Sustainable Business

SB March 2013

Sustainable Business magazine - essential reading for sustainability professionals

Issue link: https://fhpublishing.uberflip.com/i/129496

Contents of this Issue

Navigation

Page 14 of 64

Behaviour change Unilever 2/4 they are interlinked – that growth ambition is dependent on operating sustainably. "We're very clear with our plan, it's hugely ambitious, and we can't do it all by ourselves. We need to work with others," she maintains. Fenwick, who is responsible for forging those type of partnerships across Unilever's UK and Ireland operations, says it will require open dialogue and also a wider understanding of how the company's environmental footprint impacts across the whole value chain. When you think that Unilever makes and sells products under more than 400 brand names worldwide, that's a huge undertaking. Estimates suggest that on any given day, two billion people are using Unilever products so the top end of the value chain – consumer-use – is where the company is really looking to focus its efforts going forward. "We've done some detailed lifecycle assessment which shows what our impact is per consumer use – so for instance, when someone does a laundry wash using Persil or has a slice of toast using Flora margarine. In terms of greenhouse gas emissions, these actions account for More than two billion people use a Unilever product on any given day 68% of our impact. The biggest challenge we have is around tackling consumer behaviour," Fenwick states. While lifestyle issues are not within a company's direct control, Unilever can exert a strong sphere of influence in this field, both through consumer-facing activity and product functionality. In recent years, its R&D department has driven development of innovation-led solutions that can cut water, energy and material use, such as concentrated laun-

Articles in this issue

Archives of this issue

view archives of Sustainable Business - SB March 2013