Companies on the Scale
Comparing and Benchmarking the Sustainability Performance of Businesses
Article first published online: 3 MAY 2009
DOI: 10.1111/j.1530-9290.2009.00125.x
© 2009 by Yale University
Additional Information
How to Cite
Wiedmann, T. O., Lenzen, M. and Barrett, J. R. (2009), Companies on the Scale. Journal of Industrial Ecology, 13: 361–383. doi: 10.1111/j.1530-9290.2009.00125.x
Publication History
- Issue published online: 5 JUN 2009
- Article first published online: 3 MAY 2009
Keywords:
- corporate environmental reporting;
- triple bottom line (TBL);
- ecological footprint;
- input−output analysis;
- supply chain management;
- industrial ecology
Summary
A determination of the sustainability performance of a company ought to fulfill certain requirements. It has to take into account the direct impacts from on-site processes as well as indirect impacts embodied in the supply chains of a company. This life cycle thinking is the common theme of popular footprint analyses, such as carbon, ecological, or water footprinting. All these indicators can be incorporated into one common and consistent accounting and reporting scheme based on economic input−output analysis, extended with data from all three dimensions of sustainability. We introduce such a triple-bottom-line accounting framework and software tool and apply it in a case study of a small company in the United Kingdom. Results include absolute impacts and relative intensities of indicators and are put into perspective by a benchmark comparison with the economic sector to which the company belongs. Production layer decomposition and structural path analysis provide further valuable detail, identifying the amount and location of triple-bottom-line impacts in individual upstream supply chains. The concept of shared responsibility has been applied to avoid double-counting and noncomparability of results. Although in this work we employ a single-region model for the sake of illustration, we discuss how to extend our ideas to international supply chains. We discuss the limitations of the approach and the implications for corporate sustainability.

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