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GE Vernova recently announced that the core strategy of its sustainable development framework has been deeply integrated into the global manufacturing network. The framework is based on four pillars:
Electrification: Promote global electricity access;
Decarbonization: Reduce grid carbon intensity and product life cycle emissions;
Protection: Optimize factory resource use and energy efficiency;
Prosperity: Ensure employee safety and supply chain human rights.
To implement the goals, the company has launched more than 100 sustainable development projects in more than 100 manufacturing bases around the world, covering building insulation upgrades, heat pump popularization, LED lighting transformation and other initiatives. Through employee-involved "Kaizen", during Earth Week 2024 alone, more than 80 bases proposed multiple energy-saving plans, cumulatively reducing operating costs and carbon emissions.
The efficiency of electricity use in the production process has become a key optimization direction. Jessica Lough, head of climate strategy at GE Vernova, pointed out: "Manufacturing is a carbon-intensive field, and workshop process optimization is the starting point for decarbonization." The company also strengthened data transparency and hired a third-party agency to verify greenhouse gas emissions data, covering scopes 1, 2 and 3 (category 11, i.e. emissions during the product use phase) to ensure that emission reduction results are credible.
Chief Sustainability Officer Roger Martella emphasized that sustainable development needs to be rooted in manufacturing traditions: "From generators at the Schenectady plant to wind turbines, we are transforming historical heritage into future competitiveness." In the future, the company will continue to promote supply chain collaborative emission reduction through lean management culture and achieve the sustainable vision of "saving one dollar and reducing one ton of carbon for every dollar saved".