The "toughest operational carbon reduction targets of any major business" are among 47 goals in an ethical operating plan released today by the Co-Operative Group, the owner of the U.K.’s fifth-largest supermarket chain.
The Co-Op has pledged to reduce carbon emissions 35 percent by 2017, from a 2006 baselne. The company has already reduced carbon emissions 20 percent since 2006.
It aims to generate the equivalent of 25 percent of its energy needs from renewables by 2017, and to go carbon neutral by 2012. In contrast, number one UK retailer Tesco says it will go zero carbon by 2050.
The Co-Op says it will reduce water consumption across its operations by 10 percent by 2013.
The company, which also operates pharmacies, banks, insurance, investments and funeral services, says it will ensure that the “vast majority” of its operational waste is diverted from landfills by 2013. Currently the group re-uses or recycles 60 percent of its waste.
And the Co-Op has promised to move to sustainable sourcing for palm oil by 2011 and for soya by 2015.
The company called this "the most radical sustainability programme in UK corporate history".
Leading U.K. environmentalist Jonathon Porritt said: “By launching this Ethical Plan, the Co-operative is taking corporate sustainability into a new era. Other businesses will now be seeking to benchmark themselves against this plan."
Other goals and programs in the plan:
The Co-Op’s environmental achievements to date include ensuring that 99 percent of the wood and paper products it sells are from recycled sources or are certified by the Forest Stewardship Council.
In 2009 it stopped selling all fish from the Marine Conservation Society’s (MCS) list of Fish to Avoid, and ranked first out of eight retailers in the MCS’s supermarket survey.