Graduate education at Loyola can help you build a career as a sustainability professional. Sign up for an online info session to learn more: https://bit.ly/3Zfk1aT
Loyola Chicago School of Environmental Sustainability’s Post
More Relevant Posts
-
Life Cycle Analysis, environmental Impact module of my Chief Sustainability Officer certification at MIT completed (3/5). Already halfway through the 4th module.
To view or add a comment, sign in
-
As a student about to complete my master's study in Environment and Resource Management, I am excited to contribute my knowledge and skills to the continuously evolving role of sustainability experts.
To view or add a comment, sign in
-
The QS methodology for the 2025 Sustainability Rankings evaluates universities across three key categories: Environmental Impact, Social Impact, and Governance, providing a comprehensive assessment of their contributions to global sustainability efforts
To view or add a comment, sign in
-
Our Sustainability report can be viewed on Integrity Next. https://lnkd.in/dCZJyW6z By embracing K999’s Core Values, we can focus on the following sustainability strategies: 🌿 Committing to conserving natural resources, minimizing waste and pollution, and enhancing the natural environment in which we operate. ⚙ Promoting innovation within our industry and implementing new technologies to continuously improve our economic, social, and environmental performance. 💼 Being value-driven and profitable by building a resilient business that can respond to challenges and create new opportunities. 👩👩👧👧 Making a difference to people and communities by establishing and maintaining meaningful, long-lasting relationships, creating opportunities in education, employment, and enterprise, and supporting local community groups and organizations. ⭐ Maintaining excellence through our outstanding and diverse leaders by fostering a values-led culture and focusing on developing our workforce from within. 🤝 Furthering collaboration and engagement with our employees, partners, and communities on key sustainability issues, encouraging them to act individually and collectively to improve the way we do things.
To view or add a comment, sign in
-
I attended the IEMA Connect 24: Global Environmental and Sustainability Conference Over two days with 34 sessions, over 60 speakers and an international community from 55 countries. It’s been an opportunity to enhance knowledge, get inspire, and connect with a vibrant community of sustainability professionals. Discussions delved into three key areas: 1. How we can turn policy into action 2. How we can transform industry 3. How we can advance your career as a sustainability professional
To view or add a comment, sign in
-
Can you further clarify your statement please: 1 - When Mars set it's sustainability goals, are your senior executives actively involved in setting these goals, and so subsequently understand how their areas of business can help achieve these goals, and critically, are bought in to these goals, for the long(er) term? 2 - You talk about your 'overall' executive management remuneration being attached to your sustainability goals, does this mean that 'all' of your senior executives are linked to the achievement of your sustainability goals (including your CEO, CMO, COO), or are only certain senior executives roles linked, i.e that are more operational in nature? It would also be useful, and from experience, for both internal and external stakeholders, to better understand which senior executives, therefore, are having a material impact on your sustainability goals, as well as identifying senior executives that are not in the loop when it comes to sustainability; all of which, will help to ensure that the business is acting as one when it comes to integrating sustainability into day day business strategy & operations. Thank you.
"We’ve made our sustainability goals as important as our financial goals. And 20% of our overall executive remuneration is attached to our sustainability goals. When you make it that amount of money—and it’s a significant amount of money for senior executives—they move from ‘I don’t know what to do about that. I wasn’t trained on how to reduce greenhouse gas. They didn’t teach me about that at business school,’ to ‘That’s serious. That’s significant. What do I need to know? What do I need to do?’ " Barry Parkin, Mars Chief Sustainability Officer, always on point! Barry was interviewed for the The Wall Street Journal Pro Sustainable Business and you can read his full interview here:
You Want Lower Emissions? Try Attaching it to Pay, Says Mars Sustainability Chief
wsj.com
To view or add a comment, sign in
-
Boards face challenges amid rising environmental and social concerns from integrating sustainability into strategy to establishing effective oversight. Read more in the Oversight of Corporate Sustainability report to gain insights from leading directors on how to adapt to sustainability standards and changing stakeholder expectations. Learn more: https://lnkd.in/gauCKHK9
To view or add a comment, sign in
-
Did you know that at Celsa we are aligned with the 2030 Agenda to build a more sustainable future? 🌍 Since 2021, we have been part of the UN Global Compact and we prioritize 6 of the Sustainable Development Goals (#SDGs) to integrate responsible practices responsible practices in all our operations. ✅ We are committed to the efficient management of natural resources. ✅ We work to mitigate environmental risks and impacts. ✅ We adapt to regulatory changes to lead with resilience. Our objective: to achieve the 2030 and 2050 sustainability goals, responding to the demands of customers and stakeholders.
To view or add a comment, sign in
-
Discover how to enhance your competitive advantage and accelerate the transition to responsible business practices with the IE Sustainability Bootcamp, led by Alberto Cremonesi, a renowned sustainability expert and program director. Learn more about the IE Sustainability Bootcamp and how you can make a difference at https://lnkd.in/dHb2bpJ3
IE Sustainability Bootcamp
blgs.co
To view or add a comment, sign in
-
Sustainability has been presented as a “win-win” situation, but without a holistic, cooperative approach to sustainability across multiple industries, value chains, and product life cycles, we cannot overcome the challenges faced by society today, according to Rice University's Baker Institute for Public Policy’s CES fellow Rachel A. Meidl, LP.D., MEPM, M.Ed, CHMM. Today, Meidl presented a seminar on this topic as part of the University of South Carolina Environmental Health Sciences Spring 2024 Seminar Series. Her seminar, titled “A Systems Perspective for Navigating the Complexities of Sustainability and a Circular Economy,” covered the issues surrounding society's current understanding of sustainability, and how we need to change that understanding to face the future. Interested in what sustainability is and isn’t? Read Meidl’s research on the topic here: https://lnkd.in/g7qhxnKN.
The Pride and Prejudice of Sustainability: Rethinking Sustainability From a Systems Perspective | Baker Institute
bakerinstitute.org
To view or add a comment, sign in
1,242 followers