The Starting Point
Zero carbon and zero waste are lofty goals, but the escalating climate crisis demands that kind of ambition from businesses. And, increasingly, Consumer demand it, too. Companies can identify science-based targets and implement Sustainability initiatives within their own organisations, but they also need to consider their suppliers. Do their standards align with yours—or could they hinder your Sustainability efforts?
A global Consumer Products company prioritised Sustainability and set science-based targets within its organisation, but it also worked with a vast global supplier network. Many of these suppliers were implementing their own Sustainability programmes and the company wanted visibility into how these initiatives aligned with its own climate-focused goals. It needed to develop a baseline of the relative maturity of these suppliers’ programmes. This could help the company avoid transactions that would make it harder to reach certain goals or even negatively affect its brand and reputation.
With thousands of suppliers to account for, keeping in touch to each one didn’t make sense. The company was already working with Deloitte’s Audit & Assurance team on related environmental, social and governance (ESG) work. One possible path presented to the company by Deloitte—a service intended to provide insight into suppliers’ ESG metrics and, at the same time, provide a deeper analysis into how peers within the larger industry are approaching important environmental benchmarks.
As a global organisation with science-based Sustainability targets, the company wanted visibility into how suppliers’ Sustainability initiatives aligned with its own climate focused goals.
The company decided to leverage a strategic risk sensing solution, engineered by Deloitte, to assist with challenges it was facing. The solution can be used to detect ecosystem risk at scale and can gather the intelligence that an organisation needs in a short period of time.
The company wanted to focus on a subset of indirect suppliers, such as Data providers, utilities and legal firms. It shared criteria and worked with Deloitte to build a framework to explore how these third parties’ efforts aligned with its own. For example: Had the supplier also set science-based targets? Was it part of the Carbon Disclosure Project (CDP) or the RE100 initiative?
Through automation, natural language understanding and cloud-based advanced analytics, the risk-sensing tool could go beyond answering binary questions of whether a supplier has specific goals. It could also determine what types of goals a supplier had and whether they were quantified.
This information came from more than 1 million licensed Data sources, accessed using proprietary ontologies. Once the sensing engine pulled the Data and supporting context into the sensing platform, Deloitte human analysts stepped in to evaluate the intelligence and issue recommendations on how the company could enhance its existing supplier framework.
The company had also been asking itself challenging questions about its Sustainability programme: Was it focusing on the right topics? Were its stated targets in line with the larger Consumer industry? The flexibility that’s built into the new risk sensing solution facilitated industry benchmarking to help the organisation see where its ESG efforts were already leading and where there was opportunity to be even bolder
How is your organisation working to align with suppliers when it comes to Sustainability goals? Discover how Deloitte’s worldwide team of industry-focused specialists can help you to understand the opportunities and navigate risks as you move forward on your Sustainability journey. Contact us to get the conversation started.
James Cascone - Partner, Deloitte & Touche LLP
cjcascone@deloitte.com
Dan Kinsella - Partner, Deloitte & Touche LLP
dkinsella@deloitte.com