Coca-Cola Europacific Partners (CCEP), the world’s largest Coca-Cola bottler and one of the world's leading consumer goods companies, has embarked on two potentially game-changing, collaborative initiatives to
fast-track sustainability innovation throughout its supply chain.
Coca-Cola Europacific Partners, UC Berkeley to develop tech converting air to sugar
First up, CCEP — through its innovation investment platform, CCEP
Ventures — has joined forces with the
University of California Berkeley to develop scalable methods of converting
captured CO2 into sugar.
Successful completion of this project would add sugar to the growing cache of
value-added products that innovators are creating from captured carbon — from
vodka
and
ethanol
to PET
plastic
and polyester
textiles.
CCEP Ventures’ initial investment with UC Berkeley will support the Peidong
Yang Research Group on foundational research
that will focus on enabling the production of sugar from CO₂ onsite and at an
industrial level, with expectation of future investments to drive scale. In
2021, the Peidong Yang Group received a prize from
NASA
for a viable prototype for conversion of CO₂ to sugar for potential use on
long-haul space missions.
“Air to sugar conversion could significantly impact our ability to preserve the natural world,” says Professor Peidong Yang. “This is a bold scientific vision that would bring immediate environmental benefits, fundamentally transforming the production and distribution of goods across the world. We are pleased to be working with CCEP Ventures on research that could make a significant impact on our ability to create a more sustainable future.”
Agricultural ingredients, including sugar, amount to approximately a quarter of
CCEP’s overall carbon footprint; this technology could not only reduce emissions
associated with sugar manufacturing processes but positively contribute to
optimizing land usage as less arable land becomes available due to global
population growth.
Investments such as these could play a crucial role in CCEP’s journey to reach
net-zero emissions by
2040.
The development of lab-scale prototypes could make the generation of essential
raw and packaging materials more sustainable in the long term. It could reduce
some of the largest CO₂ contributors in supply chains, while saving material,
transportation and logistics costs.
In the longer term, this technology may also make the conversion of CO₂ into PET
plastic more efficient by reducing the need for crude oil in the manufacturing
process and significantly lowering costs.
CCEP, Rabobank establish sustainability-linked supply chain finance program
The program will incentivise and reward suppliers for improving their ESG
performance and supports CCEP’s ambition to reach net zero by 2040, and reduce
greenhouse-gas (GHG) emissions across its value chain by 30 per cent by 2030
(vs. 2019).
Also this week, CCEP established a new sustainability-linked supply chain
finance program, structured and operated by specialist food and agri financial
services company
Rabobank[1].
Rabobank will provide funding to the program with other banks expected to
participate and grow the facility over time[2].
The program, one of the first of its kind in the beverage industry, incentivizes
and rewards suppliers to make sustainability improvements in their businesses.
It will provide competitive financing that is linked to a number of
sustainability-driven KPIs for suppliers that, when met, unlock incremental
discounts against the initial funding rate and align with CCEP’s own action to reduce emissions across its entire value chain and reach net zero by 2040.
“We know how crucial it is that we work together with our suppliers to
decarbonize our businesses, and are committed to providing the support and
solutions they need to help them reduce emissions, aligned with our own
sustainability goals,” says Ralf Peters, VP of Procurement at CCEP. “Our new
supply chain finance program is another important step that will help us to take
collective action – by implementing positive and impactful change and driving
continuous sustainability improvements.”
Over 90 percent of CCEP’s emissions are attributed to its supply chain; and it
has already asked its suppliers to take three actions to make impactful carbon
reductions in their businesses:
-
setting and validating reduction targets with the Science Based Targets
initiative
by 2023;
-
committing to using 100 percent renewable electricity across their
operations by 2023; and
-
sharing their carbon footprint data.
The program will build on this and set KPIs for suppliers in improving their
overall ESG ratings, via assessment from EcoVadis.
Initially launched in Germany, the program will be expanded to CCEP’s
suppliers in the rest of Europe, Australia and New Zealand in future
phases.
More and more companies are creating incentives for their suppliers to improve
their social and environmental performance in an effort to future-proof their
value chains and tackle tricky Scope 3
emissions.
CCEP will also partner with Rabo
Foundation, Rabobank’s
social impact fund, to support one of its farmer programs in Indonesia
that promotes the adoption of sustainable practices and farm inputs to increase
yields and achieve better long-term economic strength. In 2021, McCormick &
Co partnered with the International Finance Corporation and Citi on a
similar
program,
beginning with its herb and spice suppliers in Indonesia and Vietnam.
[1] The facility is operated by Rabobank and is subject to a separate agreement between Rabobank and CCEP suppliers.
[2] Rabobank is the primary financing bank and as the program grows towards the expected funding level of €600m, it has agreed additional syndicated funding with other banks such as Santander.
Published Aug 23, 2022 8am EDT / 5am PDT / 1pm BST / 2pm CEST
Sustainable Brands Staff