SOURCE: Mastercard
DESCRIPTION:
I’m a marathon runner, not a sprinter, and there are a few principles I’ve embraced over the years. To run a marathon, you have to be willing to bet big and commit. You have to train with a group of people who are equally committed to the challenge. And finally, some people think you need to run 26 miles in training to know you can do it. I believe you need to run a marathon during the race, not in practice.
And I believe we need to apply that same philosophy to the biggest race of all: to save our planet from irrevocable damage due to climate change. It’s called the Race to Zero – a global campaign to forge a zero-carbon future and more sustainable world for us all. We don’t know yet exactly how we are going to reach net-zero emissions, but we are starting the right way: Making the commitment, using science to hit certain milestones, and moving forward together.
If last year felt like time was standing still, 2021 feels like we are moving in warp speed. In just the first quarter, Mastercard announced its commitment to net-zero emissions by 2050, issued our first sustainability bond linking our financing to green and social initiatives, and tied our executive compensation to our Environmental, Social and Corporate Governance goals, including carbon neutrality.
I see my peers accelerating as well. We aren’t just making up for lost time – the urgency for aggressive climate action is even more of an imperative. Economic growth cannot come at the expense of the planet. From governments to companies to consumers, we have to move together from intent to action.
Since January 2020, our Priceless Planet Coalition has been enlisting consumers in our campaign to help reach our goal of planting 100 million trees over five years. We also work with issuers and merchants to offer loyalty programs that allow cardholders to redeem reward points for trees. We partnered with Swedish fintech Doconomy on a carbon calculator to enable consumers to understand and track the carbon footprint of their purchases so that they can spend more sustainably. And 10 million cards have been issued with approved sustainable materials using our Sustainable Card Materials Directory to replace first-use PVC plastic, including recycled, recyclable, bio-sourced and biodegradable materials.
As Mastercard CEO Michael Miebach recently wrote, “We are all in the sustainability business; the future of people, our planet and the economy are inextricably linked.” How we bear this collective sense of responsibility is the question that will shape our future. See you at the race.
KEYWORDS: NYSE:MA, mastercard, climate action, Paris Accord, sustainability