Getting to Zero: defining corporate carbon neutrality

What does it means to be 'carbon neutral'? With more and more organisations, universities and even cities claiming to be carbon neutral, this timely report attempts to dig beneath such claims of neutrality.

Project Overview

As concerns about climate change grow, the concept of 'carbon neutrality' has captured the corporate imagination, being embraced by organisations as diverse as airlines, ice-cream makers and reinsurance giants. But this apparently simple concept – that a company, or one of its products or services, can have no net impact on climate – is surrounded by controversy, and a wide range of assumptions and actions often lie behind the claims that have been made.

The ambition to have zero net impact on climate is a powerful one, and a goal of neutrality has the potential to drive ongoing change within an organisation – while also promoting shared responsibility with suppliers and customers for emissions beyond the organisation's immediate control.

Unfortunately, many of the companies that have made claims of neutrality have not embraced this challenge. We’ve therefore developed a set of recommendations for companies that are considering making a claim – and which stakeholders can use to evaluate any claim.

We’ve not resolved all the issues surrounding the concept – companies will still have to make judgement calls as to whether an aspiration to neutrality makes sense for them – but we hope that this report will lead to greater consensus about what should lie behind any claim of neutrality.

Links

The Guardian, The great green swindle, 23 October 2008

New Civil Engineer, Establishing a baseline, 9 January 2009

People

Add your comment »

Comments

Add your comment

CAPTCHA
This question is for testing whether you are a human visitor and to prevent automated spam submissions. Case insensitive.
Image CAPTCHA
Enter the characters shown in the image.