Corporate Sustainability Program
Transcription
Corporate Sustainability Program
Journey Toward Sustainability AAFA Environmental Committee Meeting February 17, 2009 Colleen Kohlsaat Manager, Environmental Sustainability Levi Strauss & Co. overview Founded in 1853 by Bavarian immigrant, Levi Strauss Privately held by descendants of Levi Strauss 2008 net revenues of $4.4 billion dollars 3 brand portfolio: Levis®, Dockers®, and Signature by Levi Strauss and CO™ Over 10,500 employees Sold in over 110 countries • 55,000+ retail locations • 1,500 brand-dedicated stores Supply chain portfolio: • 800 contracted factories in 45 countries • Own and operate 4 factories • Approximately 315,000 workers 1991: The code that launched a thousand codes The Business Partner Terms of Engagement (TOE) A condition of doing business Applicable to every factory, subcontractor, licensee, agent or affiliate that manufactures or finishes our products Includes environmental requirements 1992: Establish Global Effluent Guidelines (GEG) 1992 • GEG Established • LS&CO. O&O laundries 1994 • Extended to contractors and licensees 1996 • Shared GEG with BSR wastewater industry group to develop industry limits 1999 • GEG revision 2006 • GEG 3rd Party Validation Initiative Restricted substance list (RSL) Pre-2000: Chemical approval process 2001: European RSL • Country regulatory restrictions 2002: Global RSL • Country regulatory restrictions • H&S/Toxicology data • Peer reviewed risk assessment process Systematic updates: 2004, 2006, & 2008 Restrictions • Prohibited from use • Limited concentration on end product • Phase-out (2008 version) Scope: all direct suppliers, licensees, agents, branded products, sundries, accessories, packaging Early Cotton Initiatives 1991: naturally colored cotton 1994: organic cotton 1997-98: organic cotton blends in denim 1999: convene “From Field to Fashion” cotton conference Launched Levi’s® eco jeans globally in 2006 Made from 100% organic cotton across numerous segments of the brand Alternative sundry items and packaging Created internal set of standards to differentiate the different types of product that we were selling Understanding our environmental impact Life Cycle Assessment Intended Internal Use Only Two key products (by volume) US Market (2006) • Levi's® 501® • STF, 100% cotton fabric • Medium stone wash • Dockers® Original Khaki • 100% cotton permanent press • Black Considered the full product life cycle Product Manufacture Raw Materials Materials Manufacture End Disposition Recycling Transportation & Distribution Use 9 Product lifecycle impact of studied Levi’s® 501® jean 32.3 kg of CO2 3480.5 liters of water 400.1 MJ of Energy • 78 miles driven by the average auto in the United States • Is equivalent to the carbon sequestered by 6 trees per year (based on EPA representative sequestration rates of tons of carbon per acre per year) • Running a garden hose for 106 minutes • 53 showers (based on 7 minute showers) • 575 flushes of a 3.78 liter/flush low flow toilet • Watching TV on a Plasma Screen for 318 hours. • Powering a computer for 556 hours. Which is equivalent to 70 work days (based on 8 hours of computer use/day) Data from LS&CO.’s Life Cycle Assessment on Levi’s® 501® Jean for U.S. Market, 2006 production year Levi’s® 501® Jeans – Climate Change LEVI’S® 501® JEANS Cradle to Grave Climate Change, % by Phase LEVI’S® 501® JEANS Cradle to Grave Climate Change, Amount by Phase 1% 20 18.6 5% 18 16 58% 21% kg CO2e 14 12 10 6.6 8 6 3.0 4 2 9% 2.1 1.7 0.5 Cotton Fabric Cut/Sew/Finish Logistics/Retail Use En d o f Li f e Us e Re ta il ish Lo gi st ics / /F in Cu t/ S ew 6% Fa br ic Co tto n 0 End of Life For the studied Levi’s® 501® Jeans (cradle to grave) we found the climate change impact was highest at the consumer use phase (58%) 11 Levi’s® 501® Jeans – Energy Use LEVI’S® 501® JEANS Cradle to Grave Energy Use, % by Phase LEVI’S® 501® JEANS Cradle to Grave Energy Use (MJ), Amount by Phase 0% 250 226.6 4% 200 58% 150 MJ 21% 84.9 100 40.8 50 29.8 17.7 0.4 10% Cotton Fabric Cut/Sew/Finish Logistics/Retail Use e e En d o f L i f Us i st ics / Re ta il ish Lo g /F in Cu t /S ew 7% Fa br ic Co tto n 0 End of Life For the studied Levi’s® 501® Jeans (cradle to grave) we found the energy use impact was highest at the consumer use phase (58%) 12 Levi’s® 501® Jeans – Water Consumption LEVI’S® 501® JEANS Cradle to Grave Water Consumption, % by Phase LEVI’S® 501® JEANS Cradle to Grave Water Consumption, Amount by Phase 0% 1800 1704.0 1575.2 1600 45% 1400 Liters 1200 1000 800 600 49% 400 200 110.8 72.1 18.1 Fabric Cut/Sew/Finish Logistics/Retail Use ife En d of L e Us Re ta il Lo gi st ics / /F in ish 2% Cu t/ Se w Cotton 0.4 0 Fa br ic 3% Co tto n 1% End of Life For the studied Levi’s® 501® Jeans (cradle to grave) water consumption was highest at the cotton production and consumer use phases (49% and 45% respectively) 13 Understanding our environmental impact Facility Environmental Impact Assessment Studied sample of O&O locations, worldwide Assess all inputs and outputs Key takeaway from our impact assessments -o f- l if su nd an se Je Ce n an t io Di s tr Je ibu Cu e se ta il Re nt re s fic e Of w/ t/s e Co Fa fin i br tto sh ic 25 20 15 10 5 0 n k g CO 2 Global Warming per kg garment dof - li fe en an s us e ta il Je an s Je Ce Di st r ib ut io n t/ s e Cu Re nt re s ce ffi w/ O is h fin br Fa tto n ic 2500 2000 1500 1000 500 0 Co kg water Water use per kg garment It is not enough to focus on what we control, we need to address cotton and consumers Data from LS&CO.’s Facilities Environmental Impact Assessment (FEIA) and 2007 Life Cycle Assessment of Levi’s® 501® Jean. Company vision on sustainability “We will build sustainability into everything we do so our profitable growth helps restore the environment.” Environmental priorities and aspirational goals Energy Efficiency and Climate Change: Achieve carbon neutrality by implementation of energy reduction initiatives and the use of 100% renewable energy first in our operations and then throughout the supply chain Water: Reduce water usage and improve water quality throughout the product life cycle while growing our business Resource Efficiency: Evolve into a zero-waste company offering consumers more sustainable products Chemicals: Minimize the environmental impact from chemicals used in production of LS&CO. product in all stages of the product life cycle Influence: Provide leadership to encourage other companies, consumers, governments and civil society organizations to address environmental sustainability Key environmental strategies Focusing on the Full Product Life Cycle Cotton Business Operations Consumer Cotton: big for LS&CO. 95 percent of all LS&CO. products contain cotton. Use about 0.5 percent of global cotton production annually. In 2007, used 298 million lbs. (135,453 metric tons) of cotton to make products (about the amount produced by Mexico in 2007/2008) In 2008, source from 147 mills globally. Based on mill locations, we estimate that the majority of cotton may come from China, India, Pakistan, and the U.S. however we do not know for sure Developing a cotton strategy that… Includes environmental and socio-economic considerations Supports initiatives that will spread beneficial environmental/socio-economic cotton production practices worldwide Supports a tracking system that reaches to the farm level Enables collaboration with others Water Water quality: extend GEG to mill and sundry suppliers in 2009 with nine other brands Consumption: Mapping water consumption by geography Piloting new industrial garment washing techniques to reduce consumption Policy: • Founding member of BSR Sustainable Water Group • Joined CEO Water Mandate Transparency: • Committed to publicly sharing benchmarks, progress, challenges Energy and climate change Energy consumption: • Conduct facility energy efficiency audits • Establish energy use and GHG reduction targets • Pilot new industry garment manufacturing techniques to reduce consumption Transparency: • Global GHG Inventory (O&O) • The Climate Registry • Carbon Disclosure Project (2009) 2007 LS&CO. Metric Tons of CO2e Em issions 100,000 9 1, 6 3 6 90,000 2007 LS&CO. Global Emissions of CO2e by Facility Type 80,000 70,000 100,000 91,285 90,000 60,000 80,000 70,000 57,862 50,000 60,000 50,000 40,000 42,853 40,000 30,000 30,000 20,000 8,420 2,482 O th er ffi ce O et ai l Sa le s R O ffi ce M an uf ac tu rin g ist rib ut io n C en te r 0 5,078 954 9 , 3 18 10,000 To ta l 10,796 ra ve l 10,000 24,456 20,702 Ai rT 20,000 D 0 LSA LSEMA LSAPD LS&CO. Climate and energy policy World Resources Institute (WRI) Green Power Group – CA Affiliates Ceres Business for Innovative Climate & Energy Policy (BICEP) • Founding members: Levi Strauss & Co., Nike, Starbucks, Sun Microsystems, Timberland • Goal: work with business community and members of Congress to pass meaningful legislation consistent with eight core principles: 9 9 9 9 9 Set GHG reduction targets Establish an economy-wide GHG cap-and-trade system Establish aggressive energy efficiency policies Encourage transportation for a clean energy economy Increase investment in energy efficiency, renewables and carbon capture and storage technologies 9 Stimulate job growth through investment in climate-based solutions 9 Adopt a national renewable portfolio standard 9 Limit construction of new coal-fired power plants to those that capture and store carbon emissions Chemicals, materials, & Information Management System Identifying alternatives for chemicals to be phased-out Mapping material procurement and flows for identification of reduction opportunities and efficiencies Developing information management system to collect metrics and track performance Consumer: product design, marketing, education Product design and marketing • Resource efficiency: Incorporate resource efficiency factors in product design and aftercare • Packaging: Reduce product packaging from 3 to 2 hangtags, print direct on garment, and/or use dissolvable packaging • Alternative fibers and sundries Educate consumer • Wash care: Change wash care instructions on all products to “wash in cold water, tumble dry warm” • Wash less: Educate consumer to wash less • Retail stores: Use retail stores as a way to educate consumers on reducing impact (e.g., information on shopping bags; eco store) Thank you Please refer to: www.levistrauss.com/citizenship/environment.aspx