The
burger chain also said it was working with the nonprofit Science
Based Targets initiative (SBTi) to revamp its existing climate
change targets. It aims to lower absolute emissions by about a
third for both its suppliers and its nearly 40,000 company-run
and franchised restaurants around the world by 2030.
"We're trying to send a signal to our partners, to our
investors, to our suppliers, to other brands in the global
community, to policymakers, that we share that vision for 2050,"
McDonald's Chief Sustainability Officer Jenny McColloch told
Reuters in an interview.
United Nations scientists say the world's net emissions must
fall to zero by 2050 to limit the rise in global temperatures to
no more than 1.5 degrees Celsius versus pre-industrial levels.
Net zero plans require companies to decrease carbon dioxide
emissions and offset any remaining emissions using projects that
capture the gas.
More than 1,000 companies have signed similar pledges through
the UN or SBTi.
On Wednesday, funds managing nearly $30 trillion in assets
called for 1,600 of the world's most polluting companies to set
science-based emissions targets, as wildfires, droughts and
floods make slowing climate change more urgent.
McDonald's is one of the largest beef purchasers in the world.
Roughly 80% of its total emissions come from its supply chain,
in particular its use of beef, chicken, dairy and other
proteins. It will use new guidelines from SBTi, with which it
already works, to focus on cutting emissions in agriculture,
land use and forestry.
"Beef is a big opportunity to help drive impact in the world
with our farmers and rancher partners," McColloch said.
McDonald's 2050 net zero goal includes emissions from direct
sources like corporate offices and restaurants and indirect
sources, particularly franchised restaurants and suppliers'
goods and services.
(Reporting by Hilary Russ; Editing by Richard Chang)
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