Why retail needs to set its own Mission Possible to create a sustainable future

The Retail sector has done much in the last decade on sustainability but it’s increasingly apparent that all this has just been a dress rehearsal, a beginning not an end. Edie has just launched a new report on Mission Possible for the Retail Sector showcasing the sustainable solutions the sector has developed and challenging it to scale them. Here's a link to the report and below the foreword to it

The sustainable business consensus of the last decade is being washed away. Lots of linear, individual targets, steadily ‘ticked off’ served a purpose, got the ‘flywheel spinning’. But this model cannot keep up with the environmental, social and economic pressures that retail faces. The urgency of the call for change from consumers, colleagues, shareholders, policy makers is palpable and far greater than our current collective response. To pick just three example of how the world is accelerating beyond us.

Biodiversity has been under pressure for years. But new evidence, particularly on the closely related topic of birds and insects, has set alarm bells ringing again. For example, a new study shows that Puffin populations on Shetland have plummeted from 33,000 birds in 2000 to just 570 as climate change and overfishing disrupts their food chains. France’s farmland bird populations are down by a third since 1989 and in the UK they are down by half since 1970. In North America 74% of farmland bird populations have shrunk since 1966. All potentially linking back to a recent German study that suggest the mass of flying insects is down by 75%. Whilst a study of 8236 Marine Protected Areas covering 4% of the world's oceans, showed that just 2.8C of warming by 2100 will wreck the precious ecosystems/species they are meant to protect.

Climatically we’ve smashed through the 410 ppm level for atmospheric CO2 levels. Much of the Northern Hemisphere has been in the grip of a heatwave. Oman took a staggering three years of rain in 24 hours. Kerala has had record flooding. We’ve seen a record Arctic heatwave which has been preventing sea ice from forming and may well have driven the truly horrible ‘Beast from the East’ across Europe (as reference North Greenland saw one sub 0C recording in Feb 1997, five in Feb 2011 and now 59 in Feb 2018). And a NASA study has identified 19 crucial global hotspots for water stress including China, India, California and the Middle East, none of them inconsequential.

With 8 million tonnes of plastic pouring into the world’s oceans each year it’s become a ubiquitous pollutant in nature (found in fish, birds, sediment, drinking water, sewage sludge etc) and the ‘poster child’ of all that is wrong about a throwaway society.

So let’s be harsh on ourselves, the scale of our current plans is wholly inadequate. But as Mission Possible shows we can change provided we develop quickly a new mind-set, one that recognises we need to:

  1. Satisfy a massive untapped customer need on sustainability – The biggest blocker to change currently is the paralysis induced by a 20th Century view of sustainable consumption i.e. green products inevitably cost more and perform worse and consumers are not willing to take this hit. Yet people do want to drive EVs (but first they need a charging network they can be confident in). They want to eat meat alternatives (provided they look and taste fantastic). They want to recycle clothes (provided it’s easy and they are rewarded for it). Retailers who square the circle of ‘good for you, good for others’ will win.
  2. Seize the potential of the digital revolution – Retail is made up of big numbers – 1000s of shops, 10000s of SKUs, factories and farms, billions of items. Tracing all of this and tracking its social and environmental performance using a conventional ‘spreadsheet’ approach is impossible. Now AI, big data and sensors allow us to do this simply and efficiently.
  3. Be active participants in creating a policy system in which sustainable retailing can thrive – retail today is regulated in a 20th Century way (Business Rates anyone?). We need to help shape actively a new policy system on renewables, human rights, water resources etc that helps not hinders us in creating a sustainable future. If we don’t, others will.
  4. Supercharge Collaboration – we are a competitive bunch but in the last few years we’ve started to learn how to collaborate to get sustainable things done faster, more cheaply and with greater scale. Plastics Pact, Champions 12.3 (food waste), the Consumer Goods Forum (deforestation) all point to the potential of collaboration, we need to be hungry for more.
  5. Take a Systems approach – perhaps hardest of all we need some systems thinking. We’ve spent 40 years breaking retail down into tiny, functional silos. Now we need to recognise that consumption is a dependent ecosystem. Not just along an economic value chain. Not just in how we see consumers swapping seamlessly from a physical to an online retail experience but also in how we understand that the food system and nature are symbiotically linked and need to be managed as such.

And ultimately this is what Mission Possible is, a mind-set shift as much as a technology revolution, that recognises the profound need for change and embraces its potential to serve positively consumers, planet and society alike.

@planamikebarry

Samuel Gordon

Pioneering work on making flying greener

6 年

The focus on helping customers make sustainable choices is an exciting next step, and it's great to see sustainability start to drive business efforts and not just inform them. I think the scale of efforts in retail should be more widely shared outside the industry. When I started my career, in retail, a while ago, I had no idea just how much was being done, and sharing progress might draw in more people who can help to accelerate it.

Jenny Andersson

Regenerative Place-sourced Designer | Regenerative Economy, Ecology & Culture | Weaver of Fields | Convener & Curator | Founder Really Regenerative Centre CIC | Always asking 'is this really regenerative?'

6 年

. ?It would be great to see retailers start education programmes for their retail staff in systems thinking. ?Often the impetus for change comes from the 'fire at the edges' of any system, so starting to spark ideas among the people who represent the collective intelligence on a very local basis might not only enhance knowledge but also give birth to creative ideas on the glocal ?CSR/community programmes. ?M&S has right local community connections through stores. ?Something worth trying?

Sarah Herbst

Driving Positive ESG Impact at Scale in Global Supply Chains

6 年

Couldn't agree more with the need for systems thinking! A greater 'push' from retailers would certainly help. For example, why do retailers implement energy audits at some and not all factories. Some retailer's chemicals of concern policy's only impact some not all products. But why aren't all consumers being educated and changing their purchasing practices? It's a luxury to shop responsibly so when will it be a requirement that all organizations are forced to internalize their negative social & environmental externalities? Environmental and social inequalities are happening every second of every day. Will we reach the tipping point? Every system has a tipping point. What will ours be, are we there already? Will our actions today be enough, to ensure renewable resources are not harvested at rates higher than they can be replenished? Are pollutions added to our air and water at rates low enough our ecosystem can assimilate the pollution to safe levels? We need to see more biophysical economics, systems thinking with collaboration from various stakeholders.

回复

We cannot judge our future on the environmental scars of yesterday so that we can put into practice measures that will not just safeguard our future but will actually work to enhance it and that requires us all to get involved

回复

要查看或添加评论,请登录

社区洞察

其他会员也浏览了