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2016 Forum Program Highlights

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● October 25-28th at the Denver Sheraton, Denver, CO

● Tracks v Strategic Sustainability v Safety Leadership v Reducing Risk, Spotlighting Value v  Innovative Resource Management

● Keynotes v Simplifying Complexity: Eric Berlow, Ecologist and Complexity Scientist and

Founder; Vibrant Data Labs v Leading as an EHS&S Professional Now and Into the Future: Wayne Balta, Vice

President of Environment and Product Safety; IBM v Peer-Led Ignite Power Hour: Ten 5-minute Ted-Style Talks delivered by members

of the EHS&S community, teaching the audience about a range of topics. Fun, High Energy, Engaging!

Frank Marino Raytheon

Forum Program Chair

Attributes of an NAEM National Meeting •  High energy environment with very friendly participants (650 attendees) •  Keynote speakers that help us take our programs to the next level •  4 tracks with 4 concurrent offerings in 90 minute sessions (3 speakers) •  Candid discussion by all speakers, good and bad sharings, remaining

challenges are openly discussed •  Robust dialogue by attendees after each session •  Vibrant tradeshow with a host of suppliers for networking (65)

NAEM New England Chapter •  Chapter President is Johanna Jobin from Biogen •  Informal quarterly meetings to share lessons learned, one social meeting •  Low fees for meeting attendance •  Generally ½ day meetings in the morning, rotating locations •  Series of presenters and many times includes an update from AIM •  Fall meeting generally includes take-aways from the NAEM National Mtg.

Lessons from the Zero Waste Journey •  Speakers: •  Johanna Jobin, Dir. Global EHS & Sustainability – Biogen Inc. •  Nicole Krenner, Manager, Sust. Operational Excellence- 3M •  Michelle Redfield, Dir. Safety, Env. & Process Improvement – Schneider Electric

•  Moderator: David Williams – Dir. Env. & Sustainability – Teva Pharmaceuticals

Speaker   Company   Presentation Title   Theme Song  David Williams   Teva   Risk Management on a Motorcycle?   Born to Be Wild – Steppenwolf

Nadine King   CVS   Reducing Waste – Let’s Get Real   Waiting On the World to Change - John Mayer  

Kim Jackson   Spectra Energy   Turn Around Don’t Drown   The Thunder Rolls – Garth Brooks  

Hal Ehrhardt   Lockheed   40 Year EHS Career – 4 Minutes of Lessons Learned  

Smoke on the Water – Deep Purple

Johanna Jobin   Biogen   Rocking the Boat – Being a Catalyst for Change  

Rocking the Boat  

Wayne Cran   Raytheon   Stayin’ Alive – How to Use an AED   Stayin Alive  

Anna Pierce   GE   Looking Around Corners to See Risks and Opportunities at GE  

Mission Impossible  

Megan Lum   Pacific Gas and Electric  

Popping the Question...Getting Engaged with your Employees  

White Wedding, Billy Idol  

Larry Deeney   General Mills   Four Communication Rules for the Science Nerd  

Oh Yeah – Ferris Bueller  

Al Loiselle   Raytheon   Great Moments in Safety   Safety Dance –Men Without Hats  

10 Copyright NAEM 2016

2017 Calendar of Events Date Topic Location

March 6-8 EHS & Sustainability Software and Data Management Conference

Houston, TX

May 17-18 EHS Compliance Excellence Conference Baltimore, MD

June 20-22 Women’s Leadership Conference Portland, OR

August 1-2 Sustainability Management Conference Chicago, IL

October 25-27

25th Annual EHS Management Forum Ft. Lauderdale, FL

Raytheon 2020 Sustainability Goals EHSS

12%

Greenhouse Gas Emissions

82%

Solid Waste Diversion Rate

Zero Waste Certification

20 sites

Supply Chain

Supplier Sustainability Assessment

Supplier Sustainability Commitment

Eco-Friendly Procurement:

Tech Data Packages

IT

Operations

10%

Water Use

Energy Consumption

10%

5%

Renewable Energy

Materials of Concern in

Design

Engineering

Supplier Packaging

10%

Next-Gen Virtual Collaboration Environment

100%

Enterprise Data Centers:

Advanced Energy Mgt

100%

Product Material Content

80%

90% 90%

Regulatory Trends and Developments to Watch •  Speakers: •  Scott Canonico, P.E., Senior Engineer; Linn Energy, LLC •  Jerry Tinianow, J.D., Chief Sustainability Officer; City of Denver •  Liz Harriman, P.E., Deputy Director; Massachusetts Toxics Use

Reduction Institute

•  Moderator: William Glynn, P.E., Senior Engineer; CDM Smith

Important Environmental Developments •  UN Sustainable Development Goals •  Climate Actions - Paris Agreement,

Kigali HFC Agreement, US Clean Power Plan

•  Clean Water Issues – Sanitation, water reuse

Topics for Today •  Proactive Adaptation to Regulatory Change •  Act Locally, Export Globally •  Green Chemistry: REACH & TSCA Updates

Environmental Facts •  UN Sustainable Development – Balanced Natural

Resource Use & Resilience •  Climate Action – Carbon Neutral vs. Decarbonization •  Water – Industrial Partnerships for wastewater reuse,

Direct to Potable

Lessons from the Zero Waste Journey Session 4

What does “Zero Waste” mean? •  No single unified definition •  Companies defining in their context

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Company and Zero Waste Overview •  Biogen – Johanna C. Jobin, Director, Global Sustainability •  3M – Nicole Krenner, Sustainability Operations Excellence Manager •  Schneider Electric – Michelle Redfield, Director, Safety, Environment

and Process Improvement

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19 Biogen | Confidential and Proprietary

Lessons from the Zero Waste Journey Innovative Resource Management, NAEM, October 2016

Johanna C. Jobin Director, Global EHS & Sustainability johanna.jobin@biogen.com @johannajobin

20 Biogen | Confidential and Proprietary

Commitment to Citizenship & Sustainability

The same determination that drives our science is reflected in our citizenship and sustainability commitment. We are focused on enhancing access to therapies, improving science education, maintaining carbon neutrality, and creating a company where all employees can pursue their passion while making a difference in the lives of the patients we serve.

21 Biogen | Confidential and Proprietary

72% Reduction in operational carbon emissions intensity*

Corporate Citizenship: Rethinking Resources Climate Waste

Carbon Neutrality We have been carbon neutral since 2014, having effectively neutralized all of the carbon emissions associated with our business.

Zero Waste to Landfill Our goal is to achieve zero waste-to-landfill status at all of our major locations. We work to reduce, recycle and compost our waste, as well as use some of it to create or recover energy.

Water Next Generation Manufacturing Our next generation process is expected to use 44% less per batch, and 89% less water per kilogram of output.**

*As compared to our 2006 baseline **Based on screening life cycle assessment results.

0 Zero waste-to-landfill for all of our owned manufacturing operations

69% Reduction in water intensity*

Energy Management We are committed to energy efficiency in our operations, and have achieved ISO 50001 certification in Hillerød and 100% renewable electricity globally.

22 Biogen | Confidential and Proprietary

Definition for Zero Waste to Landfill (ZWtL): >98 percent diversion from landfills of non-hazardous wastes from routine operations at our manufacturing facilities, excluding ash from incinerator and waste-to-energy disposal

Biogen Today: Zero Waste to Landfill

Targets 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015* Landfill Diversion Rate 89.0% 98.1% 99.6% 99.8% 98.9%

% of facilities achieving ZWtL 33% 67% 100% 100% 75%

Our progress resulted in less waste sent to landfills since 2012 (131 tons) than any single year prior

Began diverting previously landfilled waste to waste-to-energy in 2012 to achieve our ZWtL target

* Landfilled waste resulting from newly purchased facility. Facility achieved ZWtL in Q2 2016.

23 Biogen | Confidential and Proprietary

As our waste monitoring capabilities improved, we identified a small amount of off-spec inventory and unused medication sent to landfill between

2012 and 2014

Opportunity to innovate: •  Borrowing from the carbon offsetting concept, we

created the landfill waste offset •  Defined as the diversion of landfilled waste from an

external party that currently disposes of its waste in landfills – must be similar waste stream

41.7tons In 2014, Biogen arranged and paid for this amount of landfill waste offsets for a local small business in Cambridge, MA

Innovation in Offsetting Waste

24 Biogen | Confidential and Proprietary

Where did our waste go in 2015? In order of waste hierarchy (light green is best - dark blue is worst)

0%

10%

20%

30%

40%

50%

60%

70%

80%

90%

100%

Cambridge Hillerød RTP-DS RTP-DP TOTAL (manufacturing) Affiliates (est)

Recycling/Reuse Compost Anaerobic Digestion Waste-to-Energy Incineration Landfill

* Hillerød’s incineration stream is sent to a waste-to-energy facility, but net energy generated is anticipated to be negative

25 Biogen | Confidential and Proprietary

100% Zero Waste still largely an aspirational target connected with the Circular Economy movement

Our Future: Zero Waste

2012 2013 2014 2015 78% 78% 60% 62%

Current working definition of Zero Waste from Zero Waste International Alliance: 90% overall diversion from landfill and incineration for non-hazardous wastes, where incineration includes any waste-to-energy processes using above ambient biological temperatures

100% Zero Waste still largely an aspirational target connected with the Circular Economy movement

Biogen began reporting progress towards Zero Waste in recent Citizenship Report:

Key Focus: Identify more beneficial disposal alternatives for a process solution generated starting in 2014 that represents our entire incineration waste stream.

Our Sustainability Story Presented by: Michelle Redfield, Director Environment & Safety

Confidential Property of Schneider Electric

•  Improve Sustainability •  Positioning to our customers •  Carbon Disclosure Project •  Dow Jones Sustainability Index

•  Business Incentives •  Improve our resource efficiency •  Reduce costs •  Increase advantage against

competitors

Why is Schneider Electric doing TZWL?

Page 31 Confidential Property of Schneider Electric |

•  The TZWL label requires •  99% Metal Diversion*, AND •  97% Non-Metal Diversion*

*Must achieve for an entire calendar year

•  Site must also generate 100+

tons of waste per year (including metal waste)

What are the requirements of TZWL?

Page 32 Confidential Property of Schneider Electric |

97%

99%

100 t Total Waste

Metal Waste

Non-Metal Waste

Diverted

Landfilled

Page 33 Confidential Property of Schneider Electric |

•  2017 Program Goal

•  100 Global/ 13 NAM Sites

Goals and Results (Q2 2016) •  2016 Q2 Results

•  72 Global/ 7 NAM Sites

1

P2, TUR

Toxics in Products

Washington Dept of Ecology Wik

iped

ia

Safer Alternatives

States, Local Governments

Emissions, occupational exposure limits

Federal/union Governments

EU REACH

US TSCA - Lautenberg

Chemical Safety Act

New and Existing Chemical Information,

Regulations

2

(reduced fee)

(lower reporting threshold – 1000 lbs)

TDI – toluene diisocyanates

3

•–

•••••

–––

4

TSCA - PBT Workplan fast-track

–––––

5

•–

•––

••

6

•–

••

7

•–

••

––

Inner Packaging Specifications

GREEN  TEAM  CRG  OBJECTIVES  

Workforce  Representa<on  

Colleague  Engagement  

GREEN  TEAM  CRG  OBJECTIVES  

Talent  Systems  

Marketplace  Diversity  

CVS Charity Classic and CVS 5K Greening Efforts

23  

GLASS  AND  PLASTIC  BOTTLES  

ALUMINUM  CANS  PLASTIC  CUPS  CARDBOARD  

 

ALL  FOOD  ITEMS  BANANA  PEELS  PIZZA  CRUSTS  

   

WRAPPERS  FOIL  

STRAWS  STYROFOAM    

Non-­‐Recyclable  PLASTIC    

45% diversion rate

ZERO WASTE

Johnson family trash for 2015

1 in 5 is not enough

But How?

Image ID:104666783

Source:  BJ  Fogg  

B = M A T [ Behavior ] [ Motivation ] [ Ability ] [ Trigger ]

Who What

Wall Way

Who

What What

Wall

Way

Who What

Wall Way