Content & Commerce: A Recipe for Sustained Success
People buy experiences, not just products. See what that looks like for Mishima Reserve.
Source: magento.com
People buy experiences, not just products. See what that looks like for Mishima Reserve.
Source: magento.com
FOOD delivery firm Just Eat is sending out sauces in seaweed sachets in a bid to cut single-use plastic waste.A trial scheme involving 65 of its restaurant partners sees them dropping off Hellmann……
The circular economy is an economic and industrial model that keeps products in circulation for as long as possible to promote sustainability…
“Bellwether Coffee has a dream team of sustainability and coffee experts and is addressing a large market ripe for improvement,” DBL Partners, tells AFN.
Every year, 400 million tons of heavy metal, toxic sludge and industrial waste are dumped into our waterways. At least 8 million tons of plastic end up in our oceans. Some 1.3 billion tons of food — about one-third of all that is produced — is lost or wasted, while hundreds of millions of people go hungry. Our oceans are being overfished, our lands degraded and biodiversity rapidly eroded. Meanwhile, devastating natural disasters — flash floods in Europe and China, forest fires in the United States and locust infestations in Africa and the Middle East — are becoming more frequent. The unsustainability of our linear “take-make-waste” pattern of global production and consumption has never been more obvious. In fact, if we do not abandon it by 2050, we will need the equivalent of almost three Earths to provide enough natural resources to sustain current lifestyles, and annual waste generation will increase by 70%. But there is a better way: We can embrace the circular economy.
INCPEN has joined OPRL’s guarantors, recognising that the two organisations shared membership and mutual interests in packaging recyclability.
Hardly anyone continues to doubt the relevance of sustainable management. With buildings now accounting for some 39% of energy-related carbon dioxide emissions (even more than the transport sector), there is good reason to consider buildings as the number one focus area for emissions reduction…