Dell has become the first IT company to sign up to the Carbon Disclosure Project (CDP) plan to report on supply chain carbon emissions.
The Carbon Disclosure Project is a not-for-profit organization founded to obtain full carbon footprint disclosure by Times 500 companies on behalf of investors and with a desire to reduce greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions.
It produces annual reports providing a fair and accurate way to compare suppliers and their carbon footprints. The CDP is currently inviting institutional investors to become signatories to the sixth Carbon Disclosure Project for 2008. It is the collective pressure from these investors, representing US$41 trillion of investment funds, which encourages suppliers to reveal carbon footprints to the CDP.
The CDP has recognized that disclosing companies have supply chain contributors which also cause GHG emissions. Although the CDP has its standard reporting format there is no standard format for supply chain company emissions.
The CDP’s Supply Chain Leadership Collaboration (SCLC) project has produced a worldwide standard for supply chain businesses to report their emissions. By signing up for SCLC Dell has served notice on its suppliers that it wants them to report their emissions to Dell in this format.
It also means that the supply chain companies have joined the CDP by proxy and their emissions may even become public.
Furthermore it provides Dell with the means to compare and contrast its suppliers on GHG emissions and direct business to the low emitters. Thus a virtuous circle is produced in which Dell suppliers will compete to lower their emissions and so help to lower Dell’s own emissions.
The entry of Dell to the SCLC may well prompt other IT suppliers in the CDP’s ranks, such as IBM, HP and Sun, to follow suit; such is the CDP’s hope.