Streamlining sustainability reporting: How Thomas Foods International slashed the time taken to submit to the CDP
Company Size
1,000+
Region
- America
Country
- United States
Product
- Emitwise
Tech Stack
- Carbon Management Platform
Implementation Scale
- Enterprise-wide Deployment
Impact Metrics
- Environmental Impact Reduction
- Productivity Improvements
Technology Category
- Analytics & Modeling - Real Time Analytics
Applicable Industries
- Food & Beverage
Applicable Functions
- Discrete Manufacturing
Use Cases
- Energy Management System
- Regulatory Compliance Monitoring
Services
- Data Science Services
About The Customer
Thomas Foods USA is a meat processing company that imports meat from various parts of the world and prepares it for food retailers. The company operates in a sector where sustainability is of utmost importance due to several reasons. Meat is a product with a high greenhouse gas intensity, and this intensity can vary significantly, especially when adjusting the upstream supply chain. The meat processing industry also operates on a low-profit margin, meaning any efficiencies found in production can have a substantial impact on the company's bottom line. Furthermore, large retailers like Walmart, who are under significant pressure to decarbonise, are passing on this pressure to their suppliers, including Thomas Foods USA.
The Challenge
Thomas Foods USA, a meat processing company, was facing challenges in sustainability reporting. The company imports meat from around the world and prepares it for food retailers. Sustainability is crucial in this sector due to the high greenhouse gas intensity of meat, the low-profit margin of the industry, and the increasing demand from customers for decarbonisation. The company was asked to submit to both the CDP and Walmart’s Project Gigaton, an initiative to reduce scope 3 emissions in Walmart’s value chain. This led Jonathan, a representative of the company, to look for ways to drive efficiencies in these applications.
The Solution
To centralise and streamline sustainability reporting, Jonathan decided to collaborate with Emitwise, a carbon management platform. This platform has significantly streamlined the process of inputting data into application forms. Jonathan is now using Emitwise to align with Walmart’s Project Gigaton, where they must set emission reduction targets and report on them over time. With the aggregated data visualised in the Emitwise platform, Thomas Foods is taking action to tackle carbon hotspots.
Operational Impact
Quantitative Benefit
Case Study missing?
Start adding your own!
Register with your work email and create a new case study profile for your business.
Related Case Studies.
Case Study
The Kellogg Company
Kellogg keeps a close eye on its trade spend, analyzing large volumes of data and running complex simulations to predict which promotional activities will be the most effective. Kellogg needed to decrease the trade spend but its traditional relational database on premises could not keep up with the pace of demand.
Case Study
HEINEKEN Uses the Cloud to Reach 10.5 Million Consumers
For 2012 campaign, the Bond promotion, it planned to launch the campaign at the same time everywhere on the planet. That created unprecedented challenges for HEINEKEN—nowhere more so than in its technology operation. The primary digital content for the campaign was a 100-megabyte movie that had to play flawlessly for millions of viewers worldwide. After all, Bond never fails. No one was going to tolerate a technology failure that might bruise his brand.Previously, HEINEKEN had supported digital media at its outsourced datacenter. But that datacenter lacked the computing resources HEINEKEN needed, and building them—especially to support peak traffic that would total millions of simultaneous hits—would have been both time-consuming and expensive. Nor would it have provided the geographic reach that HEINEKEN needed to minimize latency worldwide.
Case Study
Energy Management System at Sugar Industry
The company wanted to use the information from the system to claim under the renewable energy certificate scheme. The benefit to the company under the renewable energy certificates is Rs 75 million a year. To enable the above, an end-to-end solution for load monitoring, consumption monitoring, online data monitoring, automatic meter data acquisition which can be exported to SAP and other applications is required.
Case Study
Coca Cola Swaziland Conco Case Study
Coco Cola Swaziland, South Africa would like to find a solution that would enable the following results: - Reduce energy consumption by 20% in one year. - Formulate a series of strategic initiatives that would enlist the commitment of corporate management and create employee awareness while helping meet departmental targets and investing in tools that assist with energy management. - Formulate a series of tactical initiatives that would optimize energy usage on the shop floor. These would include charging forklifts and running cold rooms only during off-peak periods, running the dust extractors only during working hours and basing lights and air-conditioning on someone’s presence. - Increase visibility into the factory and other processes. - Enable limited, non-intrusive control functions for certain processes.
Case Study
Temperature Monitoring for Restaurant Food Storage
When it came to implementing a solution, Mr. Nesbitt had an idea of what functionality that he wanted. Although not mandated by Health Canada, Mr. Nesbitt wanted to ensure quality control issues met the highest possible standards as part of his commitment to top-of-class food services. This wish list included an easy-to use temperature-monitoring system that could provide a visible display of the temperatures of all of his refrigerators and freezers, including historical information so that he could review the performance of his equipment. It also had to provide alert notification (but email alerts and SMS text message alerts) to alert key staff in the event that a cooling system was exceeding pre-set warning limits.
Case Study
Coca-Cola Refreshments, U.S.
Coca-Cola Refreshments owns and manages Coca-Cola branded refrigerators in retail establishments. Legacy systems were used to locate equipment information by logging onto multiple servers which took up to 8 hours to update information on 30-40 units. The company had no overall visibility into equipment status or maintenance history.