Friday, June 8, 2012

The Role of Carbon Footprint Reduction in the Food and Drink Industry

NEW YORK, May 22, 2012 /PRNewswire via COMTEX/ ?
Reportlinker.com announces that a new market research report is available in its catalogue:

The Role of Carbon Footprint Reduction in the Food and Drink Industry

http://www.reportlinker.com/p0865268/The-Role-of-Carbon-Footprint-Reduction-in-the-Food-and-Drink-Industry.html #utm_source=prnewswire&utm_medium=pr&utm_campaign=Energy_&_

Reaching consensus on measuring and reporting carbon footprint, reducing carbon emissions while maintaining or improving cost efficiencies, as well as dealing with legal imperatives to reduce emissions and understanding consumer attitudes to sustainability are just some of the challenges that the food and drinks industry must face if it is to meet future demand for carbon reduction effectively.Understand the commercial, legal, and consumer imperatives which drive the need for carbon reduction and reporting in the food and drink industry.Gain an insight into the significant sources of carbon emissions in the food and drink supply chain ? and measures being taken to reduce them.Assess the different issues surrounding carbon footprint measuring and reporting, including the complexities of carbon footprint labeling.Understand how carbon emissions reduction can take place at the same time as maintaining or improving productivity and efficiency.Gain an insight into how carbon emissions reduction and carbon footprint labeling will need to develop if it is to make progress in the long term.Given consumer, commercial, and legal imperatives for action on carbon emissions reduction, carbon footprinting will remain a permanent part of the food and drink landscape. What is less certain is whether carbon footprint reduction will drive consumer purchasing decisions, or whether reporting carbon footprint drives meaningful carbon reduction.The term carbon footprint is ubiquitous in the public sphere but agreement on how to measure it is not clear: should it include indirect emissions or simply direct emissions? In many cases the ability to take the more comprehensive approach by including indirect emissions is limited by data quality and the ability to procure it from suppliers.Overcoming the lack of consumer engagement and understanding of what carbon footprint measurement and reduction means in real terms is one of the first and most significant challenges that food and drinks manufacturers will have to overcome. Reaching a critical mass of carbon footprint labeling will be a key driver of this.What do consumers think about sustainability and why should the industry act when consumer buying behavior doesn?t match up to their attitudes?What are the major legal frameworks in place to encourage and enforce carbon reduction and how do they apply to the food and drink industry?Which non-governmental bodies are having an impact on carbon reduction in the food and drink industry? What is their approach to helping businesses?What are the key challenges involved in comprehensive carbon footprint labeling programs? How can they be overcome?What?s the long-term outlook for carbon emissions reduction and cabon footprint labeling in the food and drinks industry?

Table of Contents

Sarah Chambers

Disclaimer

EXECUTIVE SUMMARY

Introduction

Imperatives to take action on carbon in the food and drink industry

Sources of carbon emissions and reductions in the food and drink industry

Key issues in carbon footprinting in the food and drink industry: measurement, labeling, and engagement

The future of carbon reduction in the food and drink industry

Introduction

Summary

Introduction

?Measuring and reporting carbon footprint

?Implementing solutions to reduce carbon footprint

?Imperatives for action

?Methodology

?Definition: CO2 equivalent (CO2e)

The impact of carbon emissions on the environment

Imperatives to take action on carbon in the food and drink industry

Summary

Introduction

Commercial drivers for carbon reduction

?The Triple Bottom Line

?The effect of economic decline on sustainability initiatives

?Rising energy costs

Consumer drivers for carbon reduction

?Sustainability is part of every-day life

?Consumers want genuine and holistic sustainability efforts

Legislative drivers for carbon reduction

?Applying carbon legislation to the food and drink industry

Non-governmental organizations

?Waste & Resources Action Program (WRAP)

?The Carbon Trust

?The Carbon Disclosure Project

Carbon trading

?Carbon trading in the European Union

?Carbon trading in New Zealand

?Carbon trading in Australia

?Carbon trading in the United States

Other energy efficiency regulations

Conclusion

Sources of carbon emissions and reductions in the food and drink industry

Summary

Introduction

Greenhouse gas emissions in food and drink production

?Emissions in the agricultural sector

?Emissions from processing and manufacturing

?Emissions from packaging

?Emissions from transportation

?Emissions from retail outlets

?Emissions from food and drink waste

Conclusions

Key issues in carbon footprinting in the food and drink industry: measurement, labeling, and engagement

Summary

Introduction

Defining a carbon footprint

?Methodologies for defining and measuring carbon footprint

The challenge of creating carbon footprint labeling for food and drink products

?The costs involved in carbon labeling

?The operational complexities of carbon labeling and reporting

?The consumer challenge for carbon labeling

?The need to achieve critical mass to drive uptake and understanding

Putting the brakes on carbon footprint labeling: Innocent and Tesco

Conclusion

The future of carbon reduction in the food and drink industry

Summary

Carbon footprint measurement and reduction will be a permanent part of the food and drink industry landscape

A slow start, but there is hope for the future

Using carbon labeling to drive long-term behavior change: the need to achieve ?critical mass?

Achieving a step-change in carbon reductions in the long term

Appendix

Glossary

Bibliography/References

TABLES

Table: Global Warming Potential (GWP)

Table: CO 2 Emissions by mode of transport

FIGURES

Figure: Global average near-surface temperature anomalies 1850-2009

Figure: The triple bottom line

Figure: Food is important in many areas of policy

Figure: Greenhouse gas emissions by source, 2000

Figure: GHG Emissions in the food and drink industry in the EU27

Figure: The UK?s food-related carbon footprint

Figure: Courtauld Phase 2 Targets

Figure: Environmental impacts in the supply chain

Figure: Tesco?s direct greenhouse gas emissions

Figure: Food and drink waste generated in UK households

Figure: Carbon footprint labels, Walkers Crisps and Kingsmill bread

Figure: PepsiCo sustainability strategy

Companies Mentioned

Amer Sports Corporation, Banco Santander, S.A., CMS Energy Corporation, ERGO Versicherungsgruppe AG, HSBC Holdings plc, Hutchison 3G UK Limited, Informa plc, J Sainsbury plc, Lloyds Banking Group plc, Odwalla, Inc., Oxford University Press, Queensland University of Technology, Schindler Holding Ltd., Unilever, Uralsvyazinform OJSC

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Energy & environment Industry: The Role of Carbon Footprint Reduction in the Food and Drink Industry

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