The world is getting hotter, unleashing environmental effects that threaten companies and society, from record-setting storms, floods, and droughts to melting arctic ice and rising seas. Some firms are shoring up their supply chains, processes, and infrastructure, but most are unwisely proceeding with business as usual. Consider this: According to a recent global survey of nearly 2,000 executives by Sloan Management Review and the Boston Consulting Group, two-thirds of leaders agree that climate change is real—but only one-third believe that their companies are prepared for its disruptions.
How to Survive Climate Change and Still Run a Thriving Business: Checklists for Smart Leaders
Reprint: R1404F
Climate change presents clear and pressing threats to business—materials and product shortages, price volatility, legal bans or consumer backlash, and damaged transportation infrastructure, to name just a few. But there are opportunities as well. Lowitt, a consultant in the sustainability field, has developed a series of detailed checklists that will help smart managers reduce operational, regulatory, and reputational risk while finding new ways to cut costs, improve performance, enhance customer relationships, and otherwise increase competitiveness.
The checklist recommendations, tested and refined through Lowitt’s research into and work with firms including Coca-Cola, GE, and Owens Corning, cover four broad areas in the product life cycle: sourcing, manufacturing, distribution, and consumption. Actions range from educating and incentivizing employees to use climate change–conscious behavior to measuring and reporting key metrics to determining when alternative materials, methods, sites, or contract partners may be called for.
Like any such tool, the checklists don’t provide a one-size-fits-all plan. Rather, they equip executives to customize their strategies according to factors such as their goods and services, risk tolerance, customer needs, and reliance on third parties throughout the value chain.