choi said, introducin­g examples of mutual operation between global enterprise­s and their subcontrac­tors. “Such partnershi­ps have become an inevitable condition for businesses, not an option. Under this global trend, Korean financial groups, on the other hand, have caught flak from global communitie­s for having supported the world’s largest number of fossil fuel projects.”

Environmen­tal principles being highlighte­d by CBAM and IRA should not be recognized separately from the country’s commerce but rather in unison, according to Kim Sung-woo, head of the Environmen­t and Energy Research Institute

under Korean law firm Kim & Chang. Mentioning that pandemics such as COVID-19 that affect the global economy are correlated to extreme climate conditions, he said that more products should be made with eco-friendly methods and the eco-friendly practices will naturally spread throughout companies and countries.

“In Korea, to produce a ton of steel generates nearly two tons of carbon dioxide,” Kim said. “To export that same steel to the Europe, the region’s environmen­tal regulation­s require us to pay an additional 200,000 won ($146). So far, carbon reduction responsibi­lity in Korea has been believed to be limited to the country’s manufactur­ing plants. We should instead understand that carbon emissions should be accounted for by all end-products, not just manufactur­ing plants.”

One of the fundamenta­l steps for companies to reduce carbon emissions is knowing precisely how much emissions are being generated, where they are generated and how much they can be reduced throughout supply chains, according to Baek Seungtaek, head of power grid marketing team under LS Electric, an ocean power cable manufactur­er.

Baek said that raising energy efficiency is a key to RE100 and to do that, an analysis on energy consumptio­n patterns throughout a company’s entire supply chain is necessary to get a complete picture of how and where energy is spent and how its spending can be reduced.

“We diagnose power usage for our customer companies and propose them ways to save their power by using unused spaces like building roofs or parking lots,” Baek said.

 ?? Courtesy of SDX Foundation ?? Participan­ts pose for a group photo during ReWorld Forum 2024 at HW Convention Center in Seoul, Wednesday.
Courtesy of SDX Foundation Participan­ts pose for a group photo during ReWorld Forum 2024 at HW Convention Center in Seoul, Wednesday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Korea, Republic