This week: GM’s director of sustainability David Tulauskas on the customer-driven future for personal transportation, including full electrification, and anti-slavery charity Unseen’s CEO Andrew Wallis on how business risks on human rights and modern slavery are evolving.
Plus: Shell links executive pay to climate change targets, analysis of the latest Know the Chain labour rights benchmark into the apparel and footwear sector, and Australia’s modern slavery bill becomes law (at last).
And news of an exclusive special offer for podcast listeners (code: IFPOD10).
Hosted by Ian Welsh
Weekly podcast – Agriculture from above: remote sensing's role in farming
The power of data in food supply chains
Monday briefing – Ready, target, action: business progress in tackling scope 3 emissions
Weekly podcast – Sustainable plastics and packaging in the US: trends, innovations, regulations
Agriculture’s just transition from emissions to efficiency
Weekly briefing – Incentivising change for farmers with the US COVER Act
Weekly podcast – Achieving functionality and recyclability in packaging design
Nutritious, affordable, sustainable: redefining ultra-processed foods
Monday briefing – What regenerative poultry farming looks like
Weekly podcast – the power of data in food and farming
How digital product passports can empower consumers
Monday briefing – Scope 3 emissions: what can procurement do?
Weekly podcast – Less is more: collaborative efforts to tackle agricultural decarbonisation
Leveraging technology for carbon accounting in agriculture
Monday briefing – Collaboration to drive progress on decarbonisation
Navigating opportunities to deliver sustainable food systems
Tackling agricultural emissions and food loss
Weekly podcast – How to make tasty foods healthier
Beneath the surface: how data and technology can drive carbon farming and resilience at farm-level
Monday briefing – What's the sustainable approach to cotton?
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