Circular Transition Indicators v2.0
WBCSD and 30 companies shaped the Circular Transition Indicators (CTI) v2.0 to support business need for a universal and consistent way to measure its circularity.
WBCSD and 30 companies shaped the Circular Transition Indicators (CTI) v2.0 to support business need for a universal and consistent way to measure its circularity.
More and more companies are procuring renewable power for their operations to help manage their electricity costs while contributing to corporate carbon emissions reduction targets.
WBCSD’s work with Digital Climate Advisory Services (DCAS) is part of the Scaling Positive Agriculture project. DCAS are climate-related advisories and services delivered via digital tools and platforms.
The systems-wide change needed to create circularity in the automotive sector and sometimes seem costly and prohibitive. However, as this report demonstrates, significant abatement is possible for the auto industry with very little additional added vehicle material cost.
A meaningful transition to the circular economy will require players along the automotive value chain to establish a common language.
The objective of the Vital Supply Chains issue brief is to guide companies through the disruptions and systemic risks arising from COVID-19.
The current freight system intensifies many urban challenges: congestion, traffic safety, noise pollution, air pollution, and greenhouse gas emissions. Yet too often city planners and transportation officials overlook the impact of freight.
While cars may never be fully carbon neutral, the automotive industry can significantly reduce its carbon footprint by adopting a high degree of circularity to deliver economic, societal and ecological dividends.
As businesses globally continue to align around critical global efforts to drive the systemic transformations that will be needed to help achieve the Sustainable Development Goals, one stakeholder group with whom it is vital that the private sector remains closely engaged is the world’s young people.
There is now ample evidence that nature plays a key role in the COVID-19 pandemic’s emergence and recovery.