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Sixty corporations volunteer to measure full lifecycle emissions of products
Jeremy Hance
mongabay.com
January 20, 2010



Well-known corporations like Airbus, Levi Strauss & Co., 3M, DuPont, and Kraft Foods are volunteering to 'road test' a new global framework to measure the full lifecycle greenhouse gas emission of consumer products from blue jeans to manufactured steel.

The new standards, the Product Life Cycle Accounting and Reporting Standard and the Scope 3 (Corporate Value Chain) Accounting and Reporting Standard, provide innovative methods to measure a product's full lifecycle emissions. In all sixty corporations have been chosen to participate.

"We are encouraged by the overwhelming response from the private sector seeking to road test the new standards. There were more than 120 applications across a broad array of sectors and regions worldwide. The road testing will provide critical input in ensuring that the standards generate credible and meaningful data for business and government decision makers, while considering the practical challenges that businesses and programs will face during implementation," said Jonathan Lash in a press release. Lash is president of the World Resources Institute (WRI), which developed the standards along with the World Business Council for Sustainable Development (WBCSD).

The new standards will also allow companies to look at the greenhouse gas emissions of their full corporate value chain, including supplier manufacturing, outsourced activities, and the products' ultimate consumption.

"Levi Strauss & Co. is thrilled to be road-testing the [greenhouse gas] Protocol Product Life Cycle Accounting and Reporting Standard," said Michael Kobori, Levi Strauss & Co.’s vice president of Social and Environmental Sustainability. "If this method becomes widely accepted, it will enable us to better calculate and share the climate change impact of our products. Being able to credibly measure and communicate that product impact to consumers can unleash the power of the market to address climate change on a global scale,"

This process of testing by corporations is designed to see how well the standards work when applied in the field. After the testing process, revised standards will be published at the end of the year.



The companies doing the testing include: 3M Company; Acer Inc.; Airbus S.A.S.; AkzoNobel; Alcan Packaging; Alcoa; Autodesk, Inc.; Baoshan Iron & Steel Co. Ltd.; BASF SE; Belkin International; Bloomberg LP; BT Plc; CA, Inc.; Coca-Cola Entfrischungsgetränke AG; Colors Fruit SA (Pty) Ltd.; Deutsche Post AG; DuPont; Eclipse Networks (Pty) Ltd.; Ecolab; The Estee Lauder Company; Ford Motor Company; General Electric; U.S. General Services Administration; Highways Agency (UK); Hydro Tasmania; IBM; IKEA; Italcementi Group; JohnsonDiversey, Inc.; Kraft Foods; Lenovo Corporation; Levi Strauss & Co.; Mitsubishi Chemical Corporation; National Grid; Natura Cosméticos; New Belgium Brewing Co.; Otarian; Pinchin Environmental Ltd.; PricewaterhouseCoopers (Hong Kong); Procter & Gamble Eurocor; Public Service Enterprise Group, Inc.; Rogers Communications, Inc.; SC Johnson; Shanghai Zidan Food Packaging & Printing Co., Ltd.; Shell International Petroleum Company Ltd; Swire Beverages (Coca-Cola Bottling Partner); TAL Apparel Limited; Tech-Front (Shanghai) Computer Co., Ltd./Quanta Shanghai Manufacturing City; Tennant Company; Veolia Water; VT Group Plc; Webcor Builders and WorldAutoSteel.







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CITATION:
Jeremy Hance
mongabay.com (January 20, 2010). Sixty corporations volunteer to measure full lifecycle emissions of products. http://news.mongabay.com/2010/0120-hance_lifecycle.html


Tags:
greenhouse gas emissions carbon emissions jeremy hance green environment climate change global warming mitigation energy greenhouse gases sustainability

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