12. Februar 2011

CO2-Reduktion in der Supply Chain führt zu Kosteneinsparungen - aktuelle Studie

Die aktuelle Studie "Carbon Disclosure Project Supply Chain Report 2011" der Non-Profit-Organisation Carbon Disclosure Project (CDP) und Beratungsfirma A.T.Kearney ist erschienen.
Es werden quantiative und qualitative Daten, Stimmen und Fallbeispiele von globalen Konzernen wie Dell, PepsiCo, u. w. und über 1000 Lieferanten zum Thema CO2-Reduktion in der Supply Chain berichtet.

Einige Auszüge aus der Management Summary (unten finden Sie Link und PDF zum Download):

"Supplier carbon reduction ambition still does not meet global carbon reduction requirements to limit the rise of global surface temperature. [...] The report highlights that it is still early days in the quest to reduce emissions. While progress has been made, a major step change is required if business is to meet the global requirements. Increased engagement and commitment in the supply chain is indispensable for achieving this. This report highlights that although there is work to do, through leadership - as demonstrated by CDP Members in working with their suppliers - a positive snowball and domino effect in the supply chain can bring about thechange needed."

"If this situation persists, with only a portion of global businesses setting a target, global carbon emissions controlled by business will actually increase by 12% by 2020."

"There is hope…companies are assembling the building blocks for dramatic change [...] Members have started a ‘Chain Reaction’"

Hier das Inhaltverzeichnis:
CDP Supply Chain Member Companies i
Executive Summary ii
1 The A.T. Kearney Perspective 1
2 About CDP Supply Chain 2
3 Methodology Followed 3
4 CDP Supply Chain Member Analysis 5
5 CDP Supplier Analysis 12
6 The Way Forward 22
7 Glossary of Key Terms 26


Hier zum kostenlosen Download unter www.cdproject.net oder
Direkt hier runterladen/lesen: PDF

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