Until CEOs take ownership of carbon management as a business transformation challenge, not a corporate responsibility issue, their firms will fail to achieve absolute reductions in CO2 emissions, according to a new report from independent research firm Verdantix. World class carbon management requires the appointment of a Chief Sustainability Officer, a cross-functional strategy for reductions with a 2020 target, co-ordinated business process changes and an integrated carbon management technology platform.
“Dumping carbon management responsibility on CSR Directors without providing them with the authority or budget to execute dooms many carbon reduction plans” commented Peter Charville-Mort, the Verdantix Analyst who led the study. “Our research with 33 industry experts shows that underneath the green-wash, most firms flounder with weak carbon management initiatives. Evidence of failure includes CSR and energy managers who don’t get the opportunity to explain carbon issues to senior execs, decision-makers who struggle with terrible energy data, unachievable CO2 reduction goals and initiatives that progress at a snail’s pace due to insufficient staff and funds.”
The Verdantix report, Best Practices Carbon Management, provides detailed advice on the development and implementation of a carbon business transformation plan. To achieve absolute CO2 reductions year-on-year firms need to:
Source: Verdantix, London UK 16 February 2010. To view the full article please click here.