Small firms have a big role fighting climate change
Original article here
Back to the Roots co-founder Nikhil Arora (L) is taking steps to |
By Nathalie Jimenez, Business producer, New York
For the past two
years, Nikhil Arora has been working hard to cut his organic gardening
company's carbon footprint, taking small steps, like shifting away from plastic
packaging, to make his business, Back to the Roots, the most environmentally
efficient it has ever been.
The
California-based company is small, employing just 21 people, but it expects to
make roughly $100m (£84m) in sales this year. Mr Arora says the moves it
has made are critical to the fight against climate change.
"Small
businesses are the lifeblood of the US economy. We power most of the jobs, most
of the growth and, therefore, I think we will also power most of the
change," says Mr Arora, co-founder of the company, which started selling
organic gardening kits more than a decade ago.
Corporate giants
such as Amazon and Walmart have faced much of the public pressure over
sustainability goals.
But a company's
supply chain produces 11 times more emissions than the company on its own, the
Carbon Disclosure Project (CDP), a non-profit charity that runs the global
emissions disclosure system, has found.
In industries like
retail, it found that supply chains produce 25 times more emissions than the
company itself.
"You can't
solve the climate problem without addressing small businesses," says
Michael Vandenbergh, law professor at Vanderbilt University and director of its
Climate Change Research Network. "They make up a very large share of the
carbon emissions associated with big companies' supply chains... so you can't
get to any meaningful change without dealing with small businesses."
Small businesses
make up 99% of US companies and employ nearly half of the American workforce.
But their sheer
numbers make it easy for them to fly under the radar and mean they're tough to
regulate.
Advocates say
focusing on supply chains can make it easier to engage with small businesses,
unlocking billions in emissions savings.
"For an
individual company, their relative impact is not high," says Simon
Fischweicher, head of corporations and supply chains for the CDP's North
America branch. "But when you think about the collection of tens, hundreds
and millions of small enterprises that are suppliers to these large
corporations, they're incredibly important.
"So global value chains are one of the most effective tools driving impact."
Small Business
USA
If it's true to say
the US is the engine of the world economy, then small and medium-sized
businesses are the fuel that drives that engine.
Small businesses
create nearly two-thirds of new jobs in the workforce and account for 44% of US
economic activity. So what's the secret to their success? What challenges do
they face and which are the best cities and regions for them to thrive?
As the climate
crisis worsens and larger companies look for the most efficient ways to reduce
their environmental impact, cutting a company's "Scope 3" emissions -
or emissions from the supply chain - has gained traction with big companies.
At COP 27 in Egypt,
the UN's annual climate summit, more than a dozen of the world's largest food
firms said they planned to end deforestation in their supply chains by 2025,
making collaboration with smaller suppliers key to accelerating climate action.
US retail
corporation Walmart attributes 95% of its emissions to its supply chain, which
includes thousands of small suppliers. "From day one, working with small
businesses was key," says Jane Ewing, senior vice president for
sustainability at Walmart.
"We feel we
can play a really important role in saying, 'Hey, here's some tools,' and then
we help guide them along that journey. We've seen more [small businesses] lean
in than ever before."
In 2017, Walmart
launched Project Gigaton, which aims to use its might to help small firms in
its supplier network track their carbon footprint, set sustainability goals,
and access more favourable loan terms.
Mr Arora's Back to
the Roots joined the programme in 2019, along with 2,400 other businesses, in
the hope of lowering its emissions.
Mr Arora, who
counts Walmart as his biggest client, credits the retailer with helping his
business find, solve and track its main sources of carbon emissions, pushing it
towards its goals.
"This is by
far the most efficient we've been in terms of carbon emissions. We've been able
to scale this company at an exciting pace while also not increasing our
environmental footprint," he says.
Walmart says the
success at Back to the Roots has been replicated across its network, helping to
reduce greenhouse gases by 574 million tonnes since 2017.
That has put it
halfway towards its goal of cutting emissions by one billion tonnes by 2030 -
an impact equivalent to Germany going carbon neutral for a year.
Walmart is not
alone in taking action. Overall, CDP has found that roughly 200 major
corporations have leaned on their suppliers to reduce their carbon footprints,
helping to reduce greenhouse gas emissions by 1.8 billion tonnes last year
alone.
But for many small
companies, being sustainable is a luxury.
In a recent survey
by the SME Climate Hub, a platform that works with small and medium enterprises
to cut their emissions, two-thirds of small business owners said they were
concerned they would not be able to reduce their carbon footprint, citing
knowledge, funding and time. About 70% said they would need access to external
funds to reduce their emissions.
The economic
climate does not favour small businesses either, says Pamela Jouven, director
of the SME Climate Hub, often making sustainability their last priority.
"They're
having to face this perfect storm of rising energy prices, inflation and supply
chain disruption. So the very first challenge for these small businesses is how
to survive. It's hard for them to make the time to add another project to the
list," she says.
At the Carbon
Disclosure Project, Simon Fischweicher is staying optimistic. One day he hopes
that supply chain decarbonisation will become so commonplace and accessible
that even small businesses will start looking at how they can reduce their own
value chain's carbon footprint.
"When we'll
start to see [supply chain decarbonisation] be adopted by smaller companies,
that's when we know we're going beyond that first tier of impact, and we'll
start to see real change happen."
This is really interesting good for them So impressive that they have made a huge difference to Walmart
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