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How business can tackle deforestationInnovation, implementation and impact – stop deforestation in your corporate supply chainApril 3rd-4th, 2017 | Washington DC
A two-day discussion, debate and best practice forum, with interactive working groups
This conference is designed to provide practical guidance for the development and implementation of zero deforestation policies for business. The content will allow you to see how your organization’s sustainability strategy can best be applied to promote sustainable forestry in an impactful manner to stop deforestation and protect your company’s reputation.
Some of the key points the conference is addressing include:
From policy to implementation to impact: forests are still being cleared, learn how to start making an impact now.
Climate change and deforestation: learn how to tie it all together in a single corporate sustainability strategy.
New politics, new rules? Understand the implications of new US administration on forest regulation.
NGOs and campaigners: how to get ahead of the curve and stay out of the NGO firing-line.
Supply chain transparency and traceability: learn how new technology can increase both.
Participate in practical, insightful sessions on:
The latest best practice case studies from leading corporates.
How best to engage and work with key stakeholders – in-depth workshops on how to form partnerships with NGOs, government, suppliers and competitors.
Detailed commodity-specific workshop focused on the unique challenges that pertain to the drivers of deforestation in palm oil, paper and pulp, cattle and soy.
Simon Lord executive vice president, group sustainability & quality management Sime Darby
Rod Taylor global forests director World Resources Institute
Marcio Nappo director, Corporate Sustainability JBS
Frances Seymour senior fellow Center for Global Development
Rachael Sherman director, global supply chain sustainability McDonald’s
Kelly Goodejohn director, ethical sourcing Starbucks
Sophie Beckham manager, forest stewardship and sustainability International Paper
Karimah Hudda global procurement sustainability lead Mondelez International
Barbara Bramble vice president, international conservation and corporate strategies National Wildlife Federation
Grant Rosoman forest solutions team leader Greenpeace
Dawn Krueger sustainability supply chain manager 3M
Founding member of TRANSITION500
Speakers confirmed include:Dawn Krueger sustainability supply chain manager 3M
Michael McManus VP, corporate and government affairs Asia Pulp & Paper
Megan Weidner VP, corporate responsibility and sustainability Bunge North America
Jillian Gladstone senior manager, forests CDP
Nathalie Wallace senior manager, investor program Ceres
Frazer Lanier environmental and social risk management associate Citi
Paige Goff VP, sustainability and business communications Domtar
Christine Riley Miller senior director, CSR Dunkin’ Brands
Marcus Colchester senior policy advisor Forest Peoples Programme
Grant Rosoman forest solutions team leader Greenpeace
Sophie Beckham manager, forest stewardship and sustainability International Paper
Skip Krasny sustainable forestry programs, global sustainability Kimberley Clark Corporation
Jolyne Sanjak chief program officer Landesa
Isabelle Aelvoet global sustainability director Mars Petcare
Karimah Hudda global procurement sustainability lead Mondelez
Barbara Bramble VP, international conservation and corporate strategies National Wildlife Federation
Anita McBain head of sustainability research Permian Global
Olivia Watson head of environmental and social issues Principles for Responsible Investment
Lafcadio Cortesi forest campaign director Rainforest Action Network
Richard Donovan senior vice president and vice president of forestry Rainforest Alliance
Rachel Davis managing director and co-founder Shift
Stephen Donofrio senior advisor Supply Change (a Forest Trends project)
Ethan Budiansky director, environment World Cocoa Foundation
Charles Barber director, forest legality initiative, forests program World Resources Institute
Rod Taylor global forests director World Resources Institute
Francisco Beduschi coordinator, sustainable livestock Instituto Centro de Vida
Chris Meyer senior manager, forest policy Environmental Defense Fund
Bambi Semroc Sr. Strategic Advisor, Center for Environmental Leadership in Business, Conservation International
Kelly Goodejohn director, ethical sourcing Starbucks
Marcio Nappo director, Corporate Sustainability JBS
Frances Seymour senior fellow Center for Global Development
Rachael Sherman Director, Global Supply Chain Sustainability McDonald’s
Simon Lord executive vice president, group sustainability & quality management Sime Darby
Nathalie Walker senior manager, tropical forest and agriculture project National Wildlife Federation
Diego Di Martino palm oil, general manager Archer Daniels Midland
Glenn Hurowitz managing director Waxman Strategies
Stephen Rumsey chairman and founder Permian Global
Etelle Higonnet campaign and legal director Waxman Strategies
• Focused, open discussion
• Senior participants
• Candid dialogue
Day one: Monday, April 3rd 2017
Opening remarks
Tobias Webb, founder, Innovation Forum
We’re failing to protect forests, so what needs to change to meet 2020 targets and long-term deforestation commitments?
Despite all the meetings, frameworks and certification, forests are being cleared at a staggeringly unsustainable rate and as things stand they will diminish within 50 years. The current gradualist approach of continued deliberation on policy and methodology is failing to halt the seemingly inexorable process of forests clearance.
In this opening session, we provide a reflection on what the last five years have achieved in terms of corporate and NGO engagement with deforestation. We ask what has worked, what hasn’t, and how this should inform the next five years in terms of broad strategy to protect forests around the globe.
• NGO campaigners: Are NGOs to blame for the lack of progress? Have they focused too much on consumer-facing businesses letting traders and financiers off?
• Politics: How will the conservative and populist political movement sweeping western countries affect the protection of forests?
• Corporates: Are there any significant areas of progress that we can say are working?
• Do we need a fundamental redirect or refocus of strategy and what will it mean for each actor (corporate, NGO, government)?
• What are our ‘philosophical’ end-goals? What is the picture of the future that we are trying to work towards?
• Are we seeing the limitations of northern multinational initiatives? How do we engage with “southern” multinationals and more importantly, small-medium enterprises in the domestic markets?
Barbara Bramble, vice president, international conservation and corporate strategies, National Wildlife Federation
Rod Taylor, global forests director, World Resources Institute
Frances Seymour, senior fellow, Center for Global Development
Simon Lord, executive vice president, group sustainability & quality management, Sime Darby
Climate change, the SDGs and deforestation: can companies tie it together?
Climate change is central to any meaningful discussion on forest conservation. Forests are a carbon sink and help to maintain the stability of the global atmosphere. Therefore, their protection and restoration is essential to hitting climate change targets.
In this session, we help to clarify the implications of global climate change efforts with deforestation. Is there a way that companies can be contributing to protecting forests and stopping climate change through the same sustainability strategy?
• What is the role of forests in credible carbon offsetting?
• How can companies align their climate change policies with their deforestation targets?
• What is the role of forest projects in the pre- and post-2020 climate framework?
• What the COP22 has meant for the zero deforestation and corporate/NGO/government partnerships agenda?
• How can companies support national action plans in meeting climate targets?
Presenters:
Stephen Rumsey, chairman and founder, Permian Global
Norbert Schmitz, managing director, GRAS Global Risk Assessment Services
Panel: Chris Meyer, senior manager, forest policy, Environmental Defense Fund
NGO and campaigners: what do they want and is it fair?
NGOs and campaigners and their work are a major driver pushing companies to engage with the issue of deforestation. NGO actions can affect the reputation of a business and negatively impact their market capitalisation, customer perceptions and overall commercial performance.
Understanding the NGO perspective and their plans is an essential part of overall strategy to keep your company out of the negative headlines. In this session, we will speak to three of the most influential NGOs in the deforestation debate to get their perspective on corporate performance and where their campaigning will focus 2017/18.
This session will also provide an objective, critical discussion on the corporate-NGO relationships and expectations.
Lafcadio Cortesi, forest campaign director, Rainforest Action Network
Grant Rosoman, forest solutions team leader, Greenpeace
Richard Donovan, SVP and VP of forestry, Rainforest Alliance
Commodity-specific discussionsIn these highly-interactive, two-hour breakout sessions, we will split the conference into tracks that focus on the key commodities that drive deforestation in different jurisdictions. The purpose of the format is to capture the unique socio-economic, environmental and cultural challenges of each commodity, the specific regional differences regarding where they are produced and how they can be addressed.
Our experts will facilitate the sessions to tease out the most topical questions for each commodity and to encourage the audience to discuss solutions.
Breakout one Palm oil in Southeast Asia
Rachel Davis, managing director and co-founder, Shift
Marcus Colchester, senior policy advisor, Forest Peoples Programme
Simon Lord, executive vice president, group sustainability & quality management, Sime Darby
Breakout two Soy in South America
Robin Barr, Director, Americas, TFT
Diego Di Martino, palm oil, general manager, Archer Daniels Midland
Glenn Hurowitz, managing director, Waxman Strategies
Breakout one Cattle in South America
Francisco Beduschi, coordinator, sustainable livestock, Instituto Centro de Vida
Nathalie Walker, senior manager, tropical forest and agriculture project, National Wildlife Federation
Isabelle Aelvoet, global sustainability director, Mars Petcare
Marcio Nappo, director, corporate sustainability, JBS
Rachael Sherman, director, supply chain sustainability Asia, McDonald’s
Breakout two Timber, paper and pulp in North America
Skip Krasny, sustainable forestry programs, global sustainability, Kimberley Clark Corporation
Sophie Beckham, manager, forest stewardship and sustainability, International Paper
Charles Barber, director, forest legality initiative, forests program, World Resource Institute
Paige Goff, VP, sustainability & business communications, Domtar
Significant investors: how concerned are they about deforestation really?
While the amount of environmentally-conscious capital is growing, is it organised enough in terms of providing a strong enough and clear enough message to companies? And, is it a significant amount of capital to initiate real change?
In this session, we will hear from some of the biggest investors in the world to gauge how concerned they are about deforestation and climate change risks for companies in their portfolio and their future investments.
Nathalie Wallace, senior manager, investor program, Ceres
Olivia Watson, head of environmental and social issues, Principles for Responsible Investment
Jurisdictional and government engagement: how can companies engage the most important and difficult stakeholders to protect forests?
Government engagement is crucial to bringing real change and scale to any effort. This session will provide a pragmatic guide for companies to understand the best way to work with governments.
We will look to reflect on different examples of government engagement by companies on sustainability issues, how they have fared and what lessons have emerged.
• Everyone is talking about jurisdictional approaches, but what are we really talking about? Is it realistic for suppliers to engage in such an approach and what are the early lessons from initial examples of its implementation from companies and governments?
• How should a company manage the different approaches such as certifications and a jurisdictional approach to meet its commitments?
• How do we collectively demonstrate that delivering on the zero-deforestation agenda is in local and national self-interest?
• What does the demise of the Indonesian Palm Oil Pledge tell us about future private-sector-driven sustainability initiatives?
• Can we create genuine bottom-up engagement to circumvent issues relating to nationalism and sovereignty ‘defensiveness’ on the part of forest-hosting developing countries?
Frances Seymour, senior fellow, Center for Global Development
More speakers TBC
Day one: Monday, April 3rd 2017
Corporate cross-section: Implementing a workplan to a zero-deforestation commitment - who is making real progress?
One of the main criticisms of company engagement on deforestation is that most are stuck at the policy phase, which is the first and easiest thing to do. Writing a policy doesn’t stop deforestation; acting on the commitment does. In this session, we will have a cross-industry panel of three leading companies have gone about bringing their commitments into their operations.
We will have a pragmatic discussion on what actions companies with a zero-deforestation commitment need to take, and the best practices that are emerging as they get to grips with the reality of implementation.
• What KPIs are companies using to monitor progress?
• What incentives and dis-incentives are in place to encourage serious internal engagement?
• Who do you have to engage internally? Is it just about engaging your procurement department?
• What will it take for sustainability ‘characteristics’ to be as integral to a commodity as it’s physical ones?
Karimah Hudda, global procurement sustainability lead, Mondelez International
Rachael Sherman, director, supply chain sustainability Asia, McDonald’s
Mark Eastham, senior manager, sustainability, Walmart
Supply chain transparency and traceability: can technology finally deliver?
In this session, we debate the current approaches that companies are using in palm oil, beef and timber to drive transparency, traceability and transformation down their respective value chains. We will then discuss the innovations in technology that could be leading to breakthroughs in achieving these.
The second part of the session will give an overview of the key technologies from parameter detection to satellite scanning of forests to understand how these monitoring tools are faring in piloting and implementation.
• What new technologies are being implemented companies to protect forests?
• How should this data and information be used by governments, NGOs and companies to enforce compliance?
Robin Barr, director, Americas, TFT
David Gaveau, scientist, Center for International Forestry Research
Jillian Gladstone, senior manager, forests, CDP
Collaboration and partnerships: how can companies work both with NGOs and their competitors to scale impact?
Working in partnership towards a shared goal can reduce the burden for all, lower the cost for each partner and increase the scale of impact relative to a disjointed, individualistic approach. However, a lack of initiative, incompatibility of cultures and/or competitive instincts mean that there are few examples of companies properly engaging in effective collaborations with NGOs and competitors at any scale on sustainability issues.
In this session, we look to break down the barriers that prevent partnerships from forming on deforestation through a participatory set of multi-stakeholder tasks that will ask attendees to plan how to work with their potential partners.
How do you define the partnership, the goals and who to work with?
How do you structure a multi-stakeholder initiatives, where do you begin, what drives it and how can you ensure it does not run out of steam?
Ethan Budiansky, director, environment, World Cocoa Foundation
Paige Goff, VP, sustainability & business communications, Domtar
Kelly Goodejohn, director, ethical sourcing, Starbucks
Christine Riley Miller, senior director, CSR, Dunkin’ Brands
Day two: Tuesday, April 4th 2017
Corporate case-study breakouts In these concise 50-minute sessions, we outline highly informative case studies from the corporate and NGO world where organizations have made significant progress.
Breakout one APP
Michael McManus, VP Corporate and Government affairs US, Asia Pulp & Paper
Breakout two Starbucks
Bambi Semroc, senior strategic advisor, Center for Environmental Leadership in Business, Conservation International
Kelly Goodejohn, director, ethical sourcing, Starbucks
Breakout three 3M
Dawn Krueger, sustainability supply chain manager, 3M
Breakout four Mondelez International
Karimah Hudda, global procurement sustainability lead, Mondelez International
Breakout five Beef
Rachael Sherman, director, supply chain sustainability Asia, McDonald’s
Marcio Nappo, director, corporate sustainability, JBS
Breakout six Rubber
Etelle Higonnet, campaign and legal director, Waxman Strategies
Breakout seven Citi
Frazer Lanier, environmental and social risk management associate, Citi
Breakout eight Greenpeace
Grant Rosoman, forest solutions team leader, Greenpeace
.
Day two: Tuesday, April 4th 2017
Three reasons to attend 150+ peers and colleagues – benchmark, debate and learn from the leading business practitioners the
effort to stop deforestation.
40+ expert speakers sharing insights – you simply will not find a stronger, more focused collection of leading businesses focused on tackling deforestation throughout company supply chains anywhere else.
20+ hours of thought-provoking content – case studies, debate and group discussions to equip you with the skills and insights to move your effort forward in the year ahead.
Leading companies attend our conferencesInnovation Forum has a track record of bringing together business to engage with the difficult questions in sustainability by providing a platform for novel solutions, creative thinking and sharing best practice.
This conference is made for senior professionals from business, government, NGOs and the financial community. Delegates are from CSR, sustainability, ethical trade, legal, procurement and supply chain, corporate affairs and communications functions.
Some of the businesses that attended last year’s conference include:
What makes Innovation Forum conferences different? More time for genuine discussion –the agenda and timings have been built to provide time for in-depth debate
and meaningful exchange beyond introductions and superficial descriptive outlines. There will be a lot of experience in the room and therefore we intend for the discussions to be participatory and interactive.
The event is held under the Chatham House rule – this event is not intended as a PR platform – we hold the event under a covenant of confidentiality to promote honest exchange and generate new thinking and solutions.
Content is designed for action and practice – the event structure is designed to provide actionable tools and practical insights that can be applied. We will also be sharing post event notes with all participants.
Why attend???
UPCOMING EVENTS
Sustainability for smallholders – March 14th-15th, London
Innovation for sustainable agriculture – March 22nd-23rd, Washington DC
How business can tackle modern slavery and forced labour – April 25th-26th, London
Sustainable apparel – June 13th-14th, Amsterdam
If you're interested in any of these events, please do get in touch:
Oliver Bamford | Tel +44 (0) 20 3780 7434 | [email protected] | www.innovation-forum.co.uk
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www.innovation-forum.co.uk/deforestation-us-2017
How business can tackle deforestationInnovation, implementation and impact – stop deforestation in your corporate supply chainApril 3rd-4th, 2017 | Washington DC
3 ways to registerT +44 (0) 20 3780 7432
E boris.petrovic@ innovation.forum.co.uk
W www.innovation-forum.co.uk/ deforestation-us-2017
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