CIOs can do more to support corporate sustainability strategies through the use of data and deployment of next gen technologies, a leading analyst has claimed.
As world leaders use the COP26 summit in Glasgow to discuss plans for sustainability and a reduction in fossil fuel reliance, Bettina Tratz-Ryan, VP Analyst at Gartner, has been arguing that CIOs can marry their plans for digital transformation with the goal of more sustainable business practices.
She has argued that CIOs should utilise the wealth of information they generate through sustainable digital solutions to create a data platform for resource efficiencies and carbon emission reporting. She said this will support both the business to drive growth, while lowering the organisation’s carbon footprint.
She cited examples of initiatives that some organisations have already made in this area. Adidas, for example, has recently posted details of a sustainable growth strategy, which leverages IT to develop new ways of employing supply chains, using work tools, and reducing energy and infrastructure footprint. By leveraging data insights, Adidas was able to identify the material environmental challenges they had based on the United Nation’s Sustainable Development Goals, and how each of these issues directly impacted their operations. She said Unilever has also integrated Sustainable Development Goals into its corporate strategy. By using AI and technology, the company is tracking supplier responsibility for palm oil production by understanding deforestation, human labour conditions and environmental damage.
She added that CIOs who are looking to embed sustainability in their strategies will need to follow Adidas and Unilever’s footsteps and map out the environmental issues facing their organisations – including climate change mitigation and adaption, biodiversity, pollution, and resource efficiency – which can be done by embracing their organisations’ data strategies.
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