Swiss food and consumer goods giant Nestle is planning to transition its operations completely to renewable energy within five years as part of a plan to achieve net-zero greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions by mid-century.
The company on 3 December unveiled a sustainability plan that calls for $3.6bn in investments over the next five years to accelerate its efforts to shrink its carbon footprint and work with its suppliers to switch to more sustainable agriculture practices.
"Tackling climate change can't wait and neither can we. It is imperative to the long-term success of our business," Nestle chief executive Mark Schneider said.
Nestle said it expects to use 100pc renewables at its 800 sites in 187 countries within five years, and it also intends to switch its global vehicle fleet to lower emission options and will reduce and offset business travel by 2022.
The company used renewables for 34.5pc of its electricity in 2018. To achieve its 100pc goal, Nestle said it will use a mix of power-purchase agreements, on-site production, green tariffs and renewable energy certificates (RECs). The company said it will also work with suppliers to increase the availability of energy generated from biogas and biomass over the next decade.
The company's plan includes near-term goals of cutting its emissions by 20pc by 2025 and 50pc by 2030. Nestle's emissions totaled 113mn metric tonnes CO2e in 2018, but its reductions will be measured against a baseline of 92mn t, which it said excludes GHGs associated with consumer use of its products and purchased services leased assets, capital goods and investments. The largest slice of emissions, 66mn t, is linked to Nestle's sourcing of ingredients.
Netsle said it will continue to advocate for carbon pricing around the globe. The company has thrown its support behind a cap-and-trade program for CO2 emissions from the transportation sector in the northeast US and called for a national carbon price.
The Nestle plan also calls for increasing the number of the company's "carbon neutral" brands, which means those brands reduce emissions as much as possible and then offset the rest "through high quality, verified schemes." The company also said it will make all of its packaging recyclable or reusable by 2025, cut its uses of virgin plastic by one third by 2025 and plant 200mn trees by 2030.