LEGO builds partnerships with suppliers to cut emissions
Source : Supply Management
Par : Will Green
Toymaker LEGO has pledged to work with suppliers to cut greenhouse gases as part of a new partnership with the World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF).
Source : Supply Management
Par : Will Green
Toymaker LEGO has pledged to work with suppliers to cut greenhouse gases as part of a new partnership with the World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF).
Source : EcoBuy
Par : Sara Redmond-Neal
The recently formed Social Procurement Australasia network put on its first Social Procurement Forums in Melbourne and Sydney last month to mark the launch of the network.
Source : CSR Wire
Par : Kathrin Jansen
Companies are using innovative new tools from NGOs to keep tabs on the ESG facts of their supply chains.
Source : 2degrees
Par : Stephen Kennett
Coca-Cola, Ford, Heinz, Nestle, Procter & Gamble, Unilever and Nike are among brands that have joined forces with WWF to launch a program encouraging a responsible approach to plant-based plastics.
Source : The Guardian UK
Par : Adam Aston
Sustainable materials are gaining ground, but long development time frames and gaps in knowledge make commercialisation tricky.
Source : Sustainable procurement resource centre
The need to understand and measure the outcomes of sustainability initiatives and their contribution to an organisation is increasingly important for those engaged in sustainable procurement. EcoBuy, a sustainable procurement consultancy based in Australia, has several things to keep in mind about this process based on the outcomes of a recent webinar.
Source : Observatoire de la consommation responsable
Par : Fabien Durif
Source : Supply Management
Par : Will Green
Firms need to develop “circular supply chains” to deal with the problem of dwindling natural resources and increasing commodity prices.
Source : EBN
Par : Hal Quinn
In recent years, a new high-tech product that's ever more innovative and exciting than the last makes news every few weeks. But whether it's Google glasses, 3D printers, or flexible displays for electronics, the groundbreaking, in-demand technologies shaping our future have one thing in common -- they're all dependent on minerals.