Evan O'Neil talks with the COO and the U.S. Project Manager of Carbon Trust, an independent company set up by the U.K. government that works with organisations to reduce carbon emissions and develop commercial low carbon technologies.
EVAN O'NEIL: Good afternoon. I'm Evan
O'Neil, Managing Editor of the Carnegie Council's online magazine, policyinovations.org.
I'm speaking today with Michael
Rea, Chief Operating Officer of the Carbon
Trust, and his associate, Scott Kaufman, who is their U.S. Project Manager. Welcome to both to the Carnegie
Council.
We are hoping to discuss a little bit this afternoon the activities of the Carbon
Trust, what its mission is, how it came to be.
Michael?
MICHAEL REA: Let me explain a bit of the background of the Carbon Trust.
The Carbon Trust was originally set up in the United Kingdom about eight years
ago. Our mission is to accelerate progress towards a low-carbon economy.
When we were set up, one of the first things we did was look at how it was
possible to make the transition to a low-carbon economy. At that particular
time in the United Kingdom, we were talking about reducing emissions by 60 percent
by 2050 versus 1990.
When we analyzed that problem, we came to the conclusion that we would need to do things: we needed to deploy energy-efficiency technology at mass scale; and the second thing we needed to do was to develop new and emerging low-carbon technologies.
And, roughly, we'd get half-way with energy efficiency, but to
get to the full 60 percent at the time we needed to develop new technologies
as well.
That's why the Carbon Trust ended up with this, if you like, dual set of activities.
So we have one set of activities where we work with companies and public sector
organizations to help them reduce their emissions—and I'll say a little
more about that in a second, if you like—and the second part is we are
very active in very-early-stage pre-commercial, pre-venture capital (VC) technology
development.
EVAN O'NEIL: What have been some of the promising technological innovations
in that realm? Has anything sprung out that has really been a leader in that
industry so far?
MICHAEL REA: I think our thinking has evolved over time. When we started,
it was very much, as I say, around energy efficiency. Lots of companies are
still implementing pretty basic energy-efficiency measures, like best practices
in lighting.
But then, over the past two or three years, we have started to work with larger
companies. For example, we work with 75 percent of the FTSE
100 in the United Kingdom. For a number of those companies, we are starting
to look at more strategic issues about how their business model might evolve
over time.
And then on the other side, the technology development side, as you referred
to, a lot of our work really is about getting very-early-stage technologies
out of universities. You asked for a couple of examples.
We have a £10 million initiative, £5 million with a team in Cambridge
University and £5 million with a team in Imperial
College in London, looking at the next generation of photovoltaics,
so photovoltaics can deliver power at a tenth of the cost of today's technology.
Now, these are highly speculative investments, and if they pay off, obviously
they are going to be very successful. But they are also extremely high risk.
That is the kind of space we are playing in. Helping the corporates, we are
trying with smaller companies to push the boundaries of what is possible, and
the same on technology development, where we are also trying to do the same
thing.
EVAN O'NEIL: The original idea and the funding for the Carbon Trust
came from the U.K. government, correct?
MICHAEL REA: That's right, yes. Our funding today is about £100
million, and that's primarily from the U.K. government. But as time has gone
on we have also developed some other funding mechanisms. So we have a commercial
VC business, and that complements our publicly funded early-stage technology-development
business. So as these technologies start to emerge to the point where they look
like they may be commercial, we have a VC arm that can come in and accelerate
their progress towards the market. And then we take the profits that we get
from that particular arm and reinvest them back into the core mission of the
company, because basically we are a public company and everything we do is about
serving the mission of the company to accelerate progress towards a low-carbon
economy.
EVAN O'NEIL: Being in a close relationship and partnership with the
U.K. government like that, are there any social justice components that you
have to incorporate into your work, or is it primarily a very business-oriented
endeavor? Or do you see those two things as blending?
MICHAEL REA: It is probably a blend of a broader social good
but with a very businesslike approach. So, in effect, we sit between business
and government.
As well as doing lots of work with companies on the ground, helping them to do broadly the right thing on mission reduction, we also work with them and with policymakers thinking about how the policy framework can evolve in a way that accelerates progress towards a low-carbon economy, so the public good element.
But it does that in a way that accelerates business development.
In terms of ethos, we are very much a private sector company, so we do everything
in a very businesslike, professional way.
EVAN O'NEIL: Scott, one of your main interests at Carbon Trust is the
carbon
labeling schemes, engaging consumers in purchasing goods which are produced
in more sustainable fashions, and communicating it to the customer through labels
on products.
Can you tell me a little bit about how that certification system has been developing
in the United Kingdom and what your plans are for moving it abroad?
SCOTT KAUFMAN: Sure.
We developed primarily in the United Kingdom, but it was meant to be an international
standard, called the PAS
2050, which is a guide for companies that want to do the lifecycle product
carbon footprint for the products that they make and sell on the consumer market.
We did that so that any company doing a carbon footprint for any given product
would be using the same methodology. So we are trying to encourage a standard
approach to this kind of activity across all sectors.
The idea is for a company to follow this methodology, measure their carbon
footprint according to it, and to commit within two years after completing that
and getting certified by the Carbon Trust to reduce the footprint of the product
that they use the standard to measure.
MICHAEL REA: There were broadly two reasons we developed the standards.
The first reason was we wanted companies to take a more holistic view of their
carbon footprints. We have been working for many years looking at the direct
emissions of an individual company, and we saw lots of cost-effective opportunities
to reduce emissions. But we wanted to take a very different lens, which was
the end-to-end supply chain lens, because our hypothesis was that there were
lots of carbon-saving and cost-saving opportunities, which indeed we found as
we worked with these companies.
But the other reason we did it was the feedback we got from companies around
greenwash.
There was a concern that consumers didn't believe companies when they made claims
about being green. So the feedback we were reacting to was: Can you develop
something that gives our stakeholders and our consumers and our workers confidence
that we are really doing the right thing about reducing emissions?
We created this standard approach, which broadly has three elements:
The first element is about measuring a footprint
of a product in a completely consistent way. We have, as Scott was saying, some
very good practical guidance about doing that.
The second element, which in some ways is the most important element from the
Carbon Trust's perspective, which is about reduction, because ultimately if
we are going to move to a low-carbon economy, we have to not talk about reducing
emissions, but actually reduce emissions. So a core part of what we do is about
companies making a commitment to reduce the footprint of their productive service
over a two-year period, as Scott was saying.
EVAN O'NEIL: So there is both a business case for doing this and also
a very environmental case. Are you finding that with the product analysis there
is a lot of room for improvement?
MICHAEL REA: In both cases we have found that there is a pretty strong
correlation between the lifecycle carbon emissions of a product and the money
savings that are possible when measuring and then reducing them. There is definitely
a relationship between those two things. That encourages the business case for
doing this kind of good environmental work, which is very encouraging.
EVAN O'NEIL: Are businesses sensitive to their brand in this way? Are
they worried that, aside from being accused of greenwashing, that by putting
a label on something that perhaps people are saying, "It's not quite as
green as it could be?" Are there concerns in that direction, or is there
mostly a positive brand dividend that you guys are finding from your partners?
MICHAEL REA: What we're finding in terms of consumer feedback and consumer
research is that consumers are very positive about the whole initiative and
the labeling activity. So they value the fact that there is an independent verification
of the footprint of the product or service, and we provide that. They value
the fact that the company in question has made a commitment to reduce the footprint
of that product. They value the fact that there is a number. For some of our
partners we do put a number on the label on the pack.
But I would also say that consumers generally don't understand what that number
means. So as well as working with companies to develop the approach, one of
the things we also have to do over time is to educate consumers as to what is
a carbon footprint, why is it important, and ultimately what does it mean. That
is very much work in progress.
While I think we have nailed the measurement bit and we have pretty much nailed
the reduction bit, the communication bit and how we do this in a way that really
helps consumers to understand these numbers is still very much a work in progress.
We are taking different approaches with different partners to really try and
experiment and understand what really works, as well as to over time educate
consumers more broadly, as I was saying earlier.
EVAN O'NEIL: How far can the reductions go, since the reductions are
such an important part of the three-part process? Are you aiming for carbon
neutrality, or is there a wall that a company will hit with a particular product
where it can't really squeeze any more efficiency out of its process? Do you
then turn to carbon credits or offsets? What's the solution when a company has
gone just about as far as it can?
MICHAEL REA: We are probably quite a long way from the wall just yet.
It's quite interesting. I think our collective intuition would be at some stage
we are going to come up to a stopgap where we can't go any further. We haven't
found that yet, actually.
That depends on how broad you set the framework. We found that companies can
reduce their carbon footprint by 20-30 percent by looking at energy-efficiency
measures. And then if we look at complementing that with emerging energy supply
measures, you can get up to 50 or 60 percent.
We have been doing quite a lot of work with Tesco
in the United Kingdom looking at the carbon footprint of their stores. They
have managed to reduce the footprint of their stores over the past few years.
Their newest store versus the average of a store five or six years ago has gone
down by 50 or 60 percent.
Similarly, we have been working with Walkers Crisps in the United Kingdom. They originally committed to reduce the footprint of their product by 3 percent, which is interesting, because they already had made significant reductions over previous years. I think they and we are very pleased that they have just been reaccredited.
They have managed to reduce their footprint by 7 percent.
EVAN O'NEIL: For energy specifically?
MICHAEL REA: The total carbon footprint of, in this case, a packet of
crisps.
EVAN O'NEIL: The life cycle carbon footprint.
MICHAEL REA: Right, the life cycle carbon footprint. So that covers
the fertilizer, the transport, the processing of potatoes, the packaging, et
cetera. And they have made a follow-on commitment to reduce that even further.
So we are not pushing the boundaries yet. But to go back to your question,
I think our guidance to companies is to take a tiered approach. Firstly, if
you are starting off on a low-carbon journey, look at your direct carbon footprint
and basically do as well as you possibly can on it.
And then broaden out and look up and down the supply chain at carbon-cost-reduction
opportunities. And then, beyond that, look at renewable generation.
And yes, offsets can have a role. But I think we are very conscious when looking
at offsets to ensure that they are additional. I think we look very hard when
companies are thinking about offsetting, convincing ourselves and them that
they are really going for additional carbon reductions.
EVAN O'NEIL: Scott, speaking of the supply chain issues, when you guys
are doing the certification and looking at the PAS 2050 standard, how does the
global element factor into it? Do you have some significant challenges when
measuring the ecological footprint over a global scale?
SCOTT KAUFMAN: There are, obviously, very significant challenges. Pretty
much all products are global at this point. Most companies don't own their entire
supply chains, not even close. So in some cases it's possible to go to the suppliers
and find out what the emissions are for the components that the company is getting
from their suppliers. But in other cases we have to use what's called secondary
databases, where there are these general collections of data that represent
given processes or materials. We plug those into the footprint to give the overall
results.
As this activity becomes more mainstream over time, those sources of information
are improving. There's more and more of it. People are looking for it more and
more. So there are more resources going into the development of these data sources.
Not only that, as influential companies look to suppliers for this information
more and more, there is a demand for better providing of these data over time,
just direct emission sources along the supply chain.
So it's a challenge now, but I think as we go forward it's getting easier and
easier, fortunately.
EVAN O'NEIL: While the Carbon Trust is based in the United Kingdom and
you are working globally, what has been the experience in the American market
using these standards here? Have companies been willing to adopt them? I know
in some ways we seem to be a little bit behind the times as far as the European
momentum toward green technologies goes.
I know Pepsico and their
Tropicana Orange Juice
were just recently profiled, and I think you guys had a hand in helping them
figure that out. Can you tell me about that experience?
SCOTT KAUFMAN: We starting working with Pepsico on U.K. operations,
but the international component became very attractive to them as well. They
wanted to look at their core base of operations in the United States.
So we consulted with Tropicana and guided them through the process of creating
a very comprehensive carbon footprint. We then certified that footprint. A few
weeks ago the results
were released.
At this point in the United States there is a little bit more of a reluctance
to go directly on-pack with the communication of the number of the results,
but Pepsi has been very forthcoming with publicizing the results. There was
an article
in the New York Times, as you mentioned, and they are planning right
now to have the results and an explanation of what goes on behind this process
on their Web site.
We are continuing to explore ways going forward, as we look at other products,
how the United States is best positioned to present these results to the public,
whether it's on-pack or other forms of advertising that we have explored in
other areas.
EVAN O'NEIL: Michael, turning to the policy realm both internationally
and regionally where you guys are located in Europe, what are some of the barriers
to making carbon accounting a more common practice? Do you favor global cap-and-trade;
is that helpful to your industry? What would you hope to see come out of the
Copenhagen negotiations later
this year?
MICHAEL REA: I think we would like to see some type of comprehensive
agreement that creates a level playing field for countries and for companies
to really accelerate progress towards a low-carbon economy. I think there is
a lot of great experience that we can draw on in Europe, but there is also a
lot of great experience we can draw on from the United States.
As you know, there is a huge amount that has been going on at the state level
and at the corporate level. As I travel around the United States, I get a real
sense of optimism around what could happen post-Copenhagen and a real sense
from businesses that coming out of recession there will be a real opportunity
to reposition business models to low-carbon business models.
We think global cap-and-trade is probably a key element of a global agreement
and having a consistent carbon price is very important. We have a lot of experience
in Europe with the EU
emissions trading scheme. As you know, there are lots of concerns about
the competitiveness implications of that if there aren't similar schemes or
a linked set of schemes globally.
We have done a lot of work on the whole competitiveness issue. Our broad conclusion
is that for most sectors competitiveness really shouldn't be an issue, but there
are certain commodity sectors, such as steel and cement, where there are issues
in the absence of a global deal. So one thing we would like to see is real progress
on a global carbon price.
The second thing we'd like to see is real progress on the barriers to energy
efficiency and technology transfer so that we can apply the best available technology
in all countries and in all organizations around the world.
The third element that we think is very important is technology innovation.
So again, accelerating and going at a much faster rate around key emerging technologies
that will make a difference to 2030 and beyond.
EVAN O'NEIL: If I can push you on the technology
transfer aspect for a minute, for us here at the Carnegie Council we're
obviously interested in ethics in international affairs. What's the best mechanism
for technology transfer, to getting these green technologies to developing countries,
at least in a similar timeframe, if not the same time, as they are deployed
in the West?
MICHAEL REA: We have gone through a process of learning on that. I think
the Clean
Development Mechanism (CDM), for all its faults, has been very successful
around helping to deploy power-generation technologies and large-scale-efficiency
technologies. I think we need to build on that experience and ensure that the
kind of projects that are being funded are additional and that the money flowing
in through CDM is really working as hard as possible.
But we also need to look at the innovation side, about how developed and developing
countries can collaborate on emerging technologies. So if we look at China,
United States, India coal, carbon capture and storage is a key topic area, and
it seems like an obvious area where collaboration around demonstrating the technology
and demonstrating whether it works or not, and whether it works at some kind
of economic scale, would be a major contribution to pushing this whole low-carbon
agenda forward.
So we need to think about certain technologies that are of a scale where no
one individual country can take them forward at the pace they need to be taken
forward.
And then there are other technologies, arguably, where individual countries
can make a real difference. For example, in the United Kingdom we are having
a major push on offshore wind and deploying offshore wind at scale and getting
the cost of that technology down. That makes sense from a U.K. perspective because
we have the best offshore wind resource in Western Europe, and we also have
a lot of engineering capability and experience through our North Sea oil production
that we can leverage.
So that is an example of where the United Kingdom can make a difference in
moving forward a technology that perhaps others could benefit from. Whereas
carbon capture and storage is, I think, of a scale where a number of countries
need to come together to really move it forward.
EVAN O'NEIL: So the economic crisis that is pretty much monopolizing everybody's minds these days, how has the reaction been in the green technology sector?
Is this viewed as a crisis? Does the price of oil and its fall hinder what
you guys have been able to roll out, or is this really just an open field and
you're planting lots of seeds and new ideas?
MICHAEL REA: Again, if you look at the two sides of our activity, what
we have found with smaller companies, because a lot of what we do helps companies
to save money as well as doing the right thing for the environment, we have
seen increased interest in terms of what we do. For larger corporates, I think
for some that are finding it pretty tough, they are finding it difficult to
keep their eye on the long-term view.
On the other side, we work with lots of corporates who are looking at the opportunity
around coming out of recession and repositioning their business model. They
have the kind of balance sheets that allow them to do that.
On the tech development side, it has slowed down. Venture capital funding is
a lot more difficult to find. Project financing is difficult to find. So it
is quite frustrating in a way that there are lots of technologies that are now
starting to emerge but, at least in the very short term, the funding isn't there
at the scale required. But I think that's only a short-term issue. I do expect
funding to start to flow again for those technologies that are genuinely seen
as commercializable. We are very active in that space, and other investors are
interested. This is an opportunity.
EVAN O'NEIL: Just one final question. Keeping your own house clean,
do you guys go for carbon neutrality at the Carbon Trust?
MICHAEL REA: We are, I suppose, slightly unusual in that. If you look
at our activities in the United Kingdom, we help companies to reduce their emissions
by five million tons per annum. Our own carbon footprint is about 250 tons.
So we don't offset that directly, but we say 250 tons to do five million we're
probably doing okay.
EVAN O'NEIL: Good. Thank you.
Michael Rea, Scott Kaufman, thank you for joining us here at the Carnegie Council.
You can find more information on our Web site, carnegiecouncil.org.