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Managing operations to reduce emissions and promote sustainability
ОглавлениеMost firms understand that by building a business model that reduces reliance on fossil fuels, they should benefit from opportunities that the new ways of doing business create. And in doing this, they expect to lower operational costs, improve resilience in their energy supply, and attract more investors who are concerned about carbon risk.
Greenhouse gases (GHG) can be reduced considerably in manufacturing, where they control the operations, and even in supply chain processes such as distribution and retail. Indeed, some companies are intending to support the generation of more renewable energy than they need to make the surplus available to the markets and communities in which they operate. This would help some companies reach their target of becoming carbon-positive in their factories and site operations by 2030.
Eco-design programs are being developed to reformulate products to use fewer but higher-performing ingredients, particularly in the use of their most GHG-intensive products. Interestingly, most of the GHG footprint for many products occurs when people use them at home. Therefore, innovation and research and development (R&D) are also focused on delivering the products while considering the climate change challenge. Tackling these issues requires transformational changes to broader systems in which firms operate, and so government policy will need to dictate the right context for change and business action so that all sectors can work in collaboration on given projects and initiatives. (I discuss GHG in more detail earlier in this chapter.)