BSR has recently fielded inquiries from a
range of member companies asking how climate
change is relevant to their business.
The timing of these questions is obvious:
With prospective climate change legislation
and policy discussions in the United States
and elsewhere, intensive international
negotiations culminating later this year,
and ongoing stakeholder interest, companies
are scrambling to develop or boost their
climate change strategies, assess their
internal and supply chain emissions, and
examine the potential risks and
opportunities throughout their operations,
value chain, and industry.
For energy companies and heavy
manufacturers, it has long been clear that
climate change regulation would have a
significant impact on business. And while
some representatives from other industries
still insist climate change is not relevant
for them, the best available research
indicates it is material for virtually every
company, both in the traditional accounting
sense and the sustainability context, which
incorporates wider stakeholder concerns.
Unlike issues such as animal welfare or
toxic waste that may be irrelevant to some
firms, climate change is never off the
playing field for any company.
It’s About Owned Operations
For companies that generate large quantities
of greenhouse gases or purchase large
amounts of energy, climate change regulation
is clearly a significant issue that is
likely to affect future costs. As recent
negotiations in the U.S. Congress have
shown, however, climate change regulation is
not just about greenhouse gas emissions and
energy use. It has significant implications
for international trade, agriculture,
transportation, and other areas.
In addition, physical risks and
opportunities presented by climate change
are already becoming manifest. Companies
need to think about how a changing climate
affects things such as heating and cooling
needs, water availability, and emergency
preparedness for catastrophic weather. An
extended drought in Australia, for instance,
has forced the food company Heinz to curtail
production of tomato paste there, and to
consider shifting other production out of
the country. Meanwhile, nations and
industries have begun to discuss the
possibilities presented by expanded shipping
through the Northwest Passage.
Taking action in a company’s owned
operations can also lay the foundation for
business opportunities and reputation
building through engagement with peers,
suppliers, and customers. Although the
retail industry is responsible for only a
small amount of greenhouse gas emissions,
for example, some retailers such as Walmart
and Tesco have been applauded for addressing
climate change throughout their value chains
-- efforts that are founded in part on
efficiency and renewable energy programs in
their own stores.
It’s About Supply Chains
For many companies, the most important
climate change risks and opportunities may
lie outside of their owned operations. As a
2008 McKinsey study noted, between 40 and 60
percent of manufacturers’ carbon footprints
often lie in their supply chains. BSR has
worked closely with food-processing
companies and retailers whose supply chain
emissions are more than three times larger
than those represented by their own
facilities and purchased energy. It’s
important for companies to realize that
climate change regulation may have
significant implications for supply chain
costs in carbon- and energy-intensive
industries.
Greenhouse gas emissions and physical
climate change impacts also have significant
implications for logistics and
transportation choices in the supply chain.
Companies that have “Just-in-time” inventory
systems may rely heavily on air transport
for rapid shipment of goods to keep
inventories low. However, air transport --
which contributes more than 3 percent of
global greenhouse gas emissions -- has a
much larger climate change impact than
trucking, rail, or ocean cargo shipping.
Increasingly, aviation is brought up as an
area for regulation. In effect, climate
change is a material issue for companies
that have intricate supply chains or
otherwise rely heavily on air travel and
transport.
Climate change will also have significant
physical impacts on supply chains. At BSR,
we have seen more companies focus on this
area, including Kraft, which is addressing
growing climate and other risks to
high-value tropical crops like coffee and
cocoa by working with organizations such as
the Rainforest Alliance and the Bill and
Melinda Gates Foundation to support its
suppliers and encourage sustainable
production.
The supply chain also presents
climate-change-related opportunities. The
confectionary company Cadbury, for example,
is working closely with dairy suppliers to
reduce greenhouse gas emissions. Such
actions benefit companies like Cadbury by
strengthening the firm’s supply chain
understanding and relationships and by
improving its reputation for addressing
climate change. It’s also possible that
these efforts will provide financial
benefits if the company is able to obtain
carbon credits for use or sale.
It’s About Customers and Consumers
In addition to “upstream” supply chains,
climate change has growing implications for
companies through their “downstream”
customers and consumers. Nearly a decade
ago, Ford Motor Co. was one of the first
large companies to publicly address this
issue through its corporate citizenship
reports. Information technology companies
like IBM and Cisco are touting the benefits
of lower climate change impacts from their
energy-saving products, while apparel
companies such as Levi Strauss and Co. have
begun using garment labels, promotions, and
store staff to encourage customers to adopt
reduced-energy washing practices.
Companies whose products generate
substantial greenhouse gases during use
aren’t the only ones for whom consumer
climate change issues should be important.
There are growing efforts to encourage
consumers to select products with a smaller
total greenhouse gas footprint (such as
peanut butter rather than lunch meat), while
physical climate change itself may shift
customer preferences and needs. Farmers may
begin planting more heat- and
drought-tolerant crops, for example, while
the spread of dengue fever and other
diseases (PDF) is likely to significantly
affect pharmaceuticals markets. Companies
that understand and are prepared to meet
these trends will have a competitive
advantage over those that don’t.
It’s About Industry Dynamics
Physical climate change and related
regulation will also lead to long-term
changes in industry structures.
Climate-related regulation, market
incentives and other factors may encourage
new competitors to enter an industry, as we
see in the auto and energy fields, while
climate change reporting and compliance
requirements may increase barriers to
entering other industries.
It’s clear that climate change is one of the
largest and most persistent sustainability
megatrends of this generation -- and for
many companies, the pinch points are
obvious. For others, climate issues are more
subtle, affecting the company indirectly
through the vulnerabilities of its partners.
And for others still, climate change may
affect the company in such broad but
low-intensity ways that is hard to know
where to begin.
In any case, although some companies may not
identify climate change as the most pressing
issue they face today, these examples should
demonstrate that the breadth and magnitude
of the likely physical and regulatory
impacts -- from owned operations and
industry dynamics to supply chains and
customers -- mean the issue is relevant for
virtually all companies. It presents a wide
range of risks, as well as new opportunities
to reduce costs, differentiate products, and
work with suppliers and consumers.
By Marshall Chase and Ryan Schuchard -
Marshall Chase is associate of advisory
services, and Ryan Schuchard is manager of
environmental research and innovation at BSR.
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