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SABMiller plcMapping our carbon footprint
Dave GrantGroup Environmental Manager
Alcohol and Greenhouse Gas Emissions Working SeminarLondon19th October 2005
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1) SABMiller Overview
Miller (8)
SABMiller Europe (18)
SABMiller Africa & Asia (61)Beer SA (7)
Bavaria (16)
BevCo (2)
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BrandsOur
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1.1) Facts & Figures (pre Bavaria acquisition):
2004/05 lager volumes in excess of 148 million hl
Brewing presence in over 40 countries across four continents
Outside the USA, SABMiller plc is the 4th largest bottler of Coca-Cola products in the world
Year ended 31 March 2005:
• Pre-tax profit = US$2,194 million and,
• Turnover = US$14,543 million.
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SABMillerGuiding
Principles
Wat
er
Clim
ate
Cha
nge
Pack
agin
g &
Litt
er
Op
Was
te
2) Overarching Management Framework
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3) SABMiller – Scope of Carbon Footprint
Supply Chain
Post Plant/Consumer
Plant
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emissions
emissions
emissionsemissions
emissions
emissions
emissions
emissions
emissions
Power
Employees+ Offices
Raw MaterialsDistributor Consumer
Packaging Waste
Recycling
Reuse Disposal
Tertiary Packaging
Disposal
Farm
Chemicals
Water
Refrigeration
PaperElectricity Transport
Other Waste
Waste
LandfillRecycling
Employee Waste
Recycling
Disposal
Machinery
Production/Packaging
Effluent
packaging
Packaging materials
customer
Refrigeration
emissions
emissions
emissions
emissions
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3.1) Supply ChainS
uppl
y C
hain
1. Agriculture
2. Packaging
3. Raw Materials Processing (Barely, Maize & Hop Processing)
8 kg CO2 / tonne barley (Africa)
Varies greatly according to substrate
Malt (ave) = 400 kg CO2/tonne malt
3. Raw Materials Processing (Barely, Maize & Hop Processing)
Data available for one division only
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Supply chain: agriculture
1 Tonne BarleyNitrogen = 6.25 kg
Phosphorus = 6.1 kg
Herbicides = 0.6 kg
Insecticides = 0.0003 kg Water = 750,000 litres
Diesel = 3 litres
CO2 (equ) = 8 kg
Role of sequestration?
Source: Methodological Framework for application of Environmental Life Cycle Assessment (LCA) to Australian Grains. Narayanaswamy. V, Althan. J, Van Berke. R and McGregor.M. 2003. Curtin University of Technology, Australia.
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Supply chain: packaging CO2 emissions
GHG emissions due to material production and waste management. Excludes emissions related to : packaging manufacturing, cleaning, and transportation.
Source: Wrapping Up Greenhouse Gas Emissions: An Assessment of GHG Emission Reduction Related to Efficient Packaging Use. Hekkert,P et al. 2001. Journal of Industrial Ecology
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Caledon (South Africa):•507 kg/tonne
Alrode (South Africa):•559 kg/tonne
Kwe Kwe (Zimbabwe):•585 kg/tonne
Moshi (Tanzania):•563 kg/tonne
Saris (Slovakia):•154 kg/tonne
PU (Czech Rep.):•222 kg/tonne
SAPLO Spa (Italy):•200 kg/tonne
Radegast (Czech Rep.):•263 kg/tonne
Combined Output 2004/5 = 430 000 tonnes malt
Supply chain: Malting Plants
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3.2) PlantP
lant
9.08 kg CO2 / hl1. Boilers
?
2.5 kg CO2/hl wort @ 12 plato &
0.35 kg per degree Plato above 12
6.15 kg CO2 / hl2. Electricity
3. Fermentation
4. Packaging
5. Air & RoadTravel
?
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Plant: Energy use by Type
Energy Use by Type
1%
50%
1%8%
31%
9%
Biogas Coal Diesel Fuel Oil Natural Gas Purchased Steam
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Plant: Emissions by Fuel Type
CO2 Emissions by Fuel Type
62%
1%
15%
22%
Coal Diesel Fuel Oil Natural gas
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3.3) Post Plant / ConsumerS
uppl
y C
hain
1. Distribution
2. Packaging(recycling)
3. Landfill
?
?
?
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Energy footprint to produce 1 litre (4% alcohol) of larger transportation and post plant/consumer energy excluded
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4.1) Tools
Employee education
Fuel Switching (including renewable energy)
Fleet optimisation
CHP
Other initiatives:
Voluntary programmes (Climate Leaders)
Emissions Trading
CDM projects
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