Major Climate Threat to Global Supply Chains Identified by New Research from the Carbon Disclosure Project and Accenture
Seventy percent of companies believe that climate change has the
potential to significantly affect their revenue, a risk which is
intensified by a chasm between the sustainable business practices of
multinational corporations and their suppliers, according to research
published today by the Carbon
Disclosure Project (CDP) and Accenture
(NYSE:ACN).
“Reducing
risk and driving business value” is based on
information from 2,415 companies, including 2,363 suppliers and 52 major
purchasing organizations who are CDP Supply Chain program members. These
members include Dell, L’Oreal and Walmart, and they represent a combined
spending power of US$1 trillion. The research marks CDP Supply Chain’s
most comprehensive annual update on the impact of climate change on
corporate supply chains.
Climate change presents near-term risks to businesses, according to the
report. Fifty-one percent of the risks that disclosing companies
associate with drought or extreme rain are already having an adverse
effect on company operations, or are expected to within five years, say
those businesses. Additionally, the destructive nature of extreme
weather is likely a catalyst for company action on climate change, with
physical climate risk identified in the report as a greater driver of
investment than climate policy. Of the 678 companies investing in
emissions reduction initiatives, three quarters (73 percent) say they
feel that climate change presents a physical risk to their operations;
just 13 percent identify regulation as a sole driver.
Most of the positive actions responding companies say they have taken in
response to climate change are attributable to organizations that have
been using CDP’s unique global system for at least two years,
demonstrating that customer pressure is driving change. However, the
report identifies a performance gap between companies and their
suppliers, and it claims that this is intensifying climate risk in the
global supply chain models.
Suppliers are significantly less prepared than their clients to respond
to climate change, potentially threatening customer relationships and
heightening supply chain vulnerability. Suppliers demonstrate a lower
level of ambition to mitigate climate change risk, with just 38 percent
setting emission reductions targets in comparison to 92 percent of
purchasing companies. Similarly, at 27 percent, the percentage of
suppliers investing in activities to reduce emissions is less than half
that of CDP member companies (69 percent).
Unsurprisingly, CDP members are more likely to yield results from their
environmentally sustainable business practices than suppliers, according
to the survey. They are more than twice as likely to accomplish
year-on-year emissions reductions (63 percent vs. 29 percent), and are
better positioned to capitalize on the financial benefits of carbon
management. While 73 percent of members are achieving monetary savings,
such as reduced energy costs from emission reductions activities, only
29 percent of suppliers are enjoying such returns.
Paul Simpson, CDP’s chief executive officer says: “This research
illuminates fragility in the global supply chain model. The marked
difference in the sustainable actions of companies and their suppliers
highlights a missed opportunity for suppliers to reduce energy costs and
risks. The 61 percent of suppliers that failed to provide information
through CDP are an even greater concern since they and their clients are
unable to make a full assessment of the substantial climate risks or
opportunities they face.”
The analysis of the information, processed through CDP’s unique global
system for natural capital disclosure – now the largest and most
comprehensive in the world – demonstrates the attractive returns that
leading companies are enjoying from addressing supply chain
sustainability. The 29 percent of suppliers that have reduced their
emissions have saved some $13.7bn as a result. This implies aggregate
potential savings of all 2,363 suppliers could reach three times that
figure if the remaining proportion of suppliers were to achieve
reductions at that rate.
“This report provides clear evidence that those who are most transparent
about their climate change risks are more likely to achieve the greatest
emissions reductions,” says Gary Hanifan, global sustainability lead
for supply chain, Accenture. “And they are also more likely to enjoy
monetary savings as a result of their responses to climate change risks.
But the return on investment by the most proactive companies will not
reach its full potential unless those companies can encourage their
suppliers to follow their lead.”
The report is freely available from the CDP and Accenture websites. It
provides advice on how companies can use data, process and governance to
create a more sustainable supply chain and capitalize on the
correlations between climate risk, performance and accountability to
realize financial benefit. The report also includes supplier scoring
data provided by the CDP Supply Chain scoring partner, FirstCarbon
Solutions. Scores are available by region and sector, and show that
European and Asian companies still outperform companies in North America.
About CDP
The Carbon Disclosure Project (CDP) is an international, not-for-profit
organization providing the only global system for companies and cities
to measure, disclose, manage and share vital environmental information.
CDP works with market forces, including 655 institutional investors with
assets of US$78 trillion, to motivate companies to disclose their
impacts on the environment and natural resources and take action to
reduce them. CDP now holds the largest collection globally of primary
climate change and water information and puts these insights at the
heart of strategic business, investment and policy decisions. Please
visit www.cdproject.net
to find out more.
CDP Supply Chain member companies
Accenture, Acer Inc., Amdocs Ltd., AT&T Inc., Banco Bradesco S/A, Bank
of America, Braskem S/A, British Sky Broadcasting, BT Group, City of
Denver, Colgate Palmolive Company, Dell Inc., Diageo Plc., Domtar Inc.,
EADS N.V., Eaton Corporation, Eletropaulo Metropolitana Eletricidade de
São Paulo S/A, Elopak, Endesa, Eni SpA, FIBRIA Celulose, Ford Motor
Company, Goldman Sachs Group, Groupe Steria, Imperial Tobacco Group,
Jaguar Land Rover Ltd, Johnson & Johnson, Johnson Controls, JT
International SA, Juniper Networks, KAO Corporation, Kimberly-Clark
Corporation, KPMG UK, L’Oreal, Marfrig Alimentos, MetLife, Inc.,
Microsoft Corporation, National Australia Bank, National Grid, Nestle,
Nokia-Siemens Networks, PepsiCo, Philips Electronics N.V., Reckitt
Benckiser, Rexam, S.C. Johnson & Son, Inc., SAB Miller, Starwood Hotels
& Resorts Worldwide, Inc., Suzano Pulp and Paper, The Coca-Cola Company,
Unilever, Vale, Vodafone Group, Walmart.
About Accenture
Accenture is a global management consulting, technology services and
outsourcing company, with 259,000 people serving clients in more than
120 countries. Combining unparalleled experience, comprehensive
capabilities across all industries and business functions, and extensive
research on the world’s most successful companies, Accenture
collaborates with clients to help them become high-performance
businesses and governments. The company generated net revenues of US
$27.9 billion for the fiscal year ended Aug. 31, 2012. Its home page is www.accenture.com.
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