Greenfern Industries has been certified as a Toitū net carbonzero organization for the second year in a row. The certification means Greenfern remains New Zealand’s only Toitū net carbonzero certified medicinal cannabis and industrial hemp organization.
Greenfern, founded on an unwavering commitment to environmental sustainability, is also the only B-Corp-certified medicinal cannabis company in New Zealand.
The Taranaki-based company received the news from environmental and carbon certification provider Toitū Envirocare this week after it completed auditing the company’s core operational activities and the company’s carbon reduction strategy.
Greenfern Industries Limited is an entrepreneurial-led licensed medicinal cannabis, research, and biotechnology company that also has operations spanning into the industrial hemp and hemp food space. It operates primarily from its medicinal cannabis research facility in Normanby, which is powered by its own onsite hydropower station. Greenfern also has operations and revenue-generating streams within the Australian medicinal cannabis sector.
Emissions measurement
Toitū first undertook a baseline audit of Greenfern’s operation in 2020 and repeated that last year, when it found that the company met the standard to be certified net carbonzero.
This year’s audit saw an increase in the company’s emissions as Greenfern has grown. However, a reduction in emissions intensity was also achieved. Greenfern’s emissions for the year 1 April 2021 to 31 March 2022 were 23.69 tCO2e, resulting from its operational activities, purchased energy, and impacts from its value chain activities, including business travel, freight, and waste sent to landfill.
The audit process does not yet take into account any emissions offsets achieved by Greenfern’s hydropower station on the Waingongoro River, which powers its Normanby facility.
To compensate for its emissions, Greenfern will purchase carbon credits in both an international fair trade renewable energy biogas project and in the PFSI (permanent forest sink initiative) Hinewai Forest on Banks Peninsula.
Greenfern’s managing director Dan Casey said the company had been deliberately engineered from the start to operate as sustainably as possible and with a strong focus on leaving as light a footprint on the planet as possible.
“We’ve always set our sights on being New Zealand’s most environmentally friendly medicinal cannabis company, so we’ve made sure we have a thorough ESG (environmental, social, governance) structure and policies in place from the beginning. Although it’s a sunrise industry, it has a substantial environmental impact given indoor growing commands high energy inputs. Alongside producing a product of exceptional quality that comes from growing in a fully controlled indoor environment, we also want to be a world-leading example of sustainability and to set the standard for environmentally friendly cannabis and hemp production.”
Casey said Greenfern had introduced a number of sustainability measures, including its aeroponic grow rooms, which use less water and electricity, and fewer nutrients compared to conventional hydroponic cannabis grow rooms.
Toitū Envirocare technical account manager Matt Scott said to achieve re-certification under Toitū’s net carbonzero program gives Greenfern’s customers, management, and stakeholders the assurance that its emissions have been measured and verified to the international standard.
“It also demonstrates that unavoidable emissions are compensated through the purchase of quality carbon credits both overseas and here in Aotearoa to achieve net zero emissions,” Matt said.
Ongoing improvements
For its 2022/2023 year targets, Greenfern will aim to curb its petrol consumption, which has risen to be Greenfern’s largest source of emissions, by reviewing ways to minimize travel, e.g., prioritizing meetings and events staff attend in person while potentially
attending others via tele or video conferencing.
The company will also look to design its packaging for its MaTo body care products so as to create minimal waste and using recycled and biodegradable packaging where possible, further optimizing its indoor grow rooms and undertaking design measures for its new facility for maximum energy efficiency and waste reduction and review the
location of suppliers of inbound materials to see if they can reduce freight distances.
“We strongly believe we have a responsibility to be global pioneers in sustainable cannabis and hemp production. The fact that we can set a gold standard globally and our ongoing Toitū net carbonzero certification is practical proof of that.”
For more information:
Greenfern
www.gfi.nz