Walmart Goes ‘Beyond Sustainability,’ Vowing to Become a Regenerative Company

World’s largest retailer targets zero emissions by 2040 and aims to protect, manage, or restore at least 50 million acres of land and 1 million square miles of ocean by 2030.

Mc Millon

Since 2005, when Walmart began leading the charge in sustainability, most of its efforts—as well as those of most eco-friendly-minded CPGs and retailers—have focused on maintaining systems without degrading them. At its Sustainability Milestone Summit in late September, Walmart committed itself to becoming a regenerative company, one that is dedicated to placing nature and humanity at the center of its business.

“Regenerating means restoring, renewing, and replenishing, in addition to conserving,” explained Walmart President & CEO Doug McMillon, in his opening address. “It means decarbonizing operations and eliminating waste along the production chain. It means adopting regenerative practices in agriculture, forest management, and fisheries, while advancing prosperity and equity for customers, associates, and people who participate in our product supply chain.”


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The one-hour virtual event featured a number of Walmart and Sam’s Club executives as well as prominent CPGs and environmental non-profits, who shared details on Walmart’s goals and projects moving forward in order to “draw carbon dioxide out of the environment and bring it home,” as McMillon explained.

Walmart’s commitment, McMillon noted, is in response to the building crisis that, if left unaddressed, will have disastrous consequences for everyone. “We have exceeded the planetary boundaries that sustain our natural environment,” he said. “Worldwide, environmental losses are cascading. …Our natural systems are changing, and what they’re telling us is that we’re not doing enough. We’re actually doing irreversible damage to our planet.

“…Science is clearly pointing to fossil fuel combustion as the primary cause of warming, and that we need to be even more aggressive in moving toward renewable forms of energy. …We’re facing a reality that says we need everyone, including those who passionately defend fossil fuels, to have at least as much passion to aggressively fund and support sustainable alternatives with urgency. Let’s stop debating the or, and get on with an urgent and strategy until we’ve innovated our way out of fossil fuels.”

Transforming the world’s supply chains

According to McMillon, transforming the world’s supply chains to become regenerative involves four critical areas: climate, nature, waste, and people.

As part of Walmart’s new commitments around climate, the company is raising its ambitions to achieve zero emissions in its global operations by 2040, without the use of carbon offsets. The levers it plans to pull to reach this goal include:

·     Harvesting enough wind, solar, and other renewable energy sources to power its facilities with 100% renewable energy by 2035

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