The Organisa(on Environmental Footprint (OEF) Retailers pilot tes(ng

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1 The Organisa(on Environmental Footprint (OEF) Retailers pilot tes(ng Presenta(on of this pilot selected by the European Commission November 2014 Carole Dubois Project manager, Quan0s Europe * carole.dubois@quan0s- intl.com ) Pascal Léglise Director Quality and Sustainability Carrefour Belgium * pascal_leglise_be@carrefour.com

2 What is the environmental footprint of a retailer? 2

3 What to know about THE Organisa(on Environmental Footprint retailers pilot tes(ng selected by the European Commission? 3

4 OEFSR Retail Technical Secretariat 1 retailers assoc. 1 NGO 6 retailers 3 public agencies 1 LCA consultant Press release à htp://goo.gl/rsfpdk 4

5 Retailers act as a link between a mul0tude of upstream and downstream markets Retail 10.9% of non- financial business economy Key player in the European economy Turnover = EUR billions in 2010 (EU- 27) Close rela0on to the supply chain partners and the consumers 5

6 Organisa(on Environmental Footprint (OEF) mul(- criteria life cycle- based approach reproducibility development guided by 4 core criteria physically realis(c modelling Source: Pelle0er et al. (2013) 6

7 The EF pilot phase The steps for building an OEFSR 1. Defini0on of the sector 2. Defini0on of representa(ve organisa(on 3. OEF screening : most relevant life cycle stages and processes 4. Dra[ of sector rules 5. Suppor0ng study: iden0fica0on of the most relevant impacts 6. Final OEFSR 7

8 OEF Screening study Currently on- going Check it on the stakeholders workspace: h[ps://webgate.ec.europa.eu/fpfis/wikis/display/euenvfp/ Stakeholder+workspace%3A+OEFSR+pilot+Retail Public online consulta(on for your feedback: 3 to 30 March 2015 (date to be confirmed soon) 8

9 OEF Screening goals (original) 9

10 OEF Screening goals (adapted for the OEFSR Retail) 10

11 Scope of the screening Unit of analysis (func(onal unit) Ac(vi(es of a retailer, as a product provider, i.e. taking into account, when relevant, the life cycle impacts of the products provided, over a 1- year (me interval 11

12 Scope of the screening System boundaries 12

13 Virtual product porbolio (goods and services) Retail trade sector Food Beverage Tobacco Retail trade sector ICE: telecommunica0ons equipment ICE: audio and video equipment Tex0les Retail trade sector CRG: spor0ng equipment CRG: games and toys Clothing Fruit and vegetables Meat and meat products Fish, crustaceans and molluscs Bread, cakes, flour and sugar conf. Automo0ve fuel ICE: computers, per. units and sogware Hardware, paints and glass Carpets, rugs, wall and floor coverings Electrical household app. furniture, ligh0ng eq. CRG: books CRG: newspapers and sta0onery CRG: music and video recordings Footwear and leather goods Dispensing chemist Medical and orthopaedic goods Cosme0c and toilet ar0cles Flowers, plants, seeds, fer0., pet an. and pet food Watches and jewellery ICE: Informa0on and communica0on equipment CRG: cultural and recrea0on goods 13

14 Virtual product porbolio (goods and services) 14

15

16 In a nutshell The roadmap of the communica0on phase Concep(on Implementa(on Feedback Ready for implementa(on Results based on the dra[ PEFCR/OEFSR 16

17 Transparency Availability and accessibility Reliability Completeness Comparability Clarity 17

18 OEFSR Retail The next steps are Do you want to join? To be sure you know the rules source of proposal, instead of suffering the rules made by others recognized as leaders in sustainability Public online consulta(on: 3 to 30 March 2015 (date to be confirmed soon) Communica(on phase from January

19 Thank you J Ques(ons? Carole Dubois OEFSR Retail Project Manager * carole.dubois@quan0s- intl.com )

20 OEFSR Retail Technical Secretariat Agathe Grossmith Pascal Léglise Frederic Vermeiren Steven Van Hemelryck Mieke Vercaeren Arnaud Brulaire Emilie Aubry 6 retailers François- Xavier Morvan (francois- Shela Fletcher 20