Secretly Label Group Sets “Climate Positive by 2026” Pledge

Music

Secretly Label Group Sets “Climate Positive by 2026” Pledge

Aiming to trigger an industry-wide shift, the group behind Secretly Canadian, Jagjaguwar, and other labels has unveiled an extensive sustainability plan

Secretly

Secretly, image courtesy of Shore Fire Media

Secretly—the company behind labels including Secretly Canadian, Jagjaguwar, Dead Oceans, Ghostly, Numero Group, and Justin Vernon and the Dessner brothers’ 37d03d—has unveiled a sustainability plan and pledged to become “carbon positive” by 2026. 

The company outlined a sustainability plan that begins with carbon offsets as it works “toward accounting for [its] historical carbon debt by [its] 30th anniversary in 2026.” The ultimate goal is to eliminate rather than offset Secretly’s greenhouse gas emissions. In addition to its “early efforts” to minimize product packaging, avoid overstock, recycle unsold formats and packaging, and install a solar array at Secretly’s office, the company outlined steps it plans to take going forward, including:

  • Investing in energy efficiency throughout Secretly buildings
  • Assessing opportunities to replace natural gas equipment with electric options
  • Measuring and reducing the company’s Scope 3 emissions
  • Switching to 100% renewable energy
  • Being a founder investor and user in Impala’s bespoke Carbon Calculator for the music industry

The company notes that for emissions it can’t reduce directly, carbon offsets will be purchased through Native.

Earlier this year, employees of Secretly Group formed Secretly Group Union. Within two days, Secretly Group officially recognized the union. Read “What Does Secretly Group’s Union Mean for the Indie Music Industry?” on the Pitch.

Articles You May Like

Halle Berry Hilariously Wore Her Viral (In A Bad Way) Wig From The Call For A Screening Of Her New Horror Movie, And There’s Video
Did Pixar Tone Down Riley’s Queerness in ‘Inside Out 2’?
“Sex and the City” Author Candace Bushnell Guests On Harvey Brownstone Interviews
Inside Out 2’s Director Knows The Movie Did Great, But He’s Worried About The Future Of Cinema
See the Stunning Cast Portraits For Netflix’s ‘Monsters’