Monday,
23 December 2024
North East producers team up with Coles to create carbon neutral beef range

MANSFIELD Shire's Delatite Station is one of ten low–emission beef producers supplying Coles with the nation's first supermarket own brand carbon neutral beef.

Coles launched Coles Finest Certified Carbon Neutral Beef on Wednesday, April 20, with the industry–leading range including seven premium–quality cuts of beef, from eye fillet to porterhouse steak.

The beef range is certified carbon neutral from paddock to shelf to the Australian Government's Climate Active Carbon Neutral Standard.

And though the range is currently only available in Victorian stores, the next 12 months will see the initiative rolled–out nationally.

The product has been two years in the making with Coles working with beef farmers across Victoria and New South Wales to help calculate and reduce their emissions, resulting in emissions that are 19 per cent below the Australian national average.

Coles chief executive officer Steven Cain said the launch of Coles Finest carbon neutral beef was a great example of Coles working with suppliers to achieve better sustainability outcomes.

"When we announced our Sustainability Strategy just over a year ago, we said we'd work with all our stakeholders to achieve our Together to Zero emissions ambitions and to be Australia's most sustainable supermarket," he said.

"Coles Finest Certified Carbon Neutral Beef is a testament to the hard work of our beef producers and their commitment to sustainable practices, and we're thrilled that they're taking this important step with us."

The packaging for the new beef range is fully recyclable and made from 90 per cent recycled and plant–based sources, an Australian innovation by packaging business Plantic.

"As part of our ongoing sustainability journey, Coles is exploring further opportunities to partner with our suppliers on sustainability initiatives," Mr Cain said.

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Delatite Station cattle farmers Mark and Fenella Ritchie have been supplying Coles for 10 years, and are now among the beef producers working with Coles to deliver certified carbon neutral beef.

"We are really pleased to be part of the carbon neutral beef project," said Mark.

"We are always looking to produce the finest quality beef with a strong commitment to environmental and animal welfare values that are backed up with an evidence–based approach to our decision making."

As part of the carbon neutral beef program, Coles works with farmers to identify ways to reduce emissions from their operations, such as using renewable energy, changing herd management practices for more efficient reproduction and to maximise growth, and use of genetic selection to improve herd health.

Over the past two years, the supermarket has also been working with Dr Stephen Wiedemann, principal research scientist at Integrity Ag and Environment, to study innovative ways tree planting and vegetation can help reduce net carbon emissions on beef farms through carbon sequestration.

Carbon stored in trees is then included in the farm's 'carbon account' and reduces the overall emissions associated with the farm's production – a process known as carbon 'insetting', in which the process of reducing emissions is carried out at or directly related to their source.

Coles is the first to pilot insetting as part of the Federal Government's Climate Active program, a partnership between government and Australian businesses to drive voluntary climate action.

"The Coles carbon neutral beef initiative, and the information we have gained along the way about how we can reduce carbon emissions on farms through better herd performance and tree planting, will be invaluable to farmers everywhere," Dr Wiedemann said.