Walmart
has released its eighth annual Global
Responsibility Report (GRR), outlining its social and
environmental work over the past year, including its efforts to reduce solid
waste, such as food waste and packaging materials, and its initiatives around
using more sustainable materials for product packaging.
“Every day,
Walmart brings affordable products and services to 260 million customers in 27
countries around the world. As the world’s largest retailer, we have committed
to use our strengths to help others, by addressing social and environmental
issues in collaboration with customers, suppliers, governments, non-profits,
and other stakeholders,” says Kathleen McLaughlin, President of the Walmart
Foundation and Senior Vice President of Corporate Affairs at Walmart. “We
believe business exists to serve society. Our commitment to global
responsibility goes beyond philanthropy—it is a whole company undertaking that
is woven into our day-to-day business activities, creating value for business
and society.”
In the area of
waste reduction across its global operations, Walmart’s GRR reports that each
day, the corporation moves closer to realizing its goal of creating zero
waste—a goal set 10 years ago—by providing solutions to improve waste data
management and reduce and divert food and materials from turning into waste.
“Millions of tons
of materials flow through Walmart facilities each year,” says the report.
“We’re finding ways to reduce, reuse, recycle, and manage them more
efficiently, resulting in a significant environmental and business upside.”
Among the
achievements cited in the report around waste reduction are the following:
·
Walmart U.S.
operations’ operational waste diversion improved to 82.4% in 2014.
·
Through reverse
logistics, Walmart in Central America increased the total weight of materials
collected for recycling by 10.8% in 2014, for a total of 21,388 metric tons.
·
In Mexico, the
corporation’s waste reduction campaign, Reduce, Recycle, and Win, helped
Walmart reduce food waste by 6% in Mexican stores and increased the amount of
recyclables, including cardboard and stretch film, as compared with 2013.
·
With the opening
of the ninth Asda Service Centre in 2014 in the U.K., all Asda stores in
England, Scotland, and Wales are returning recyclables and food waste via
reverse logistics.
Sustainable
materials
From recycled
content to packaging optimization, Walmart says its thorough consideration of
the materials it uses for its products helps deliver value to its customers,
both from an economic and an environmental perspective. “In the U.S. alone,
cities spend billions of dollars annually throwing away materials that are
worth billions more,” says the report. “Every ton of trash recycled rather than
landfilled not only raises the availability of materials we need, but saves
money, creates local jobs, and reduces greenhouse gas emissions.”
As the report
notes, Walmart’s aspirations related to sustainable packaging materials include:
·
Incorporating the
learnings and successes of the Packaging Scorecard into the Sustainability
Index
·
Increasing
recycled content into plastic packaging and products
·
Increasing the
recyclability of plastic packaging
·
Sustainably
increasing the supply of recycled content
·
One example cited
where Walmart has been able to reduce the footprint of one of its products is
its collaboration with Replenish Bottling LLC to launch a new household
cleaning products line “that has the potential to forever change the way
water-based consumer products are designed, manufactured, and sold.”
Explains the
report, “Harnessing Replenish’s patented Refill System™, the CleanPath™ line of
products, available exclusively at Walmart.com, allows consumers to easily mix
concentrates with water at home using a reusable bottle. This translates into a
CO2 emissions and plastic waste reduction of more than 80 percent.”
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