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Translated by
Nicola Mira
Published
Nov 29, 2018
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2 minutes
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LVMH doubles projects financed through internal carbon fund in 2018

Translated by
Nicola Mira
Published
Nov 29, 2018

The LVMH group has reaffirmed its commitment to environmental protection. Bernard Arnault’s luxury goods giant, which operates Louis Vuitton, Christian Dior, Celine, Guerlain and Sephora, among other brands, announced it has funded 112 projects for CO2 emission control and reduction in 2018 through its internal carbon fund, as opposed to 64 projects in 2017.


Through the internal carbon fund, the luxury group wants to reduce its environmental impact - lvmh.fr


The LVMH carbon fund was created in 2016, and is financed by contributions from the group's labels, which pay a “tax” based on the greenhouse gas emissions generated by their business operations, production sites and stores. The sums collected are then used to fund projects designed to reduce the group's carbon footprint, for example by building infrastructure which produces renewable energy.

Last year, the world’s luxury goods number one had pledged to double its target, multiplying by two the price per ton of CO2 emissions - from €15 to €30 - which it asks as contribution from its labels. As a result, LVMH collected €11.3 million in 2018 to finance its 112 projects, enabling the group to “avoid generating nearly 2,500 tons of CO2 equivalent per year (for the useful life of the equipment installed in the year). This is equivalent to the annual emissions of 1,600 European households,” wrote the group in a press release.

The initiative is part of the group’s environmental policy, enshrined in the LIFE 2020 (LVMH Initiatives For the Environment) programme, one of whose objectives is to cut the group’s CO2 emissions by 25% by 2020. LIFE 2020 adheres to the directives set out in 2015 by the COP21 conference in Paris to fight climate change.
 

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