The threat of climate change is increasingly present in our daily lives. But in order to reverse its course – or at least stem the literal and figurative rising tide – we must first examine our behavior.
The ACS Climate Science Toolkit found that nearly all climate warming can be attributed to human activities since the Industrial Revolution. It was our collective behavior that caused global temperatures to rise. Controlling those temperatures must also be our collective duty. In particular, we must enable people to adopt sustainable lifestyles and advocate for sustainable business models.
According to the Survey of Sustainability Reporting 2020, 80% of the world’s top businesses reported on sustainability in 2020. Meanwhile, individuals are struggling to implement and fully grasp eco-friendly practices in their daily lives. In a Southern Cross University survey of U.S. and Australian consumers, 77% indicated they wanted to learn how to live more sustainably, but higher prices and perceived inconvenience stops them from doing so.
How do we make our businesses sustainable while also making climate change an economic opportunity?
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Build a net zero business model
The first step toward honoring the United Nations’ Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), the North Star to-do list for people and the planet by 2030, is to create sustainable products. G7 climate and environment ministers acknowledged that “the unprecedented and interdependent crises of climate change and biodiversity loss pose an existential threat to nature, people, prosperity, and security.”
According to Accenture research, companies are realizing value from integrating net zero into their operations and products. Between 2013 and 2020, companies with consistently high ratings for environmental, social, and governance (ESG) performance have outperformed their peers, achieving operating margins 3.7X higher than lower ESG performers, and generating 2.6X higher annual total returns to shareholders.
At Accenture, sustainability is inclusive of everything – from environment and equality, to technology and economics. Nothing shows greater promise than sustainability. It will permeate everything, driving new value and growth along the way. That’s why Salesforce and Accenture announced an expanded partnership to help companies embed sustainability into their business. The combination of Accenture’s Sustainability Services, Salesforce Net Zero Cloud, and Customer 360 will bring sustainability to the front office and provide leaders visibility into historical and real-time environmental, social, and governance data.
“Accenture and Salesforce continue to have a unique opportunity to play a market-shaping role in the fast-moving, mission critical sustainability transformation agenda,” said Farshad Family, managing director and global Salesforce sustainability lead at Accenture. “Accenture brings deep sustainability expertise, and Salesforce powers the business imperative with a trusted platform.”
In tandem with a broadened commitment to their own sustainability goals, Accenture has rolled out a suite of services that help global clients carry out sustainability initiatives of their own. This includes focusing on net zero waste, circular value chains, and other green priorities.
Salesforce has similarly worked to incorporate net zero goals into everyday business practices. Co-CEO Marc Benioff leads a consortium of companies in an initiative to plant one trillion trees by 2030. In 2021, the company introduced its Sustainability Exhibit, which expands its climate commitments to also include every company in its supply chain. For the first time, these commitments are being written into contracts with the understanding that by working together, companies can amplify their impact.
How your company can participate in the green economy
Xcel Energy was the first major energy company to pledge a carbon-free presence by 2050. Since 2005, the company has reduced carbon emissions by 51%, making Xcel Energy the nation’s energy company leader in transitioning to clean energy.
“Customers want to participate in the greening of the country,” said Brett Carter, executive vice president and chief customer and innovation officer at Xcel Energy. “You have to empower them to participate in the transition.”
Carter explained how the key to empowering consumers is by providing them with data they didn’t previously have access to. For example, Xcel Energy makes clean energy consumption insights visible and accessible. Customers can then use that information to decide when to plug in their electric cars or better understand their own consumption habits.
The clean-energy utility pioneer has also committed to providing affordable electrical vehicles (EV) with an intentional rebate added on for vehicles under $50K.
“We are already busy creating new charging options for customers, whether they are residential customers or companies and government agencies with large vehicle fleets,” Carter said. “EVs charged on the Xcel Energy system will have an estimated 80% lower carbon emission by 2030.”
Tailor your net zero offerings to different generations
Every generation engages with the reality of climate change – natural disasters, financial disruptions, existential dread – differently. But it’s younger generations in particular who are willing to change their buying patterns based on a brand’s commitment to the environment.
Countless retail studies indicate that Gen Z and Millennial shoppers prefer to buy from sustainable brands. Is your company only targeting investors for wildlife preservation when there’s a powerful interest among customers? Are you focusing on Baby Boomers at the expense of younger generations?
Businesses have the capacity to address every one of these barriers. We can make eco-friendly products affordable, convenient, and available – even in communities where so far they have not been. We also have the power to shift the way people think about sustainable living. Instead of it being a novelty, it can be the new baseline for how consumers – across all generations – act.
Because getting to net zero is multidimensional, our approach should be as well. Lack of awareness is not the problem. The problem is the gap in application. Now it’s up to businesses to actually address it. How can our sustainability programs reach everybody across geographical and generational borders?
Knowing this fundamental human truth, it’s clear that business is the greatest platform to address climate change. We are the ones who can turn sustainability into economic opportunity. We can reach people in every aspect of their lives, in a way that makes intuitive sense. This is our responsibility. This is our moment.