June 2011 USF Water Meeting Joe Rozza, P.E., BCEE Global Water Resource Sustainability Manager The Coca-Cola Company

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Transcription:

June 2011 USF Water Meeting Joe Rozza, P.E., BCEE Global Water Resource Sustainability Manager The Coca-Cola Company jrozza@na.ko.com 404 676 4764

The Coca-Cola Company by The Numbers 200 Countries 300+ Franchise Bottlers 400+ Brands Worldwide 900+ Manufacturing Plants 1,600,000,000 Moments of Happiness for Consumers Each Day 2

Water is Biggest Part of Our Supply Chain and it is Under Growing Stress Physical availability surface or groundwater and the sustainability of those sources Infrastructure existence, pressure, service area, metering Pricing too cheap or too expensive Droughts Water Risks in Manufacturing Locations Competing use and increased demand from more people and increased GDP Climate change Regulatory limits Water Risks in Agricultural Supply Chain Social acceptance

Geospatial Analytics for Decision Support Socio-Economic Water Stress Socio-Economic Drought Long-Term Water Stress 4

Socio-Economic Water Stress: Today and 2020 Conditions 5

Scope of Risk Assessment: Environmental, Operational, Social, Political, Economic Water Resources Sustainability Surface/Groundwater Stress Watershed Quality Social Impacts Effective Resource Mgt Supply Economics Water Supply Costs Water Treatment Costs Policy Supply Reliability Legal Access to Water Policy/Politics Infrastructure Natural Disasters Water Efficiency Plant Water Efficiency Product/Package Mix Change Policy Technology Changes Wastewater Compliance Local/Legal Standards Operations Reuse Local Social Community Local Government Media NGO/Activists Business Community National Governance 6

Risk Assessment Structure is Critical 7

Risk Based Strategy Implementation 8

Critical Success Factors for Risk Mitigation Communications, Engagement & Alignment Execution Risk Assessment Participation: 840 Plants All BUs, All T2T Bottlers Briefed CEO and BOD (PPCR Council) Reports to all Group/BU Presidents, CEOs of Top Franchise Bottlers Validation, Alignment & Planning Meetings with Key Directors and Managers (300+ Individuals) Current Operations: Source Water Vulnerability Assessments Provide Decision Support for Locally Relevant Priorities Source Water Protection Plans Plant, BU, Bottler, Cross Functional Execution Infrastructure Planning: SC Rationalization / Greenfields Connect to Annual Business Planning Governance & Capability Development Revised Corporate Standard Updated Governance Model Tools, Guidance, Training Support Procuring Professional Services Global Tracking System Standard Capability Audit Protocol

Global Leader in Sustainable Water Use Plant Performance Watershed Protection Sustainable Communities Global Awareness & Partnerships 10

Performance Targets Our water conservation goal is to return to communities and nature an amount of water equivalent to what we use in all of our beverages and their production. 11

Replenish: Communities and Watersheds Replenish is the manifestation of our community and watershed partnership work, with the aim to offset the water we use in finished products Locally relevant projects that support communities and nature, from source water protection implementation to rainwater harvesting projects Total amount of water used in Manufacturing Treated wastewater Product Volume and amount to replenish We are engaged in 320 community water projects in 89 countries to protect and preserve water resources and help enable greater access to water and sanitation. Our partners include USAID, UN- HABITAT, CARE, UNDP, TNC, WWF, local governments and implementing NGOs. 12

Plant Level Water Sustainability and Replenish Program Plant Level Water Risk Assessment & SVA/SWP Planning Water Resource Sustainability Water resources under stress Water quality degradation Supply Reliability Decreased water availability Ecological Health Aquatic Ecosystems & Species Terrestrial/Riparian Ecosystems & Species Human Health & Well-Being Safe Drinking Water Food Availability Local Social Unsustainable Communities Sanitation Economics Replenish Projects Framework for Community Water Partnerships Watershed Protection Water for Productive Use Water Access & Sanitation Education & Awareness

Watershed Protection and Restoration Activities: Agricultural improvements (better management practices) Land cover improvements (reforestation, land conservation) Surface and groundwater quantity management (dam reoperation, floodplain reconnection, rainwater harvesting, aquifer recharge) Water conservation and leak repair Wastewater treatment Replenish Benefits: Water quantity and quality 14

Access to Safe Drinking Water Access to Safe Drinking Water Activities: Household water pumps New water source (boreholes) Rainwater harvesting Community water treatment systems Distribution network improvements Replenish Benefits: Metered or calculated based on number of beneficiaries and WHO minimum daily requirements 15

Mexico Reforestation Program Activity: Reforestation in priority ecosystems across Mexico Outcome: 25,000 hectares replanted by 2012 Benefits: Reduced runoff water quantity: 9.4 billion liters/yr (total) Reduced sediment runoff: 770,472 metric tons/yr (total) Carbon sequestration Habitat restoration & improved biodiversity Economic & community growth Costs: $6 million from Coca-Cola (33% of total) Classified - Internal use 16

Valuing Water: Payment for Environmental Services Activity: Conservation of tropical forest through payment for maintenance of environmental services Outcome: Deforestation will be prevented on 12.5 million hectares Benefits: Reduced runoff water quantity: 120.6 billion liters/yr (total for 2010) Reduced sediment runoff: 104,274 metric tons/yr (total for 2010) Carbon sequestration Habitat protection & preserved biodiversity Preservation of quality of life for communities Costs: $20 million from Coca-Cola to endowment fund (33% of total endowment) Classified - Internal use Current and predicted extent of deforestation (red) in 14 conservation units (without the program)

18

Replenish Africa Initiative (RAIN) Partners: USAID, other Priority Goal: Provide access to safe drinking water to at least 2 million people by 2015; 100 water projects Primary Activities: Boreholes for drinking water, community latrines, hygiene promotion, rainwater harvesting, rehabilitation of water supply systems Investment: $30 million over 6 years Seeks to leverage funding to achieve at least 1:1 co-finance Replenish Benefits: Currently 1.5 billion liters/yr

20

WWF: A Transformational Partnership In 2007, we announced a global, multi-year partnership with WWF to combine our international strengths and resources to help conserve freshwater resources. Improve water efficiency in Coca-Cola s manufacturing operations Decrease the company s carbon dioxide emissions and energy use Support more efficient water use in TCCC s agricultural supply chain, beginning with sugar Measurably conserve seven of the world's most important freshwater river basins Inspire a global movement to conserve the world s freshwater resources 21

22

Building Organizational Capability Repository of information to assist in water management and data collection techniques Guidance and templates

Focal Point: ME & Southern Eurasia

Water For Strategy (Notional) Heath Economic Development Environmental Sustainability Policy Partnerships Supporting the Services Water Provides in Human Security and Prosperity 25

Key Elements of the Strategy 26

Reducing the Impact from Natural Disasters Assets and Capabilities Alternate Potable Water Source Rigorous Water Treatment Technologies Logistics Independent from Muni Infrastructure (many cases) Local Presence Understand Hydration Key Learnings Planning For Truly Worst Case Taking Early Action in Situations Dominated by Uncertainty Pre-arranged Partnerships with Tactical Planning Recommendations Integrated global-to-local response policy and planning requirements Integrate plans with local governments/authorities 27 Global partnerships (RCRC)