Glasgow Times

Businesses are aiming to reduce their carbon footprint with the help of Royal Bank of Scotland Carbon Planner

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BUSINESSES are on their way to a more sustainabl­e future with the help of the free digital Royal Bank of Scotland Carbon Planner tool.

The easy- to- use tool, created to help all businesses, not just Royal Bank of Scotland customers, gives recommenda­tions on how to reduce carbon emissions and tackle rising fuel bills. As part of the banking giant’s broader £ 100bn Climate and Sustainabl­e Funding and Finance commitment, Royal Bank has pledged to help SMEs cut their carbon footprints and costs

Director and adviser Michael Minter, who launched Mortgage Steps more than 18 years ago, said the Carbon Planner tool was “a walk in the park” compared to the multitude of programs and websites he uses when helping clients.

“The Carbon Planner really is quite simple to use. It took me a matter of minutes to complete and then get suggestion­s of how we could run a more environmen­tally friendly business,” he said.

“It really stimulates your thoughts around your business, carbon footprint, and what actions you could take. We’re not a gasguzzlin­g business but the tailored report still came out with suggestion­s we’re already adopting.”

Mr Minter, who set up the business with his wife Karen, said they are now printing less documents on paper, discussing ways to reduce mileage and making sure their office is as energy efficient as possible.

He added: “Our carbon footprint is low, and our office is well insulated, so we scored quite well.

“But we have loads of plain paper in the office, it’s such a waste. Businesses print documents out of habit when it’s all stored on computers. We’ve stopped that immediatel­y and are looking at how we can cut down on mileage with more use of Teams ( video) meetings. It’s about little steps for us.

“The Carbon Planner tool is making us continuall­y think about how we can adapt. I would recommend other businesses using it.”

The Carbon Planner tool was designed with specialist climate insight and feedback from more than 2,000 businesses.

Taking the user through a series of questions, it measures, evaluates, and creates a list of recommenda­tions that could help the business improve its carbon footprint through greater insight.

CEO Christine Bhatt, who owns and manages Systematic­s, a company providing expert market informatio­n for industries such as agricultur­e and constructi­on, praised Royal Bank for “doing the right thing and raising awareness in the public space.”

She formed her company with husband Manuel in 2007. The small but dedicated team deal with clients around the world, but they have adapted over the years to reduce their carbon footprint with less internatio­nal and domestic travel.

“All business owners want to measure what they do to make sure they’re heading in the right direction,” Mrs Bhatt said. “The

Carbon Planner tool enabled us to do that and then came back with a couple of recommenda­tions.”

Advice was mainly around hybrid models of working, something the company has already embraced and encouragin­g staff to switch to electric vehicles if possible.

Mrs Bhatt, who drives an electric car, added: “We have staff in our paperless office three days a week – to drive innovation and work together – but our team has the option to work from home the other two days to reduce their carbon footprint and give a better work- life balance.”

Solange Chamberlai­n, Chief Operating Officer for Commercial and Institutio­nal at Royal Bank of Scotland, added: “We must help UK businesses through the current challenges without falling behind on taking the sustainabi­lity measures that will ultimately lead us towards a cleaner, greener future.”

Sign up now for FREE to discover what suggestion­s the Carbon Planner has to help reduce your businesses inefficien­cies and costs:

Find out more about Mortgage Steps and Systematic­s at: https:// www. mortgagest­eps. co. uk/

https:// www. systematic­s- int. co. uk/

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Michael Minter

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