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Partnership with Coop 2022

Since 2006, WWF and Coop have been working together in a strategic partnership towards more environmentally-friendly consumption. Coop has made an ambitious commitment to WWF on key environmental issues.

Industry
Retail Trade
Type of partnership
Sustainable Business Partnerships
Financial contribution 2022 (in CHF)
1’000’000 - 3'000'000 CHF
Partner since
2006
Coop

CLIMATE

In January 2022, Coop joined the Science Based Targets Initiative (SBTi) and committed to reducing its emissions based on science-based targets. In this way, Coop not only continues to reduce its operational footprint, but also indirect emissions such as emissions from traded products. Already since 2007, Coop has been committed to avoiding and reducing CO2 emissions through a binding reduction path when transporting goods by plane (the largest source of CO2), coop.ch deliveries, and business trips. More about the voluntary climate protection projects here.

Coop is pursuing a reduction path for the Scopes 1-2 in line with the SBTi

Coop has set itself the target of reducing absolute CO2 emissions by 50% by 2030 compared to 2018; the target applies to Scopes 1 and 2 in accordance with the GHG Protocol. The target is measured in tonnes of CO2eq per year. The scope is the Coop Group.

In 2022, the CO2 emissions of the Coop Group (Scope 1 and 2) were 293,607 tonnes CO2eq.

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Coop pursues a reduction path for Scope 3 agreed with SBTi

Coop has set itself the goal of following a reduction path agreed with SBTI for Scope 3 in accordance with the GHG Protocol. The measurement is in tonnes of CO2eq per year. The scope is the Coop Group.

Coop is currently developing the baseline for SBTI target scope 3.

Reduction of absolute CO2e emissions caused by air freight

Coop has set the goal of reducing the absolute CO2e emissions caused by air freight to 55’871 tonnes CO2e by 2021. This is measured in tonnes of goods flown in, multiplied by km and CO2e/km. The reporting period was July 2021 to June 2022. The scope is air freight excl. flowers for supermarkets, Pronto, Bau+Hobby, Warehouse, and Coop.ch.

By mid-20212, Coop was able to reduce the absolute CO2e emissions caused by air freight to 76’149 tonnes CO2e.

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Comment: After several years of overachievement of the jointly defined reduction path for airborne goods emissions, the value in 2021 is significantly above the target. Reasons include corona-related poor availability of goods, import of face masks by airplane, and increased sales of airborne goods.

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Trinkwasser

Water

Coop is currently developing the basis for setting science-based targets in the area of water. 

Reduction of blue and grey water consumption

Coop is developing the basis for this objective.

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Blumenwiese

BIODIVERSITY

Coop is currently developing the basis for setting science-based targets in the area of biodiversity. 

Transparency per raw material

Coop has set itself the goal of knowing the origin of 100% of the Forest Risk Commodities (meat, cocoa, coffee, palm oil or wood & paper) in Coop private labels by 2026. The share of Forest Risk Commodities in Coop own brands with known origin (meat, cocoa, coffee, palm oil or wood & paper) is measured. Scope is retail trade until 2024, then retail trade and wholesale.

In 2022, the origin was known for 52% of the forest risk commodities.

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Supplier commitment

Coop has set itself the goal that by 2026 100% of direct business partners have a commitment to deforestation- and transformation-free supply chains. The percentage of direct business partners with a commitment to deforestation- and transformation-free supply chains (suppliers of Coop own brands that supply meat, cocoa, coffee, palm oil or wood & paper) is measured.

The scope of application is the own brands in the retail trade.

In 2022, 37% of suppliers had a commitment to deforestation- and transformation-free supply chains.

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Certification

Coop has set itself the goal of ensuring that 100% of Forest Risk Commodities meet a minimum standard by 2026.

The percentage of minimum standards (beef, cocoa, coffee, palm oil, soy, wood & paper) is measured.

Scope the private labels in the retail trade.

In 2022, 92% of suppliers certified a commitment to deforestation- and transformation-free supply chains.

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Accepted standards are: 

Beef:

Bio Suisse, origins without deforestation and conversion risk according to WWF report.

Cacao:

Fair Trade, Bio Suisse, Rainforest Alliance

Coffee:

Fair Trade, Bio Suisse, Rainforest Alliance

Palm oil Food:

RSPO Identity Preserved (IP), RSPO Segregated (SG), Bio Suisse

Palm oil Non-Food:

RSPO Identity Preserved (IP), RSPO Segregated (SG), RSPO Mass Balance (MB), Bio Suisse

Soy:

Standards with soy feeding ban, Bio Suisse, Pro Terra, Donau Soja, Europa Soja, RTRS Non GM, Origin Switzerland, Other origins without deforestation and conversion risk according to WWF Report, Mutterkuh, Naturabeef, Naturaveal, IP-Suisse (pasture-raised beef).

Wood and paper:

FSC or recycled or with verified origin ,PEFC or origin without deforestation and conversion risk according to the risk country list of Prefered by Nature*.

Traceability per raw material

Coop has set itself the goal of increasing the proportion with a segregated minimum standard for the raw materials cocoa, coffee and palm oil to 85% by 2026. The scope of application is the retail trade.

In 2022, 67% of cocoa, coffee and palm oil had a segregated minimum standard.

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Seafood at a market in Japan

FISH AND SEAFOOD

As members of the WWF Seafood Group, Coop and Bell have committed to not offer any species threatened with extinction, to phase out non-recommendable sources, and to continuously expand the proportion of recommendable labels.

Coop: The share of recommendable or acceptable sources according to WWF in the entire seafood range

Coop has set the goal of sourcing 100% of the entire seafood range from recommendable or acceptable sources according to WWF. This is measured as a percentage of the turnover of the total seafood range. The scope comprises Coop supermarkets, Pronto, Coop to go, Coop.ch, department stores, restaurants, and FOOBY.

In 2022, 100% of the total seafood range once again came from recommendable or acceptable sources.

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Coop: Share of recommendable sources according to WWF in the entire seafood range

Coop has set the goal of having 85.8% of the entire seafood range originate from recommendable sources according to WWF by 2024. This is measured as a percentage of the turnover of the total seafood range. The scope is Coop supermarkets, Pronto, Coop to go, Coop.ch, department stores, restaurants, and FOOBY.

In 2022, 74.1% of the total seafood range came from recommendable sources.

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Coop: The share of recommendable labels according to WWF (organic, ASC, MSC), in the entire seafood range

Coop has set the goal of having 79.5% of the entire seafood range certified with recommendable labels according to WWF by 2024 (Bio, ASC, MSC). This is measured as a percentage of net turnover. The scope comprises Coop supermarkets, Pronto, Coop to go, Coop.ch, department stores, restaurants, and FOOBY.

In 2022, 64.5% of the overall seafood range was certified with recommendable labels according to WWF.

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Bell: The share of recommendable or acceptable sources according to WWF in the entire seafood range

Bell has set the goal of sourcing 99.9% of the overall seafood range from recommendable or acceptable sources according to the WWF by 2024. This is measured as the percentage of turnover of the total seafood range. The scope is Bell Seafood.

In 2022, 99% of the entire seafood range came from recommendable or acceptable sources.

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Bell: Proportion of recommendable sources according to WWF in the overall range

Bell has set the goal of having 72% of the overall seafood range originate from recommendable sources according to WWF by 2024. This is measured as the percentage of the turnover of the total seafood range. The scope is Bell Seafood.

In 2022, 58.5% of the overall seafood range came from recommendable sources.

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Comment: The conversion of the fresh salmon range to ASC-certified salmon has been somewhat delayed and has resulted in targets not being met this year.

Bell: Share of recommended labels by WWF (organic, ASC, MAS) in the entire seafood range

Bell has set the goal of having 66% of the entire seafood range certified with recommended labels according to WWF (organic, ASC, MSC). This is measured as a percentage relative to the net turnover. The scope is Bell seafood.

In 2022, 49.7% of the entire seafood range was certified with recommended labels according to WWF.

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Comment: The conversion of the fresh salmon range to ASC-certified salmon has been delayed and has resulted in targets not being met this year.

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Woman with shopping bag buys vegetables

ASSORTMENT

Coop has set the goal of increasing sales of organic products and expanding the range of vegan and vegetarian alternative products.

Increase the number of vegan and vegetarian alternative products

Coop has set the goal of expanding the range of vegan and vegetarian alternative products to 2000 items by 2026.

The number of new articles will be measured.

Meat, fish, egg and dairy substitutes, products of a line deliberately designed and marketed for vegan/vegetarian consumption (Karma)

In 2022, 1800 items of vegan and vegetarian alternative products were listed.

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Turnover with organic labels

Coop has set the goal of increasing the turnover of organic products to CHF 2100 million by 2026. Turnover is measured in million CHF. The accepted standards are Bio Suisse, Schweizer Bio, and EU-Bio. The scope is Coop retailers, own brands and third party brands.

In 2022, sales in organic products were CHF  1700 million.

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Note: Slight decline in turnover due to post-Covid market movements

Coop Projects

WWF recommends Oecoplan

Coop Oecoplan is an environmentally friendly alternative to conventional non-food products. The label makes an important contribution to more sustainable consumption – which is precisely why the WWF recommends Oecoplan.

Coop-WWF climate protection projects

Since 2007, we have been working together to implement climate protection projects that have a positive impact on our climate, people, and local biodiversity.

Philippines: Sustainable tuna fishing

This WWF funding project strives to ensure the sustainably recovery of the yellow-fin tuna population in the waters of the Philippines, with the planned MSC certification of local hand-line fishing. Coop and Bell are project partners.