Title: Environmental best practice for FORS companies
1 Environmental best practice for FORS
companies James Swanston, Carbon Voyage
Web www.carbonvoyage.com/freight Twitter
_at_carbonvoyage
2Outline
- The basics of sustainability
- FORS and sustainability
- How to use sustainability to save money
- Environmental Audits and Policies
- Carbon/ Greenhouse Gas Accounting for you and
your customers
3Introduction to Sustainability
4What is Climate Change?
- The increase in the Earths average temperature
over a long period of time - Caused by greenhouse gases from
Natural reasons
Human activities
Source EU European Commission on Climate Change
5Brief history of climate change
Source BBC News
6Source An Inconvenient Truth
1927 Carbon emissions 1 billion tonnes per
year 1989 Carbon emissions 6 billion tonnes per
year 2006 Carbon emissions 8 billion tonnes per
year
Source BBC News
7Early warnings
Source BBC News
8(No Transcript)
9 The effect of Global Warming
10Effects Melting Glaciers
- Rising global temperatures
- The Polar ice cap is melting at 9 per decade
- Over the past 3 decades, more than a million
squares miles of sea ice disappeared - If this continues, Arctic summers could be
ice-free by 2040 - Glaciers in Glacier National Park will be gone by
2070 -
Picture Source NASA
11Effects Rising Sea Levels
- Sea expansion due to rising temperature
- Melting Glaciers
- Global sea level rises by 4-8 inches in the past
century - Sea level rising appears to be accelerating
- Sea level could rise 10-23 inches by 2100
- Small islands like Maldives, Marshall islands
will be gone by 2100 - Soon 70,000 people will become homeless
12Effects Weather
- Powerful and dangerous Hurricanes
- Increased Volcano Activities
- More Floods
- Drought and Wildfire
- Intense Rainstorms
13Effect Health
- Heat Waves
- Spread of Deadly Disease
14Effects Migration, Conflict and Wars
- Drought and Flooding
- Less available water, less food, damaged
shelters, less dwindling resources - Migration, conflict and wars will become
unavoidable - Countries may seek those resource in order to
survive at the cost of others
15Future of Climate Change
16Future of Climate Change
- One of the main questions that people have about
climate change is, can it be stopped?
17FORS and sustainability
18Where this fits into FORS benchmarking
Silver and gold membership fuel use/ CO2 and
emissions
What it is? Calculations based on per million
vehicle km for each type of vehicle Fleet size/
type x Fuel Consumption
What to do? Manage Reduce
19FORS The Bigger Picture
Definition of sustainable freight distribution
The balanced management and control of the
economic, social and environmental issues
affecting freight transport that Complies with
or exceeds environmental standards, regulations
or targets aimed at reducing emissions of climate
change gases, improving air quality and
minimising impacts from accidents, spillages or
wastes Ensures freight is run efficiently,
reduces unnecessary journeys, minimises journey
distances and maximises loads with effective
planning Complies with labour, transport and
human rights standards and regulations ensuring
that employees and communities affected by
freight can function in a healthy and safe
environment Minimises the negative impacts of
freight activities on local communities
20FORS The Bigger Picture - Congestion
Between 1980 and 2006, average journey speeds
decreased by an approximately 14 - more in rush
hours TfL estimates that up to 17 is lost for
every hour a vehicle is stuck in traffic.
Estimates for the total cost of congestion to
London range from 2 to 4 billion Freight,
which makes up 17 per cent of all road traffic,
is expected to grow by 25 per cent in 2031 Based
on 2006 data, the estimated contribution from
freight transport in London is 2.2m tonnes of GHG
emissions, equalling 5.1 per cent of the
Capitals GHG production and energy use
21FORS The Bigger Picture - Solutions
- Delivering freight sustainably through
- Freight Operator Recognition Scheme (FORS)
- Delivery and Servicing Plans (DSP)
- Construction Logistics Plans (CLP)
- Freight Information Portal (FIP)
22FORS The Bigger Picture Potential Result
23How to use sustainability to save money
MS said it had generated 50m in additional
profits against its expectation that the plan
would cost it 200m over five years. (The
Telegraph, June 2010)
24Why sustainability is important for your business
25Drivers for Sustainability
Case study research has calculated that for every
employee fully engaged in their organisations
sustainability policies, the organisation can
save 1,000 in operational costs each year
Improved sustainability practise within large
corporations can increase profits by 38 when the
benefits are aggregated, similar savings in
expenditure can be achieved in the public and
not-for profit sector
26Some of the problems
Each transport user/ provider has different
challenges, but are all negatively affected by
inefficiencies
27Some of the Problems
Under-utilised transport assets
Carbon Emissions
Stove-piped transport modes
Lack of easy access to supply chain
Congestion
Pollutants
Regulatory Requirements
Needless doubling up of vehicles
Costs
Managing expenditure/ Acquitting receipts
Stakeholder/ Reputation Management
Sustainability should be about efficiency, and
thus equate to savings
28Saving money and building profit requires a
coherent strategy
29Drivers for Sustainability
Macro vs Micro Organisational vs Individual
30Organisational Behaviour
Drivers for Change Cost Carbon Regulation Congest
ion Employees Customers Shareholders
31Organisational Behaviour
Drivers for Change Cost Carbon Regulation Congest
ion Employees Customers Shareholders
Drivers against Change Competing
resources Inefficient procurement Lack of senior
buy-in Lack of coherent and resourced
strategy Employee Terms and Conditions
32Individual Behaviour
Drivers for Change Cost Carbon Health
33Individual Behaviour
Drivers for Change Cost Carbon Health
Drivers against Change Opportunity Cost
Convenience Unattractive or no
incentives Trust Knowledge/ information
34Individual Behaviour Drivers for and against
change
Drivers for Change Cost Carbon Health
Drivers against Change Opportunity Cost
Convenience Unattractive or no
incentives Trust Knowledge/ information
Opportunities to affect change Information Trust
- system Trust - other sharers Management Incentiv
es
35Generating efficiencies internally is
goodGenerating efficiencies through the value
chain is betterOpening up collaboration
opportunities is best
Collaborative Consumption