USA TODAY US Edition

Ikea uses sun, wind to be energy independen­t

- Wendy Koch @wendykoch USA TODAY

Energy independen­ce by 2020? The idea has been touted on the U.S. presidenti­al campaign trail, but global home furnishing­s retailer Ikea is announcing plans today to achieve that goal with solar and wind power.

As more U.S. businesses go solar, the Swedish retailer says it will rely on the sun and wind to produce all the power it uses at its stores and buildings worldwide within a decade. It plans to install more rooftop solar panels, erect wind farms and reduce its energy usage by replacing 1.2 million incandesce­nt light bulbs with 85%-more-efficient LEDs (lightemitt­ing diodes).

“Each roof is a power station in the making,” says Steve Howard, Ikea Group’s chief sustainabi­lity officer, adding that the United States has “fantastic sun ... as good as anywhere in the world.” Ikea already has solar panels atop 34 of its 38 U.S. stores and distributi­on centers.

Howard says parts of the U.S. also have great wind potential, and Ikea, which is building wind farms abroad, would like one stateside. “But we find the policy environmen­t rather choppy,” he says. Production tax credits for the U.S. wind industry are set to expire in December unless Congress renews them.

Ikea, which announced earlier this month that it will sell only LED light bulbs in its stores by 2016, is not the first retailer to shoot for 100% renewable energy. Wal-Mart has also set that goal (without specifying a timeline), and it ranks first among U.S. companies for solar power generation, according to a survey last month by the Solar Energy Industries Associatio­n, a trade group. Costco Wholesale ranked second, Kohl’s Department Stores third, Ikea fourth and Macy’s fifth.

“The devil is in the details,” says Joel Makower, executive editor of GreenBiz.com, which covers corporate sustainabi­lity efforts, about Ikea’s plans. “It’s great a company is trying to get its own house in order, but its house is more than its buildings,” he says, adding that more than 90% of the total energy that retailers use is embedded in the supply chain — the making and delivering of parts and products.

Makower says renewable energy is no longer just about scoring publicrela­tions points. “It’s about mitigating risks,” he says, referring to the uncertaint­ies of energy prices and supplies.

Howard agrees. He says Ikea, which phased out plastic bags in 2007 and stopped selling incandesce­nt bulbs in 2010, believes energy independen­ce is “the right thing to do,” not only because it’s concerned about climate change but also because it wants to protect itself against higher energy prices in the future.

“Sustainabi­lity will decide the winners and losers in the business community,” Howard says.

GOP presidenti­al candidate Mitt Romney has talked about North American energy independen­ce by 2020, but his agenda has focused on getting there by expanding domestic oil, gas and coal production. He’s called for phasing out subsidies for solar and wind, which President Obama has supported.

 ?? VICTOR J. BLUE, BLOOMBERG NEWS ?? Customers shop at an Ikea in Brooklyn, N.Y. The Swedish retailer says it will rely on the sun and wind to produce all the power it uses at its stores worldwide within a decade.
VICTOR J. BLUE, BLOOMBERG NEWS Customers shop at an Ikea in Brooklyn, N.Y. The Swedish retailer says it will rely on the sun and wind to produce all the power it uses at its stores worldwide within a decade.

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