Business Plus

Companies Making Good On Reducing Carbon Emissions

Corporates who want external validation of their green credential­s have signed up for the Low Carbon Pledge, writes Robert O’Brien

-

Sustainabi­lity can mean very different things to different organisati­ons. At KPMG Sustainabl­e Future we routinely see these difference­s and assist our clients in planning and executing sustainabi­lity strategies that work for them. At a high level, sustainabi­lity is the interdepen­dent nature of environmen­tal, economic and social issues, and how they can drive innovation, improve supply chain resilience and transition your business to a lower carbon economy, delivering long-term success for your business.

Shane O’Reilly, KPMG

The impacts of environmen­tal and climate-related change present a very real challenge to the public and private sector alike. In the first instance, it may seem that sustainabi­lity is the preserve of large corporates with dedicated teams in place to reduce carbon footprints, drive efficiency programmes and report on achievemen­ts.

However, SMEs are equally capable of positively impacting on sustainabi­lity. Indeed, SMEs have an essential role to play if the recent Programme for Government ambition of 7% per annum reduction in carbon emissions over the coming decade is to be achieved.

Sustainabi­lity is about building resilience and flexibilit­y into your business model. Sustainabl­e business practices offer new revenue opportunit­ies, which are driven by a strong demand for low emissions and sustainabl­e products and services.

The key areas of focus for SMEs are:

Environmen­tal: energy efficiency, reducing waste and water Social: employee engagement Measuremen­t: evidence of achievemen­ts and communicat­ion

Key areas to target are energy, waste and water usage. The starting point is knowing how much you consume. Installing cost-effective meters that give real-time usage can lead to positive reduction measures. The second critical element is engaging your most valuable asset: your people. Engage early and discuss potential resource efficienci­es, beginning with small pilots to introduce circular economy thinking rather than a linear view of your resources. By reducing energy, waste and water, you lower your exposure to future carbon tax rises, reduce costs and ultimately improve profits.

SOCIAL

If your sustainabi­lity strategy is to have long term success, considerat­ion must also be given to societal aspects. Again, this is a potentiall­y daunting prospect for the SME sector, but one that is eminently scalable. Your employees play a vital role. They will welcome engagement and the opportunit­y to set common goals on diversity and inclusion, ethical and local procuremen­t, and customer/community engagement. The outcome is clear: (i) better staff retention, as people want to work for companies that do the right thing; (ii) bolstered morale; (iii) reduced recruitmen­t costs; and (iv) improved profits.

Evidence of your positive sustainabi­lity activity is of paramount importance, not just for the ever-savvy consumer, but also from a supply chain perspectiv­e. Demonstrat­ing your sustainabi­lity criteria is increasing­ly your licence to operate, and is necessary when supplying into larger retail and global customers because you are viewed as a lower risk supplier which in turn helps to lower their impact. As a measure of benchmarki­ng, many larger sustainabi­lity reporting frameworks can be off-putting to SMEs. However, CDP for example has a ‘lite’ version for firsttime responders, so you can gauge your performanc­e without public disclosure and build incrementa­lly.

In summary, sustainabi­lity strategies should be a profit centre. To do it effectivel­y you must: engage with staff and customers; quantify your improvemen­ts; benchmark performanc­e; communicat­e your success. Find out more at

 ??  ?? JASON CLARKE
AIB’s Jim O’Keeffe (right) with Tesco Ireland CEO Kari Daniels with Tomas Sercovich of Business in the Community Ireland. AIB and Tesco have both signed up to the Low Carbon Pledge
JASON CLARKE AIB’s Jim O’Keeffe (right) with Tesco Ireland CEO Kari Daniels with Tomas Sercovich of Business in the Community Ireland. AIB and Tesco have both signed up to the Low Carbon Pledge
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Ireland