An analysis of the state of green business in the South African retail sector

'Green' business is claimed by some South African retailers even though they lack well-founded and integrated sustainable, social, and environmental commitments. This is because no standards of greening exist for retail in South Africa. The purpose of this study is to explore, 'What c...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Christelis, Theodora Anita
Format: Dissertation
Language:English
Published: University of Cape Town 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11427/16841
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spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-uct-oai-localhost-11427-168412020-10-06T05:11:28Z An analysis of the state of green business in the South African retail sector Christelis, Theodora Anita Environmental Science Climate Change Green economy 'Green' business is claimed by some South African retailers even though they lack well-founded and integrated sustainable, social, and environmental commitments. This is because no standards of greening exist for retail in South Africa. The purpose of this study is to explore, 'What constitutes green retail in the South African supermarket sector?' This required investigation into the sustainability of the companies' green business processes, social component of sustainability, and the existing state of the green retail sector. The five dominant supermarkets were selected to answer a questionnaire based on different environmental variables and principles. Interviewee responses were supplemented with publicly available company reports and these were then critiqued by allocating a level of commitment to sustainability of companies' green business processes, social considerations of sustainability, and establishing the current state of the green retail sector. Results show that within business processes, sustainable procurement is becoming increasingly accounted for through eco-labels and enterprise development programs. Distribution processes assist in verifying green claims and production. Various international and local sustainability programs are used to validate green efforts in the lack of national standards. Best practice frameworks are being utilised in the absence of local green standards and where limited, some are creating their own innovative solutions. Sustainability is a core focus at an executive level to some to ensure full integration of sustainability. Retailers may not necessarily pursue trends, but they have similar pressures that are often variably addressed. Although retailers' attempts to green their operations may not be standardised, the retail industry in South African has almost privatised sustainability and socio-economic development as they have superseded legislation to contribute to society and transform communities. It is an opportunity for retailers to take responsibility for their operations and in doing so create innovative solutions that address South Africa's environmental and social issues, in spite of the lack of green standards and governmental regulation, and in doing so become leadership companies that are accountable to their consumer base. 2016-02-08T07:07:40Z 2016-02-08T07:07:40Z 2013 Master Thesis Masters MSc http://hdl.handle.net/11427/16841 eng application/pdf University of Cape Town Faculty of Science Department of Environmental and Geographical Science
collection NDLTD
language English
format Dissertation
sources NDLTD
topic Environmental Science
Climate Change
Green economy
spellingShingle Environmental Science
Climate Change
Green economy
Christelis, Theodora Anita
An analysis of the state of green business in the South African retail sector
description 'Green' business is claimed by some South African retailers even though they lack well-founded and integrated sustainable, social, and environmental commitments. This is because no standards of greening exist for retail in South Africa. The purpose of this study is to explore, 'What constitutes green retail in the South African supermarket sector?' This required investigation into the sustainability of the companies' green business processes, social component of sustainability, and the existing state of the green retail sector. The five dominant supermarkets were selected to answer a questionnaire based on different environmental variables and principles. Interviewee responses were supplemented with publicly available company reports and these were then critiqued by allocating a level of commitment to sustainability of companies' green business processes, social considerations of sustainability, and establishing the current state of the green retail sector. Results show that within business processes, sustainable procurement is becoming increasingly accounted for through eco-labels and enterprise development programs. Distribution processes assist in verifying green claims and production. Various international and local sustainability programs are used to validate green efforts in the lack of national standards. Best practice frameworks are being utilised in the absence of local green standards and where limited, some are creating their own innovative solutions. Sustainability is a core focus at an executive level to some to ensure full integration of sustainability. Retailers may not necessarily pursue trends, but they have similar pressures that are often variably addressed. Although retailers' attempts to green their operations may not be standardised, the retail industry in South African has almost privatised sustainability and socio-economic development as they have superseded legislation to contribute to society and transform communities. It is an opportunity for retailers to take responsibility for their operations and in doing so create innovative solutions that address South Africa's environmental and social issues, in spite of the lack of green standards and governmental regulation, and in doing so become leadership companies that are accountable to their consumer base.
author Christelis, Theodora Anita
author_facet Christelis, Theodora Anita
author_sort Christelis, Theodora Anita
title An analysis of the state of green business in the South African retail sector
title_short An analysis of the state of green business in the South African retail sector
title_full An analysis of the state of green business in the South African retail sector
title_fullStr An analysis of the state of green business in the South African retail sector
title_full_unstemmed An analysis of the state of green business in the South African retail sector
title_sort analysis of the state of green business in the south african retail sector
publisher University of Cape Town
publishDate 2016
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/16841
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