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Businesses are a significant source of greenhouse gas emissions. Emissions from buildings (lights, heating and air conditioning, computers, photocopiers) along with emissions from industrial processes and product distribution – these are all ways that businesses contribute to climate change. When you add in emissions from staff commuting and business air travel the total climate impact from businesses is even greater.
Many businesses are responding to the challenge of climate change by implementing voluntary greenhouse gas management programs. These programs usually include steps to reduce energy use internally, such as using energy efficient lighting or managing their fleets more efficiently. Once energy use is reduced to the extent technically or financially feasible, carbon offsets can be purchased for some or all of the remaining emissions. By offsetting its emissions in this way, a business can claim that its product(s), service(s) and/or operations are carbon neutral.
There are many potential benefits for businesses that implement greenhouse gas management programs, including:
Increased employee retention rates and productivity: A business that shows leadership in an important area like fighting global warming can be a powerful motivator for employees, increasing their productivity, building loyalty and inspiring them to assist in innovating and adapting. The cooperation involved in managing and reducing greenhouse gas emissions can also increase teamwork across business units within an organization. Further, energy efficiency programs such as increasing the use of natural light can directly improve workplace conditions and increase employee productivity.Below are some resources for businesses interested in greenhouse gas management and carbon neutral initiatives.
Resources
Media articles
Business Gets Serious About Emissions - BusinessWeek
Getting a toehold on your company's climate footprint - Grist Magazine
Can business be cool? - The Economist
Tips for reducing the emissions from your business
Cool Companies
How to make your organization carbon neutral - General
WRI’s “Working 9 To 5 On Climate Change: An Office Guide”
WRI's "Hot Climate, Cool Commerce: A Service Sector Guide to Greenhouse Gas Management"
The Greenhouse Gas Protocol: A Corporate Accounting and Reporting Standard
Offsetting Emissions: A Business Brief on the Voluntary Carbon Market
GEMI Business and Climate Change Site
How to make your organization carbon neutral - Specific Sectors
Going Carbon Neutral - A Guide for Publishers
Calculation Tools
GHG Protocol Calculation Tools
Environmental Defense Paper Emissions Calculator
Carbon Value Analysis Tool
Carnegie Mellon's Economic Input-Output Life Cycle Assessment (EIOLCA) Tool
Carbon offset vendors (for individuals and small and medium size businesses)
See Resources section at bottom of Going Carbon Neutral page for a comprehensive list of offset vendors.
Carbon offset vendors (for larger volumes)
Trexler and Associates
500PPM
Natsource
More information
Find out more about the David Suzuki Foundation's carbon neutral program for its offices
See a list of businesses and other organizations that have gone carbon neutral ("Who's Doing It?")
ClimateBiz
SafeClimate for Business
The Climate Group
Carbon Down, Profits Up
Low Carbon Leaders in Canada
The GHG Protocol Initiative
The Carbon Trust Three Stage Approach to Developing a Robust Offsetting Strategy
A Three-Pronged Approach to Corporate Climate Strategy
Carbon Disclosure Project
Voluntary Compensation of Greenhouse Gas Emissions
Carbon Management & Carbon Neutrality in the FTSE All-Share
CEO Briefing: Emissions Trading
CEO Briefing: Renewable Energy
CEO Briefing: The Future of Climate Policy
Links to news and information on the world carbon market
David Suzuki Foundation backgrounder on Going Carbon Neutral