Ecostore will be carbon neutral by year’s end
Thursday, 5th September 2019
Ecostore will be carbon neutral by year’s end to tackle climate change
Ecostore is once again leading the way
with today’s announcement the Australasian business will
be carbon-neutral by the end of 2019.
The goal is a
keystone of ecostore’s 2018 Sustainability Report which
will see both the New Zealand and Australia sites become
carboNZero certified.
The only business in Australasia
that makes and packages their products in a manufacturing
plant that has been carboNZero certified since 2010,
ecostore has already offset 769 tonnes of carbon through the
plant’s participation in the certification
programme.
Ecostore has partnered with New Zealand’s
leading provider of environmental certification, Enviro-Mark
Solutions. The organisation will measure ecostore’s carbon
emissions and help the team reduce and offset these
emissions to achieve carboNZero certification beyond the
manufacturing plant to cover the entire organisation,
including the finished goods warehouse facility, flagship
store, head office and satellite office in
Australia.
Enviro-Mark Solutions chief executive Dr
Ann Smith says, “Taking action on climate change, by
reducing carbon emissions, is one of the biggest challenges
faced by business but rising to the challenge will identify
opportunities and drive innovation. With ecostore’s
ambitious plans to offset their impacts in the short term,
and commitment to continual emissions reductions and
environmental improvement for the long term, they are
setting an excellent example for other
organisations.”
Ecostore’s 2018 Sustainability
Report also outlines further action plans to tackle climate
change, aligned with the Paris Agreement, to keep warming
within 1.5 degrees Celsius and the government’s Zero
Carbon Bill.
Ecostore managing director Pablo Kraus says, “Businesses need to step up and recognise that they can and must be a force for good. Corporates have an incredible opportunity to pave the way for future generations. We must lead by example, empower others, act, make changes – and this report communicates how ecostore is delivering on our promise to lead the way.
“Climate change and plastic
pollution are two of the biggest challenges we face in the
21st century. At ecostore we tackle this holistically
through our operations, how we choose our partners, how we
source our materials, and what we do about the lifecycle of
our products.”
In 2014 ecostore switched their
plastic packaging to plastic made from sugarcane saving
almost 4500 tonnes of carbon emissions – the equivalent of
a car driving the length of New Zealand 8500
times.
Currently, 90 percent of ecostore’s plastic
is made from sugarcane and refill bottles are 10 percent
post-consumer recycled (PCR) made from New Zealand milk
bottles. The company has a target to achieve 100 percent
renewable or recycled content in their packaging by
2025.
The company also has introduced new electric
forklifts. Much like EV cars, these forklifts have no
emissions, are quieter, require less maintenance and
generally have a longer life than internal combustion
engines. By recharging the battery during off-peak times
these forklifts have less impact on the grid.
Ecostore
general manager of supply chain, Tony Morpeth, says they are
investigating further ways to minimise electricity, LPG and
fuel use, waste and water use during manufacturing, along
with carbon emissions from the freighting of their finished
goods.
Morpeth says they are constantly seeking ways
to reduce water use and wastage. At their factory, they have
an environmental management system to maintain the quality
of wastewater discharged for treatment, they are monitoring
water use and discharge, and they undertake grey water
testing. Ecostore has also achieved Enviro-Mark Diamond
certification for their environmental management system.
“We’ve also developed new ways to reduce waste by
reducing bottle weight and maximising efficiency, saving 28
tonnes of plastic from entering the waste and recycling
streams,” Morpeth says.
Packaging is a key area
where the team can make a difference and where they’re
committed to using renewable recyclable packaging materials
so less ends up in landfill.
“Recycling is just part
of the answer to the plastic pollution problem,” Morpeth
explains. “Refills reduce the amount of plastic consumed
and the amount entering our waste stream. We’ve led the
refill model in New Zealand, invested heavily in our refill
stations in 2018, and now have more than 60 stations
throughout New Zealand, and the first one in a
supermarket.”
In 2018, ecostore customers saved as
many as 86,520 bottles (500ml) by using the sustainability
company’s refill stations. Ecostore is now focused on
selling more bulk packs via refill stations in order to
encourage reuse with a target of 140 percent growth over the
next five years.
Rolling out more refill stations at
supermarkets in 2019 is also another goal the company is
working towards. The brand also plans to have new programs
in place this year to create a more circular economy and
close the loop with their sugarcane plastic bottles to help
eradicate plastic waste.
The 2018 Sustainability
report aligns with the United Nations Sustainable
Development Goals, the blueprint to achieve a better and
more sustainable future for all.
To view ecostore’s
2018 Corporate Sustainability Report, please visit: https://bit.ly/2lt6Z9g.
Morpeth
talks about ecostore’s goal of becoming carbon neutral by
year’s end on the Sustainable Business Council’s
Sustainability Radio, download the
episode.
-ENDS-