While growing numbers of companies are now investing in initiatives to reduce the carbon footprint of their staff while they are at work, far fewer have deemed it their responsibility to try and reduce the emissions of their employees once they turn off their PCs and leave the office each night.
And yet with people spending an increasing amount of their time at work, their employers have perhaps the greatest ability to shape their opinions and encourage environmentally sustainable behaviour.
It is an opportunity not lost on global insurance giant Swiss Re, which last year launched an innovative new scheme called CO You2 Reduce and Gain, designed to offer financial support to those staff who commit to reducing their own personal carbon footprint.
"In 2003 we launched a major programme to reduce our company emissions and become carbon neutral by 2013," explains Britta Rendlen, sustainability advisor at Swiss Re and programme leader for the CO You2 initiative. "But our CEO, Jacques Aigrain, thought it was too internal focused and that we hadn't done enough to change employees' behaviour."
Thus the CO You2 programme was born and officially launched at the start of this year.
Under the scheme, staff who have been with the company for over two years are eligible for a subsidy of up to CNF5,000 (£2,060) if they make an investment in a CO2 reducing technology. The subsidy, which has to cover no more than half of the cost of the overall investment, is available until 2011.
Rendlen says that the investments eligible for the subsidy vary by geography to ensure staff can install the types of technology that best suit their locality. "For example, in Switzerland hybrid cars, annual public transport passes, ground source heat pumps and solar heat pumps all qualify for the subsidy," she say. "But we have asked the local environmental managers what investments would suit their location, so in the US, the UK or Asia the set of eligible investments are different."
She adds that in each geography the aim has been to deliver a range of investments to suit all staff. "If you are a home owner there are options, like solar panels or heat pumps," she explains. "But if you are renting there are also measures you can get subsidies for, like hybrid cars or public transport passes."
Since the launch of the scheme a series of energy fairs and lunches have promoted the perk and according to the company take up has been impressive with one percent of eligible staff, or 100 employees, having already received pay outs.
The company said interest in the scheme was continuing with staff typically using the subsidy to go towards new hybrid cars, home energy audits, heat pumps, double glazed windows and more energy efficient air conditioning systems or white goods.
Other companies are experimenting with similar schemes, with both Google and Bank of America offering rebates to staff who buy hybrid cars, but Swiss Re claims it is unaware of any initiative as far reaching as its programme.
And Rendlen is confident that besides providing a perk for employees the scheme can also form a key plank in Swiss Re's environmental strategy. "For the reinsurance industry climate change is a key issue," she argues. "It costs us a lot when a storm hits, so if increased storms are going to be a big part of climate change then it is going to have a major impact on our business. As a result we started to engage with the issue very early compared with many sectors, but you can't be telling everyone about the need to combat climate change if you yourself aren't trying to tackle it."
Carbon labels represent a great way of forcing firms to face up to their supply chain's carbon footprint. But how do these labels work and which one will win out in the end? Danny Bradbury investigates 24 Jun 2008
Bank’s £45m global environmental programme targets seven per cent cut in power consumption 12 Jul 2007
Northern Rock finance director Ann Godbehere could be forced to slash jobs in the finance function as her first task in her new role 28 Feb 2008
In the first of our four-part guide to green computing, we look at why the datacentre is the best starting point 03 Jul 2008
Focus on energy savings through fuel efficiency for homes and public and commercial buildings 04 Jul 2008
ActionAid accuses G8 of driving more people into poverty by pursing biofuels and cutting agri-aid 04 Jul 2008
Businesses' new found focus on the environment may be welcome, but according to Conrad MacKerron, it is taking attention away from workers' rights issues – and the credibility of the entire green business movement could be at risk 03 Jul 2008
It may be a year old, but as Dell's Jonathan Perry explains, firms looking to get rid of their old IT kit still need to pay attention to the WEEE directive 02 Jul 2008
Telling customers about your environmental targets is all well and good but, as Paul Thomas argues, they are meaningless if you do not know how they are to be achieved 01 Jul 2008


