SC Johnson Exceeds Climate Leaders Greenhouse Gas Reduction Goals
In Partnership with the EPA, Company Exceeds its 2010 Goals by More Than 19 Percent
As a charter member of the Climate Leaders program, SC Johnson pledged to reduce its U.S. GHG emissions by eight percent from 2000 to 2005. By the end of 2005, greenhouse gas emissions had been reduced by 17 percent; more than double the absolute reduction target. The company then set a second goal of eight percent to be achieved by 2010 and again exceeded the goal, this time by 19.4 percentage points.
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An innovative burner/boiler system that since 2007 has enabled the company’s Medan, Indonesia factory to run on palm shells; the remaining waste of the palm oil industry. Rather than being burned as a waste product, the shells are used as a fuel source, transferring them to the value chain with minimal environmental impact reducing the company’s diesel fuel usage by 80 percent in 2008.
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The 2009 construction of an 80 meter tall wind turbine helps power SC Johnson’s European manufacturing facility in Mijdrecht, Netherlands, which is expected to produce 6.1 million kilowatt hours of electricity a year – eliminating 3,900 tons of carbon dioxide annually.
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Continuing to push the winds of change, the company installed three SWIFT mini-wind turbines at its Racine, Wis. Corporate Headquarters in 2010 as a pilot program, with the goal of reducing GHG emissions while raising awareness that renewable energy can be used in urban settings. In their first year of operation, the mini-turbines have reduced GHGs by 580 pounds.