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Category: Sustainable Supply Chain

Press Release: PUMA expands its project in cooperation with The Global Reporting Initiative (GRI) and the Gesellschaft für Technische Zusammenarbeit (GTZ) in GRI’s GANTSCh program which supports supplier factories to report on their social and environmental initiatives and agreed with 20 key suppliers in South East Asia and other major sourcing regions to issue their own sustainability reports from 2011 on. Through this project, PUMA endeavours to enhance transparency as well as social and working conditions in its supply chain by advising factory management regarding weak points in their operations and enabling them to make improvements independently.

Twenty strategic PUMA suppliers based in China, Vietnam, Cambodia and other countries  – which produce together more than two thirds of all PUMA products consumed – will receive GRI certified training on transparent measurement and reporting on their sustainability performance using the GRI G3 Guidelines – the world’s most widely-used framework for sustainability reporting. The training within the Global Action Network for Transparency in the Supply Chain program (GANTSCh) will be conducted by GRI Certified Training Partners. During the reporting process, scheduled to start in 2010, the suppliers will be supported by regional sustainability consultants and the first sustainability reports are expected to be released in 2011/2012.

“Supply chain sustainability reporting is a key part of PUMA’s overall sustainability strategy,” said Dr. Reiner Hengstmann, Global Director of puma.safe supply chain. “Without sustainable suppliers, we will not be able to produce sustainable products or credibly report about PUMA’s own sustainability initiatives. The GANTSCh project helps to ensure that our suppliers fully embrace the concept of sustainability and introduce respective programs in their companies.”

Read the entire press releaseon PUMA’s Website HERE

 Similar to P&GIBM has also announced new management system requirements to advance sustainability across the company’s global network of suppliers.  IBM’s “first-tier” suppliers – those firms with which IBM holds a direct commercial relationship – will now be required to establish and follow a management system to address their corporate and environmental responsibilities. 

This is the latest move in IBM’s decades-long commitment to working with suppliers around corporate responsibility initiatives. The company runs one of the largest, most complex supply chains in the world, spanning 28,000 first-tier suppliers in 90 countries. 

IBM’s suppliers are now required to: 

P&G announced the launch of the Supplier Environmental Sustainability Scorecard and rating process on May 12, 2010. Rick Hughes, P&Gs global purchasing officer, talks about how the new scorecard represents the next step in P&Gs commitment to environmental sustainability and reflects the Company’s holistic, end-to-end supply chain strategy.

The supplier sustainability scorecard and training materials can be found here:

http://www.pgsupplier.com/environmental-sustainability-scorecard