We want to leave the world a Lusher place than we found it.
We want to Respond to the Climate Emergency and Become carbon positive.
We want to Respond to the Climate Emergency and Become carbon positive.
How we choose to respond to it will define whether we continue to co-evolve with life, or not. At Lush, we have never been too keen on long-term targets, we believe we all know what needs doing – moving away from fossil fuels, using cleaner transport, protect and plant forests, divesting our money from climate destroying funds. All of that while keeping a viable business and customers happy. However, we all need to align ourselves to what science is telling us, going carbon positive is no longer a choice, it is an imperative. Ten years ago, we invested in 6,000 hectares in Peru of degraded forest, we have kicked out illegal loggers and maintained a team of people employed to protect the forest. We think that alone has made our main UK business carbon positive in the last ten years, but we don’t want to engage in creative carbon accounting.
We want instead to focus on the long horizon of becoming truly carbon positive, no offsets allowed.
likely Carbon Positive (UK)
In our direct operations, our biggest contribution to climate change is the movement of goods and people, 68% of total. Two suppliers (bicarb & citric acid) make up 33% of inward freight emissions.
Where we can choose the supplier (88% of the sites), 100% of the electricity and gas we use is with Ecotricity. If we were to use Ecotricity’s own published data of the CO2eq impact of their electrical production, our emissions from electricity would be 34 tonnes. Instead we report 2251 tonnes of CO2eq as we use the national grid coefficients.
We are working on calculating our emissions from our very complex supply chain. Greenhouse gas emissions from the supply chain are still a big unknown, but we estimate it to be at least six times that of our operations. To give some perspective, just the carbon impact of card and paper alone (6437 tonnes of CO2eq) we buy in the UK, is nearly the same as ALL of our transport emissions combined. (6464 tCO2eq).
The estimated annual capacity to sequester carbon dioxide from Peru and the land we helped to buy in Sumatra is eight times the carbon footprint of UK direct operations, excluding supply chain.
The following image shows Carbon sinks in tropical lands vs carbon emissions Lush UK in tonnes of CO2eq.
Lush Peru Second Growth 6,000 hectares (67,200 tCO2eq) Sumatra II Reforestation 300 hectares (7,080 tCO2eq) Sumatra I Agroforestry 50 hectares (310 tCO2eq) Sumatra I Reforestation 50 hectares (1,180 tCO2eq)
vs
Lush UK (Excluding Supply Chain) (9,530 tCO2eq)
This is uncertified and our we are constantly looking to check these figures.
Across the UK&I, we have 88% of our estate supplied by Ecotricity’s 100% renewable electric tariff and 94% Ecotricity of our estate with Ecotricity’s frack free gas supply. This is the maximum amount of properties that can be with Ecotricity in UK&I.
Whilst our Ireland/NI properties are on a green tariff with SSE Airtricity; the tariff is only 34% renewable due to the generation infrastructure available to suppliers in Ireland.Many shopping centres, train stations and private estate properties don’t allow us to choose a supplier and for this reason, we can’t select a green/renewable energy tariff for them.
Lush has proudly been supplied by Ecotricity for over 10 years. We consume 3% of their annual generation from wind farms directly controlled by Ecotricity. With this wind farm traceability, we are entitled to use Ecotricity’s Grid CO2 conversion figures which happen to be 6gCO2/kWh rather than 256gCO2/kWh for standard Grid electricity.
Not all properties can be with Ecotricity but for the ones who can, CO2 tonnage drops by 2,044 tonnes in FY18/19. The reason for excluding the Ecotricity figures is that the tonnage data offers little reason to reduce consumption from an environmental perspective.
In the rest of the Lush world, our factories and shops in Japan, Australia and Germany where we can choose the supplier, also purchase green electricity. In Lush North America, we buy renewable energy credits for 100% of retail electricity use and 60% of manufacturing, while we work on the rest. In Germany, we buy Greenpeace’s electricity and wind gas, a new technology that uses surplus wind power to create methane (natural gas)! In Japan, the supply is 65% from renewable energy. We could purchase 100% renewable energy, but from the company involved in the Fukushima disaster, so we would rather not give them our money. Finally, in Croatia, we have solar hot water panels on the roof help that greatly reduce their gas usage.
Lush have announced that they will be using an electric bus to replace all of their taxi journeys in Poole, UK.
By switching to an electric vehicle Lush will be stopping around 8 tonnes of carbon from being emitted in Poole each year. It would take 3 acres of mature forest to sequester this amount of carbon!
The Lush team have fondly named the bus, Electra and it will eliminate around 10-20 car journeys a day.
After a full carbon study was carried out, the Carbon Trust have officially verified that our cork pots are sequestering carbon dioxide, making them Lush’s first Carbon Positive pieces of Packaging!
Circular
Not only are our cork pots reusable but they are also biodegradable and fully compostable at end of life too.
Carbon Postive
1.2kg of CO2e removed from the atmosphere for every 35g cork pot sold, the equivalent weight of over 33 individual pots!
Regenerative
20,000 native trees planted in the first year of production directly supporting the wider regeneration of Cork Oak Forests in Alentejo, Portugal.
Minimally processed
No adhesives, harvested cork is simply boiled and shaped ready to house our solid shampoo bars.
Responsibly harvested
It takes 50 years of growth before the oak tree produces the right quality of bark for our cork pots, the harvest then follows a 9 year rotation thereafter.
In order to achieve our climate emergency goals, we must ensure that there is no deforestation in our supply chain, quite the contrary, that we can actually achieve net afforestation through our purchasing practices. This work has four main paths:
Here are a few examples of how we are working with forests in our supply chain:
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