Amy Larkin | |
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Occupation | Environmentalist | Social Entrepreneur | Author |
Known for | Environmental Activism |
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environmentaldebt |
Amy Larkin is an American environmentalist and social entrepreneur. As Solutions Director of Greenpeace USA, Larkin led the collaboration with the Consumer Goods Forum that directly led to the inclusion of hydrofluorocarbons (HFCs) into the Montreal Protocol and is anticipated to save 0.5C degrees of global warming.
Larkin's 2013 book, Environmental Debt: The Hidden Costs of a Changing Global Economy examines the connections between the environmental and financial crises. She served as Vice Chair of the World Economic Forum's Global Agenda Council on Climate Change from 2014-2016 and was a regular contributor to The Guardian for several years.
She is the Co-Founder and Director of PR3 | The Global Alliance to Advance Reuse. PR3 has developed the only global standards to provide the blueprint for the move away from single-use packaging, a huge contributor to both the plastic and climate crises.
Larkin served as the Director of Greenpeace Solutions from 2005-2012. In this role, Larkin led the partnership with the Consumer Goods Forum to eliminate hydrofluorocarbons (HFCs) from global refrigeration. In 2011, this collaboration, known as Refrigerants, Naturally, received the Roy Award from the Harvard Kennedy School of Government which honors innovative public-private partnerships.
Her 2013 book Environmental Debt: The Hidden Costs of a Changing Global Economy joined Amazon's "Best Business and Leadership" and details the effects of the environmental crisis on the global economy. Larkin's clarity and illumination of the external costs of "business-as-usual" are now foundational to the discourse around corporate sustainability. Larkin proposed a three part guide for business which she calls "the Nature Means Business Framework."
1. Pollution can no longer be free.
2. All accounting and investments must consider long-term consequences.
3. Government must support clean investments and disincentivize damaging investments.
Larkin was Vice Chair of the World Economic Forum’s Global Agenda Council on Climate Change from 2014 to 2016.
ADD DATES Larkin has consulted for clients including Facebook, Oceana, OECD, Greenpeace, Consumer Goods Forum, and Coca-Cola, among others.
PR3 | The Global Alliance to Advance Reuse was founded in 2019 by Amy Larkin and Claudette Juska. The goal of the group is to develop global standards for reusable packaging system under the ANSI-accredited standards development organization, RESOLVE. Standards are widely recognized as tools to promote safety, enable technology to advance and scale, and help businesses to succeed by ensuring customer confidence and identifying best practices. [1]
Studies by the Ellen MacArthur Foundation show that switching from single-use to returnable packaging can significantly reduce GHG emissions by up to 70%, uses 70% less water, and results in a 90% reduction in waste. [2] These benefits are seen in even modest reuse system modeling, but the impact of switching to returnable packaging system over single-use are greatest in scaled systems [3].
Reuse systems include the production of the reusable container, distribution to vendors, use and return by the customer, collection, washing and sanitization of the container and then redistribution of the container for further use [4]. PR3 has draft standards for each of these points in the system: Collection points, Container design, Digital, Incentives, Container washing, inspection, and packing for distribution, Labeling, and Reverse Logistics. PR3 says their goal is to create a set of standards with the minimum criteria to ensure interoperability and environmental benefit while being mindful and inclusive of traditional systems of reuse already in place around the world.
As part of the ANSI-accredited process, these standards are currently under review by an international Panel representing multinational companies, reuse service providers, manufacturers, human health and toxics experts, resource recovery agents, waste management professionals, environmental justice activists and community advocates, environmental health specialists, and government representatives. The Standards are currently in bi-national development with Canada.
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