The Morning Call

Pay incentives to save the planet

-

more, but five years ago this wasn’t part of the conversati­on,” said Seymour Burchman, a managing director at Semler Brossy, a consultant that advises on compensati­on plans. With companies creating better data around environmen­tal impact and risks, he said, the case for linking compensati­on gets stronger. “The board can’t ignore it.”

The employers that most often link compensati­on to environmen­tal impact aren’t crunchy consumer brands like Seventh Generation but gritty miners. Extractive industries need to measure environmen­tal impact to get licenses required to operate in local communitie­s, and Burchman said that incentive pay has been an effective way for miners to improve these results. Cameco Corp. links 40% of annual bonuses to safety, environmen­t and community measures. Vale SA started linking emission reductions to annual bonuses in 2018. Rio Tinto Plc said in April it was considerin­g how to link greenhouse gas cuts to short-term incentive plans. BHP Group — the world’s largest miner — said Tuesday it will increase the amount of short-term incentives CEO Andrew Mackenzie has tied to carbon emissions reductions and climate metrics in 2020 from 4% currently.

As more companies reckon with their carbon footprints and face pressure to embrace renewable energy, links between climate-related targets and compensati­on are spreading.

General Motors Co. CEO Mary Barra had seven sustainabi­lity objectives last year, including reaching 200,000 electric vehicle sales in the U.S. GM’s proxy statement denoted each one with a little green leaf, alongside other traditiona­l financial goals for CEO pay like revenue, dividends and share repurchase­s. There are other executives at the Detroit automaker with sustainabi­lity goals included in their compensati­on, although a GM spokeswoma­n didn’t say how far these targets extend down the line.

Climate goals for executive pay are more common in Europe, where companies like Novozymes A/S, the Copenhagen-based maker of industrial enzymes, gives each employee his or her own incentives for meeting financial, social and environmen­tal targets. Food and beverage maker Danone SA bases about 10% of CEO Emmanuel Faber’s pay on meeting climate commitment­s and creating a sustainabl­e supply chain.

Sustainabi­lity is increasing­ly creeping into traditiona­l financial incentives for companies — and even their suppliers. Walmart, for example, has pledged to cut a gigaton of greenhouse gases out of its business by 2030, extending all the way into its supply chain. Earlier this year, in an effort to spur suppliers to do better, Walmart offered better financial terms to anyone who delivered on green goals. Walmart specifical­ly links diversity and culture to 15% of executive incentive pay and 10% of pay for associates, but doesn’t break out environmen­tal goals in its proxy.

In credit markets, nearly $70 billion of green- and sustainabi­lity-linked loans were issued this year, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. The loans let companies lower the cost of their debt if they meet sustainabi­lity targets.

At Seventh Generation, the entire workforce sees pay change along with companywid­e sustainabi­lity metrics. That puts the unit on the far end of adoption, which makes sense for an environmen­tally-minded consumer brand. “When you bake it into the incentive system people really feel compelled to go after it,” said Bergstein, the chief executive.

Meeting goals on packaging and greenhouse-gas reduction prompted the launch of an ultra concentrat­ed laundry detergent in 2018. The detergent weighs less, which the company claims will cut emissions from shipping by about 70%.

Scientists working for Seventh Generation, however, have concluded that 92% of the company’s greenhouse-gas footprint stems from people washing and drying clothes at home — something very difficult for executives to change. Working with manufactur­ers to design washing machines that are more efficient didn’t seem like it would address that problem fast enough. So the company took an unorthodox approach.

Seventh Generation set a target that 100 U.S. cities would need to pledge to shift to clean energy by 2030. If they didn’t, employees would lose out on incentive pay. Bergstein will admit that it sounds crazy: “What kind of control do we have over 100 cities across America to make that kind of commitment?” he said. “But we looked at each other and said if we’re really serious about cleaning up the energy grid, then we’ve got to do something like this.”

Seventh Generation spent $1 million on lobbying efforts and worked with the Sierra Club and other groups to sway local officials. It worked — and its 160 employees got to keep their bonuses.

 ?? PAUL SANCYA/AP ?? General Motors CEO Mary Barra had seven sustainabi­lity objectives last year that factored into her compensati­on.
PAUL SANCYA/AP General Motors CEO Mary Barra had seven sustainabi­lity objectives last year that factored into her compensati­on.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States