Bangkok Post

US big-box stores barrel towards solar

Target and Walmart are trying to out-green each other in proving to customers they are environmen­tally responsibl­e businesses. By Bruce Horovitz

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Target Corp’s famous bull’s-eye is so cosmically linked with the brand that it’s hard to imagine the retail behemoth ever messing with the logo’s red colour. But over the past decade — under pressure from customers, shareholde­rs and employees — Targetr’s retail future is morphing into a very different hue: eco-green.

The Minneapoli­s-based retailer best known for its trendy, privatelab­el brands and its millennial-friendly prices has very publicly embraced the renewable energy passions of its millennial-heavy consumer base and is adding rooftop solar panels to its stores to generate renewable electricit­y at a breathtaki­ng pace.

Target is so serious about being viewed as a friend of the planet that by November it will have erected rooftop solar panels on 500 of its stores in the United States. That’s more than onequarter of its total of 1,855 stores, and it expects to reach that goal one year earlier than projected.

By the end of 2019, Target will have achieved 25% of its mission to attain 100% renewable electricit­y in its stores — and this just months after announcing the pledge.

In its relentless bid to out-green arch-rival Walmart Inc, Target also has ranked No. 1 in on-site solar capacity for three years in a row in the Solar Energy Industries Associatio­n’s Solar Means Business report, a survey of corporate solar users.

“We view this as one of the most important things we can do,” said Mark Schindele, senior vice president of properties. “The headline we are focused on is this: What’s most important to Target’s guests?”

A recurring answer: sustainabi­lity. Nearly three in four Target customers say that sustainabi­lity is “extremely” or “very” important to them, according to a customer study completed last autumn.

At a time when the federal government is increasing­ly stepping away from addressing issues like sustainabi­lity and climate change, corporate America is stepping up.

Retail giants from Target to Walmart to Amazon.com Inc, and tech titans from Apple Inc to Google to Facebook, are taking action to respond because it’s good for business and good for corporate image. For many consumers, addressing core issues like climate change and sustainabi­lity go hand-inhand with attracting their business.

“Going green has never looked so good — or cost so little. Solar power is almost 90% cheaper than it was 10 years ago and wind power is about 70% cheaper,’’ said Gregory Wetstone, president and chief executive of the American Council on Renewable Energy, a non-profit that promotes the transition to renewable power.

That explains why companies in the United States purchased three times as much power generated from solar and wind energy in 2018 than they did the year before.

“Every aspect of retailing’s machine is going to be modernised and ultimately energised green,” said Marshal Cohen, chief retail industry analyst at The NPD Group, a research and consulting specialist.

“This green evolution not only applies to energy use, but everything from packaging to fuel consumptio­n during delivery, he said. “Retailers will chase greenness to be viewed as part of their DNA.”

This has left many of the world’s biggest companies falling all over themselves to embrace solar power, wind power and other renewables. But over the past decade, major retailers like Target and Walmart, who use vast quantities of energy in their stores, have gone from sticking a toe in the water to diving in headfirst.

“Target and Walmart are competing over who can be greener,” Wetstone said. “Besides saving serious money on energy costs, there are tremendous business advantages from having customers understand that you walk the walk.”

Which may explain why since mid-2017, Target’s distributi­on centre in Phoenix has been outfitted with a massive solar panel display designed in the shape of Target’s bull’s-eye logo.

The solar panel display — which stretches the distance of seven football fields — can be seen by passengers arriving and departing on flights at nearby Phoenix Sky Harbor Internatio­nal Airport.

Because Target is so widely recognised for its design capabiliti­es, designing the solar panels in the shape of Target’s logo was a no-brainer, Schindele said.

But Walmart is right on Target’s tail. It also has set a long-term goal of using 100% renewable energy.

“We know this is on the minds of our customers,” said Laura Phillips, senior vice president of sustainabi­lity at Walmart.

By 2025, Walmart aims to power 50% of its operations with renewable energy through on-site installati­ons and purchases from external power providers.

“That helps to explain why companies purchased three times as much renewable power last year than they did the year before,’’ Wetstone said.

They purchased 8.6 gigawatts of solar and wind power in 2018, which is enough to power 2.2 million American homes annually, according to the American Council on Renewable Energy.

Unlike Target, whose stores are all domestic, Walmart has renewable energy projects all over the world from South Africa to China to India.

In India, rooftop solar power is in 90% of its buildings. And in China, Walmart recently placed a rooftop solar project at a Sam’s Club store in Jiangxi province.

“Worldwide, Walmart has 136 projects under developmen­t that will generate another two billion kilowatts of renewable energy,’’ Phillips said.

And via a supplier-focused initiative that Walmart calls Project Gigaton, the retailer is working to avoid one billion metric tonnes (a gigaton) of greenhouse gases from the global value chain by 2030.

Target’s rooftop solar programme began with a trickle around 2011, shortly after John Leisen, Target’s vice president of property management, joined the company. The programme took off in 2015 when 150 stores added solar roofs and just four years later that figure has more than tripled.

Not all Target stores are solar roof candidates, however, because most of its smaller stores are rented spaces and some are in parts of the country where the economics of going solar don’t work out.

Target will not say what it is investing in solar, but Leisen confirmed it’s “millions” of dollars.

A solar panel rooftop system for a mass merchandis­er like Target or Walmart can cost $150,000 to install, according to estimates from the Solar Energy Industries Associatio­n, a nonprofit trade associatio­n of the solarenerg­y industry.

“As CFOs get more comfortabl­e with the concept, they realise it makes sense,” said Abigail Ross Hopper, chief executive of the trade group.

Going green has never looked so good — or cost so little. Solar power is almost 90% cheaper than it was 10 years ago and wind power is about 70% cheaper. GREGORY WETSTONE President and CEO of the American Council on Renewable Energy

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 ?? TARGET CORP VIA THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? An undated photo shows solar panels on the roof of a Target store in Greenville, South Carolina.
TARGET CORP VIA THE NEW YORK TIMES An undated photo shows solar panels on the roof of a Target store in Greenville, South Carolina.

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