Sustainability


 

Thursday, January 18, 2018

[Atlanta] In an effort to bring awareness to and support for climate action, Interface recently launched a social giving campaign to raise critical funds needed to advance carbon-oriented solutions to climate change. Every time a social media user takes a stand against climate change by sharing the campaign’s branded post on Facebook, Twitter or LinkedIn, or registers for regular sustainability-focused emails from Interface here, the company will donate U.S. $1 to Project Drawdown, up to $20,000. The company will then match those donations up to $20,000.
 
Interface has long been committed to sustainability, launching its first sustainability initiative, Mission Zero, in 1994. Mission Zero set a goal for the company to eliminate any negative impact it had on the environment by the year 2020. With the company on track to meet this goal, in 2016, Interface launched Climate Take Back, which looks at climate change from a point of optimism, framing it as an opportunity rather than an insurmountable problem. This sense of optimism and ownership makes Project Drawdown the perfect partner and beneficiary of Interface’s giving campaign, which encourages social media users to take a stand against climate change. 
 
“Project Drawdown offers comprehensive and tangible solutions that address climate change. Project Drawdown has done an incredible job outlining how we can reverse global warming, but now we must now set the wheels in motion,” said Erin Meezan, Interface’s chief sustainability officer. “The funds raised through this campaign will help facilitate that next step, as well as motivate other individuals and businesses to address global warming and join the Climate Take Back.”  
 
According to the company, Climate Take Back expands Mission Zero by encouraging action that creates a positive impact on the environment – beyond Mission Zero’s “do no harm” philosophy. As its first proof point for Climate Take Back, the company created the world’s first carbon negative carpet tile prototype. Additionally, Interface has begun to look at how factory locations can have positive impacts, under its Factory as a Forest initiative. This pilot project mimics ecosystems in the ways they conserve and utilize water, store and use carbon and energy and reuse food, the company said. Examples of this include installing solar panels for energy, rainwater collection for use in operations and native and drought-resistant landscaping. 
 
To learn more about how you can join the Climate Take Back, visit the Interface website. To help Interface achieve its goal of $40,000 directed to Project Drawdown and drive awareness of climate change, click here and share the post. 


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