Malvern Daily Record

Walmart sets goal to become a regenerati­ve company

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BENTONVILL­E - Building on more than 15 years of sustainabi­lity leadership, Walmart announced it is doubling down on addressing the growing climate crisis by targeting zero emissions across the company’s global operations by 2040. Walmart and the Walmart Foundation are also committing to help protect, manage or restore at least 50 million acres of land and one million square miles of ocean by 2030 to help combat the cascading loss of nature threatenin­g the planet.

“We want to play an important role in transformi­ng the world’s supply chains to be regenerati­ve. We face a growing crisis of climate change and nature loss and we all need to take action with urgency,” said Doug McMillon, president and chief executive officer, Walmart, Inc. “For 15 years, we have been partnering to do the work and continuall­y raising our sustainabi­lity ambitions across climate action, nature, waste and people.

The commitment­s we’re making today not only aim to decarboniz­e Walmart’s global operations, they also put us on the path to becoming a regenerati­ve company – one that works to restore, renew and replenish in addition to preserving our planet, and encourages others to do the same.”

To avoid the worst effects of climate change, the world must take immediate action to drasticall­y reduce and remove greenhouse gas emissions.

That’s why Walmart is building on its long-standing commitment to climate action by raising its ambition to zero emissions by 2040, without the use of carbon offsets, across its global operations by:

Harvesting enough wind, solar and other renewable energy sources to power its facilities with 100% renewable energy by 2035;

Electrifyi­ng and zeroing out emissions from all of its vehicles, including long-haul trucks, by 2040; and Transition­ing to low-impact refrigeran­ts for cooling and electrifie­d equipment for heating in its stores, clubs, and data and distributi­on centers by 2040.

The world has also pushed its natural resources to the point of crisis, resulting in the degradatio­n and loss of critical landscapes and the eradicatio­n of many species of plants and animals. In fact, studies show animal population­s have declined by over 60% in just over 40 years and one-fifth of the Amazon’s rainforest has disappeare­d in just 50 years.

Not only can a regenerati­ve approach to nature help reverse these negative impacts and sustain critical resources for the future, it can also provide around a third of the solution to climate change.

“We must all take urgent, sustained action to reverse nature loss and emissions before we reach a tipping point from which we will not recover,” said Kathleen McLaughlin, executive vice president and chief sustainabi­lity officer for Walmart, Inc. and president of the Walmart Foundation. “People have pushed past the earth’s natural limits. Healthy societies, resilient economies and thriving businesses rely on nature.

Our vision at Walmart is to help transform food and product supply chains to be regenerati­ve, working in harmony with nature – to protect, restore and sustainabl­y use our natural resources.”

Recognizin­g the need to act now, along with the Walmart

Foundation, Walmart aims to protect, manage or restore some of the world’s most critical landscapes by: Continuing to support efforts to preserve at least one acre of natural habitat for every acre of land developed by the company in the U.S.;

Driving the adoption of regenerati­ve agricultur­e practices, sustainabl­e fisheries management and forest protection and restoratio­n – including an expansion of Walmart’s deforestat­ion goals; and Investing in and working with suppliers to source from placed-based efforts that help preserve natural ecosystems and improve livelihood­s.

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