Safeway has become a founding member of the Sustainability Consortium, the group launched in support of Wal-Mart's Sustainability Index.
The goal of the consortium is to develop guidelines and promote innovations as the supply chain seeks to reduce its energy use, emissions and packaging. The consortium made headlines in January when Wal-Mart and Best Buy, together with electronics suppliers Dell, HP, Intel and Toshiba, officially launched the effort.
The consortium is administered by Arizona State University and the University of Arkansas, with financial support from Wal-Mart.
The consortium has courted Safeway, in hopes that it would become involved in what could be an industry wide sustainability metric system.
Safeway made its involvement in the initiative public March 1, reports Supermarket News. Safeway is the first grocer to join the group, according to a press release.
The retailer will use life cycle assessment data to create a company-wide supply chain policy encouraging sustainable purchasing and manufacturing practices throughout the organization's direct and indirect buying.