In fact, the carbon emissions of our food are surprisingly voluminous – up to 30% of a household’s greenhouse gas emissions. Consider that metric when multiplied by the demand (and subsequent wastage) of your typical major business, and that output increases exponentially. It’s why, for any eco-conscious business, food is a pivotal factor in the journey to net-zero.
From field to fork, food journeys are carbon rich and, to the average consumer, utterly invisible. According to a 2023 report by the European Commission, food production makes up 30% of Global greenhouse gases*, with close to a quarter of those emissions occurring from pasture alone. A further 27% is believed to be from crop production for humans and animals, with close to a third emerging from the fuels and machinery used to keep livestock and fisheries in production**. The impact of our Food on the environment occurs long before it sits on the end of a fork.
In pursuit of the net-zero workplace, these are crucial considerations. They’re also circumstances that few businesses have direct control over. It’s for this reason that the IPCC’s messaging is so insistent: if we don’t tackle the climate crisis in unison, we can’t hope to tackle it at all.
At ISS, our Net Zero pledge means committing to a low-carbon supply chain — that is, to ensure that our suppliers adhere to the same sustainability standards that we do. That’s not only to our benefit but our clients’ too; like us, they want to know their supplier is delivering carbon-minimal*** services.