Welcome back to this new edition of Managing ESG !!!✖
JULY 2024 19 ENVIRONMENTAL BUSINESS REVIEWto reduce contamination, minimize waste and increase recycling by proactively identifying commingling. To date, the program has reduced service of front load dumpsters by over 50 percent.Telematics Transforms Vehicle EmissionsWe have experienced equally strong results in another key program, greenhouse gas emissions management, through idling reduction technology. In coordination with an Exelon-wide climate initiative, ComEd has set a goal to reduce its operations-driven emissions 50 percent by 2030. To work towards this goal, our first step was to reduce non-essential, company vehicle idling by 50 percent at ComEd facilities where field employees are based. To monitor idling, we utilize vehicle telematics technology, installed in our entire company fleet, which provides real time data to our Fleet and Environmental Departments. The Environmental Department then utilizes custom dashboards to manage an ongoing, targeted communication campaign. Our year-end data predicts that we will meet our 50 percent idling reduction goal, which equates to avoiding nearly 1,280 MtCO2e of emissions.Innovation Protects Avian Species Lastly, we have found remarkable success utilizing drone technology to provide creative solutions for avian protection and management. As an electric utility, we recognize that our power lines pose a danger to avian species, and as such, we seek to continuously minimize the risk of avian interactions, often through use of bird diverters. Diverters are designed to increase visibility of overhead lines and are estimated to reduce the incidence of bird collisions and associated deaths from 70 percent to 90 percent. Several years ago, we conducted a risk assessment on distribution assets in high-risk waterway crossings prone to bird collisions. Findings showed a small, but significant, percentage of distribution lines were installed in migratory paths of birds along water crossings. These over-water or marshy crossings are difficult to reach over without rental of barges or use of matting, which pose increased costs and safety risks to employees. To address this challenge, several departments partnered and decided to pilot the use of drones to place bird diverters over water ways. ComEd's Drone Team then modified the Matrice 600 drone to achieve greater resilience to electromagnetic interference near high voltage conductors. Since the beginning of this initiative, approximately 2,000 diverters have been installed in 176 high-risk locations using drone technology. This is only one aspect of our avian protection and management program.Through my many years in this industry, I am grateful to have witnessed a transformation in ComEd's approach to environmental management. We've embraced innovative technologies to refine our recycling practices, harnessed data to reduce carbon emissions from our fleet, and found unique uses for drones to minimize impact on birds. As I continue to witness these initiatives and others in action, it is clear that technology will have a growing role in how we manage and improve our environmental performance in the utility industry. These efforts, led by our Environmental team and supported by countless groups across the organization, not only make me proud to work for ComEd but also inspire hope for more sustainable future. We've embraced innovative technologies to refine our recycling practices, harnessed data to reduce carbon emissions from our fleet, and found unique uses for drones to minimize impact on birds < Page 9 | Page 11 >