The Scotsman

Sustainabl­e transporta­tion of goods is now a necessity

◆ Vendors and suppliers are expected to provide emissions records, writes Callum Bastock

- Callum Bastock, CEO and Founder, CCL Logistics & Technology

Historical­ly, it has been extremely difficult to calculate emissions data associated with the logistics and transporta­tion of goods, essentiall­y due to the variety of modes of transport, distance travelled, and consignmen­t weights involved.

The sheer amount of data, and its convoluted nature, is something our team spent the last few years trying to tackle, investing heavily in our transport management system where our customers’ logistics data is held centrally. In turn, this has enabled us to run complex calculatio­ns in the background to work out transporta­tion and distributi­on emissions across the supply chain.

Scope 3 emissions are defined as all indirect emissions that occur in the value chain of the reporting company, including both upstream and downstream emissions. Tscope 3 emissions usually account for more than 70 per cent of a business’s carbon footprint.

We operate in an environmen­t of heightened compliance pressure and increasing­ly stringent reporting requiremen­ts. Research last year revealed that 90 per cent of the FTSE 100 will only work with suppliers that share their environmen­tal, social & governance (ESG) credential­s. There is now an absolute expectatio­n from public companies that vendors and suppliers can provide their emissions record.

While our business model has always been about supporting customers to reduce costs and grow, in recent times sustainabi­lity has moved very much to the front and centre as organisati­ons realise how crucial it is to tackle Scope 3 emissions.

Last year, we achieved a milestone for our collective efforts when we became the first UK logistics services group to be accredited by the Smart Freight Centre, the internatio­nal non-profit focused on reducing the emissions impact of global freight transporta­tion.

Branded ‘Greener Routes’, our innovative sustainabi­lity feature means customers can now measure, manage, and minimise their CO2 emissions. Sustainabi­lity is paramount for our larger UK and European customers, and the CO2 emissions calculator embedded in our system provides customers with a CO2 statement at the click of a button.

Overall, we are helping to facilitate Scottish and UK export trade in a much more sustainabl­e fashion, so we’re pleased to be playing a supporting role in terms of being a driver of economic impact. Exporting and importing is complex, and we simplify the whole process for our customer base.

In terms of our own scorecard, we want to measure ourselves against the best in the industry, including the internatio­nal scene, while, closer to home, being one the most innovative technology companies to come out of Scotland.

In 2023, CCL was one of the first cohort of companies invited onto Sir Tom Hunter’s Scale Up Scotland 2.0 programme, which in itself was an amazing experience. The year finished on another high when The Hunter Foundation hosted a Founders Conference at Gleneagles where it was great to meet up and hear from a fantastic line-up of corporate luminaries, sharing stories and intel from out on the coalface.

As 2024 gets under way, we wish all our peers a successful year ahead.

 ?? ??
 ?? ?? CCL is helping to facilitate Scottish and UK export trade in a much more sustainabl­e fashion
CCL is helping to facilitate Scottish and UK export trade in a much more sustainabl­e fashion

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom