CCPortal
New 'integrity initiative' is designed to fight corporate greenwashing  科技资讯
时间:2022-06-08   来源:[美国] Daily Climate
Fast CompanyFollowLoginCo.DesignTechWork LifeNewsImpactPodcastsVideoRecommenderInnovation Festival 360IF360SubscribeFastCo WorksAWSGenpactIBMHomepageCo.DesignTechWork LifeNewsImpactPodcastsVideoRecommenderInnovation Festival 360SubscribeHelp Centerfastco worksAWSDeloitteDeptElevate PrizeEYIBMKlarnaVisaFastCo Works

An award-winning team of journalists, designers, and videographers who tell brand stories through Fast Company s distinctive lens

FC Executive BoardcollectionsFast Government

The future of innovation and technology in government for the greater good

Most Innovative Companies

Fast Company s annual ranking of businesses that are making an outsize impact

Most Creative People

Leaders who are shaping the future of business in creative ways

World Changing Ideas

New workplaces, new food sources, new medicine--even an entirely new economic system

Innovation By Design

Celebrating the best ideas in business

NewsletterEventsInnovation FestivalCourses and LearningAdvertiseCurrent IssueCurrent IssueSUBSCRIBEFollow us:Social media iconsSocial media iconsSocial media iconsSocial media iconsadvertisementadvertisement06-08-22This new ‘integrity initiative’ is designed to fight corporate greenwashingAs hundreds of companies set climate goals to reach net zero emissions, it’s difficult to tell what’s actually greenwashing.

This new ‘integrity initiative’ is designed to fight corporate greenwashing[Image: StudioM1/iStock/Getty Images Plus] By Adele Peters2 minute Read

Hundreds of companies have set climate goals to reach net zero emissions or in some cases to become carbon negative or carbon positive but some plans are less credible than others, and it s difficult to tell what s actually greenwashing. A new framework is designed to give companies benchmarks on best practices, and to help make it easier for consumers and investors to understand if they re actually making progress.

advertisementadvertisement

For many years, companies have been declaring carbon neutrality, or climate neutrality, or something similar, says Mark Kenber, executive director at the Voluntary Carbon Markets Integrity Initiative (VCMI), the group behind the new framework. And the only thing that s been clear about those claims is that they very rarely mean the same thing. Sometimes we ll have two companies that claim to be carbon neutral, but have completely different bases for that claim. And then you ll have two companies that are doing exactly the same thing and use completely different claims. So it s not surprising that the public, and consumers in particular, are confused.

The group, which launched last year and is funded in part by the U.K. government, created a new code of practice that can help evaluate corporate climate goals and the use of carbon credits. To reach VCMI Gold, the highest level, a company will have to have net zero targets including both short- and long-term goals, covering all of its emissions, including from its supply chains and show that it s on track to meet those goals.

In any year that it wants to make a claim, it needs to show that its emissions are falling in line with its target and its plan is being implemented, Kenber says. One hundred percent of remaining emissions need to be covered by high-quality carbon credits.

advertisementadvertisement

At the Silver level, companies will have to be on track for their next target to reduce emissions, and cover at least 20% of remaining emissions through high-quality carbon credits. The Bronze level lets companies address Scope 3 emissions, the emissions from suppliers and customers, through a combination of reducing those emissions directly and buying carbon credits.

For the next several months, the group will be working with some companies, including Google and Unilever, to try out the tool and offer feedback about how easy it is to use. Then it will launch more broadly. Other programs, like the Science-Based Targets Initiative and the Integrity Council on Voluntary Carbon Markets, are also continuing to refine the guidance that they offer companies.

By the end of the year . . . there should be a simple, easy-to-navigate ecosystem of target-setting claims and carbon credits and reporting that companies can use, Kenber says. Then companies will have clear guidance on what they need to do. And public investors, journalists, and others will be able to scrutinize them with a reasonable amount of ease. . . . At the moment, it s quite hard to tell what greenwashing is and whether a company is or not. We hope that with all these initiatives it ll be much easier to separate the wheat from the chaff.

advertisementadvertisementadvertisementadvertisementAbout the author

Adele Peters is a staff writer at Fast Company who focuses on solutions to some of the world's largest problems, from climate change to homelessness. Previously, she worked with GOOD, BioLite, and the Sustainable Products and Solutions program at UC Berkeley

More

VideoTech
TechNetflix buying Roku would make a lot of sense
TechCisco’s new Video Phone 8875 may finally normalize office video phones
TechThis game designer predicted COVID 10 years ago. Here’s what’s coming nextNews
NewsExclusive: Mattel makes its play for the metaverse—and the metaverse plays back
NewsBrands need more than rainbow-colored products if they want to celebrate Pride in 2022
NewsWhat is the gender wage gap in your city? This online calculator will tell youCo.Design
Co.DesignWhy Biden just used one of his most significant powers on insulation
Co.DesignOld Navy’s plus-size experiment failed. It didn’t have to
     原文来源:https://www.fastcompany.com/90759104/this-new-integrity-initiative-is-designed-to-fight-corporate-greenwashing

除非特别说明,本系统中所有内容都受版权保护,并保留所有权利。