Although circularity goals have risen to the top of executives’ agendas, the path to a waste-free world remains less clear. Fortune magazine’s latest white paper, produced in partnership with Dow, aims to help
sustainability leaders and practitioners understand the current challenges and collaborate on circular solutions.
In a year of sweeping corporate commitments to sustainability, setting
zero-waste goals is a top priority at the very highest levels in business. In
fact, 70 percent of business
leaders
see recycling and waste reduction as integral to their business operations.
Although circularity
goals have
risen to the top of executives’ agendas, the path to realizing a waste-free
world remains less clear. That’s why Fortune magazine’s latest white paper,
produced in partnership with Dow, is critical to
implementing and scaling sustainable solutions.
Launched in June 2021, The Path to a Plastics Circular Economy
explores how organizations connected to plastics are working to foster the
development of a circular economy — where plastics are treated as a resource,
rather than waste that accumulates in the environment.
Gathered through a survey of C-suite executives — as well as interviews with key
leaders from organizations including Procter &
Gamble, Sealed Air,
Closed Loop Partners and Dow — the research reveals critical insights from
enterprises across an array of industries, from
construction
and manufacturing to government and healthcare. These learnings demonstrate the
level and breadth of sustainability-focused commitments companies are making.
Three significant findings from the interviews with 300 C-suite executives
include:
-
68 percent of executives surveyed say that waste reduction has had a
“substantial” or “very large” influence on their organization’s strategic
direction over the past two years.
-
56 percent of respondents cite difficulty collaborating across the value
chain as one of the top three obstacles to the development of a circular
economy for plastics.
-
70 percent of C-level executives say they have been treating recycling
as a higher priority since the beginning of the pandemic. By comparison,
only 59 percent prioritize the broader concept of climate change, and
57 percent cite reducing air pollution as a prominent goal.
Put all this together and a trend emerges — there’s a growing appetite to
transition plastics to a sustainable circular economy. Whether it’s driven by an
intrinsic belief in doing the right thing, a desire to be on the right side of
history, or recognizing possible reputational risks, corporations are
increasingly demonstrating a newfound willingness to pursue sustainable
solutions.
Reflecting on the report’s findings, Jeff
Wooster
— Global Sustainability Director for Dow Packaging and Specialty Plastics —
said, “Executives see the importance of doing something more sustainable for the
future. They’ve figured out that it’s not only the right thing to do, but also
that a sustainable business model is in fact essential to their enterprise.”
Yet, there remain steep challenges to realizing a comprehensive circular
economy, particularly when it comes to recycling infrastructure. The Recycling
Partnership’s recent
Paying It Forward report found that 40 percent of US citizens lack equitable
recycling access. Which is why many companies are putting in the work to reach
a circular
economy
— from transitioning products to more recyclable
materials
to building better recycling
infrastructure.
For its part, Dow is committed to accelerating its own sustainability
goals.
By 2030, Dow intends to curb plastic waste by allowing one million metric tons
of plastic to be collected, reused or recycled through its direct actions and
partnerships, enabling 100 percent of Dow products to be sold into reusable or
recyclable packaging applications by 2035. Morever, Dow is funding the Recycling
Partnership’s work in Baltimore to scale investments in equitable recycling
access, to help close an important gap in circularity.
Fortune’s research into circular plastic strategies aims to help executives,
sustainability leaders and experts in the field better understand the current
challenges and ultimately collaborate on solutions to achieve circularity.
Working together, organizations and communities can build a collaborative path
toward net-zero waste and carbon emissions to achieve transformative industry
sustainability goals.
To learn more, read this
article
with key analysis from the research.
Published Jul 2, 2021 8am EDT / 5am PDT / 1pm BST / 2pm CEST
Sponsored Content
/ This article is sponsored by
Dow.
This article, produced in cooperation with the Sustainable Brands editorial team, has been paid for by one of our sponsors.