Our Experience
From PR to Progress
Delivering on Corporate Sustainability
OUR IMPACT HIGHLIGHTS
29,936
Organisations Supported
1,736
Partnerships Established
18,872
Organisations Reporting Increased Turnover
$272.2M
Value of Organisations’ Turnover
No organisation or government exists in isolation. Each one operates within an ecosystem of people, cultures, processes, and interests, and alignment around a shared strategy can result in transformative value that benefits everyone within that complex network.
For many corporations around the world, sustainability is emerging at the heart of that strategy.
2021 saw a continued pressure on organisations to make good on their ESG commitments, to see through promises to increase diversity within their ranks and establish plans for reaching net zero by 2030. Now is the time for companies to deliver on those pledges, but what we’ve seen time and again is that many, if not most, don’t even know where to start.
Now is the time for real change – if not simply because it’s the right thing to do, then because people are demanding it. Global and multinational companies have made statements and committed funds, but their efforts ring hollow in the ears of stakeholders who have become disillusioned by posturing without progress.
In too many companies, social impact and corporate social responsibility reporting are considered public relations issues. Annual statements are made, but words aren’t enough from corporations that touch every facet of our lives – their reach is too immense not to play a meaningful role. True progress on social issues requires corporate action, and with that action, monitoring and reporting on impact.
What many organisations fail to realise is that while operating within a broader ecosystem may complicate their ESG goals, it’s also the key to their success.
Can an organisation consider themselves truly net zero when one of their suppliers isn’t? For many companies, the underlying issue is with ensuring that partners within that value chain are meeting overarching goals. “Scope three emissions” is the latest buzz-term – those emissions that are out of an organisation’s control but may in fact still affect overall goals towards net zero or reductions in greenhouse gases.
Palladium thought leader Dr. Robert S Kaplan proposed a new system for tracking and reporting emissions across an entire supply chain in his 2021 Harvard Business Review article, “Accounting for Climate Change”. It’s these emissions that represent not just the struggles many organisations are facing, but their opportunities to improve. Supply chains can make or break an organisation, and when each facet of the chain is in alignment, it’s not only good for business but can have positive ripple effects within the communities in which the organisation works and beyond.
While an important factor, this goes well beyond environmental work. From building local capacities, to improving technology and capital access, and implementing diversity requirements throughout a value chain, our experience has taught us that a truly sustainable business is one that encompasses inclusive growth strategies to build up resilience and capacity every step of the way.
There’s no one-size-fits-all solution and working across an entire supply chain requires significant transformation. It means asking a lot from organisations, suppliers, and value chain actors alike – but it’s possible, and there’s no more worthy a cause for either people or profits.
A MINING COMPANY’S COMMITMENT TO REFORESTATION
Location: Brazil Client: Fundo Vale
One of the largest mining companies in the world, Vale announced a commitment to reforest and protect 500,000 hectares of land in Brazil by 2030. Working with Vale’s foundation, Fundo Vale, Palladium is overseeing the project's 100,000 hectares of reforestation, taking an innovative approach that brings together productive forest recovery and social impact. Acting as an impact investor in companies that creatively use and restore degraded land, Fundo Vale has invested in five agroforestry start-ups across Brazil to achieve the restoration goal.
Each company brings a different approach to the table. Whether through commercial forestry, raising dairy cattle sustainably alongside native palm trees, working with smallholder farmers, or partnering with one property owner, they all are commercially viable businesses that are reforesting the areas in which they work. In 2021, the team set and met the aggressive goal of reforesting 5,000 hectares of land, proving that the innovative approach is working.
In addition to reaching the target, the Vale 2030 Forestry Commitment is a platform for promoting new businesses and seeks to induce the development of an ecosystem of positive social and environmental impact businesses linked to forest recovery in Brazil.
ASSESSING SUSTAINABLE COCOA SOURCING OPPORTUNITIES
Location: Global Client: Confidential
Palladium is working with one of the leading chocolate and confectionary companies in the world to diversify their cocoa sourcing origins by designing and implementing new sustainable sourcing models at scale. These models will be integrated into both the business and impact objectives for the company and help pave the way for other chocolate companies looking for more sustainable means of sourcing.
Working closely with a team from the corporation, we assessed and ranked 13 countries for the company, looking at both sourcing basics such as the quality of the cocoa, and the sustainability elements such as labour and economic development. From there, we identified 25 sourcing opportunities across those countries and worked with the company to rank them based on criteria such as readiness, time to results, positive impact potential, size, and complexity. The rankings allowed the team to narrow the opportunities down to four projects, with two already underway.