Supply Chain Sustainability School Honoured With Queen’s Award For Enterprise in Sustainable Development

The Supply Chain Sustainability School (delivered by Action Sustainability), has joined an exclusive group of companies in receiving Britain’s most coveted business prize; a Queen’s Award for Enterprise.

Launched in 2012, the School is an industry-wide collaboration of major companies to enable a sustainable built environment through knowledge and collaboration. The School is unique – it enables collaboration between competitor companies who share a common supply chain, and a realisation that the industry cannot develop the sustainable buildings and infrastructure society it needs without more sustainable suppliers. Its free online learning platform gives 50,000 registered users access to 3,000 learning resources, 400 virtual training sessions each year, and a range of diagnostic and benchmarking tools to support companies on focusing their sustainability strategies.

The School has been awarded the Queen’s Award for Enterprise in Sustainable Development because we have delivered significant environmental, social and economic benefits to our Members and Partners, plus led pioneering work to set new standards in climate change, modern slavery, social value, sustainable supply chain management and more.

Ian Heptonstall, Director of Supply Chain Sustainability School, said: “When we first floated the idea of an online sustainability learning platform for the built environment industry, we were told it was unlikely that competing companies would collaborate, nor would people use an online training platform. But most of all, that the supply chain were simply not interested in sustainability.

“A decade on and 50,000 people have trained through the School – last year alone we had over 100,000 e-learning downloads. We’re thrilled to receive a Queen’s Award for Enterprise in Sustainable Development. I see it as thank you to all those people who have joined us to collaborate and drive real sustainable change across our industry.”

Her Majesty The Queen personally approves the winners and the Department for Business, Energy & Industrial Strategy publicly announced the winners on Thursday 21 April 2022. Now in its 56th year, the Queen’s Awards for Enterprise are the most prestigious business awards in the country, only awarded for outstanding achievements, entitling winning businesses to use the esteemed Queen’s Awards Emblem for the next five years.

Shaun McCarthy OBE, Chair of Supply Chain Sustainability School, said: “I was honoured by Her Majesty in 2013 with an OBE for services to sustainability and London 2012. This is different, it’s not about me, it’s for everybody involved in the School over the past 10 years and so, we dedicate this award to you! Thank you, all.”

The School’s 10-year anniversary will take place on Tuesday 21 June 2022. Our vision is of a built environment industry where everyone has the skills and knowledge to deliver a sustainable future.

 

Related news articles from the Action Sustainability blog

How to use ISO 20400 to embed carbon into sustainable procurement and supply chains

This was posted in All Topics, Energy & Carbon, ISO 20400 Sustainable Procurement

Our Head of Climate, Dr James Cadman, shares his insights on how organisations can effectively embed carbon reduction into their sustainable procurement practices using the ISO 20400 framework.

Read Article

Top Tips for an Effective Double Materiality Assessment

This was posted in All Topics, Sustainability Strategy

Senior Consultant, Imogen Player shares her top tips for what makes an effective double materiality assessment.

Read Article

Embracing Sustainable Travel: Top Tips to Travel more Sustainably

This was posted in All Topics, Biodiversity, Wellbeing

Consultant Hattie Webb dives into some practical tips to enable anyone to embrace sustainable traveling. From choosing eco-friendly destinations to minimising waste and respecting natural habitats, these tips aim to reduce the environmental impact of commuting while providing a more meaningful travel experience.

Read Article