Jim Andrew, Pepsi's executive vice president and chief sustainability officer, told Insider he's confident the strategy will deliver results in the coming years. I spoke to Andrew on the sidelines of Climate Week NYC. Read our conversation below. We've made some great progress, but we need to go bigger on scale and accelerate everything. Regenerative agriculture is really important. We have a big agricultural footprint.
We've also told our independent bottlers and co-manufacturers in the US and around the world to report their emissions by the end of this year and a science-based target to reduce them by the end of 2023.Pepsi said it will be 100% renewable across its value chain, and we're already at 70% around the world. One of the best things our suppliers can do is get onto renewable electricity.
That takes some time to set up. We didn't get any climate benefit from that last year, but we absolutely will this year.It's not as simple as not using a certain cup anymore. There needs to be policy and infrastructure to support collection and sortation. We need consumers to do something. That whole chain needs to work. A well-designed treaty would enable that transition.
Deloitte Of COURSE! Because before they just wanted a large carbon footprint AND profits. And all they had to do was cut carbon emissions and profits would go up?! I'd love to see the blue haired, shaved side of head, scientist who told them about this!
Deloitte Top priority - business People demand - sustainability Pepsi - 'Oh yeah, that's our priority' whispers 'just secondary'