As a work assignee or digital nomad, you want to see and appreciate the world, not endanger it. So how can you fit your wanderlust into a sustainable lifestyle?
As a global provider of relocation services, we want to help our clients move overseas in the most sustainable way possible.
To help our clients make informed decisions about their international removals, our team reviewed the carbon footprint of common relocation services.
Here is what they found:
1. Pick the most environmentally-friendly shipping option
2. Decide if it is better to buy new furniture or ship your old things
3. Right-size your move
4. Reduce number of flights
5. Make sustainable choices in your new location
Did you know that sea shipping has a much lower environmental impact than air transport?
To reduce your carbon footprint, choose sea shipping for the majority of your home goods shipment and reserve air shipping only for items that need to be received urgently.
An added bonus: Sea shipping is easier on your wallet or relocation allowance too.
Before you decide to leave your household goods at home and replace them with new items when you are abroad, read on. New furniture must be manufactured and shipped — potentially creating a higher environmental impact than moving your old items.
A report on the carbon footprint of new furniture suggests that an average piece of furniture generates approximately 47 kilograms of CO2 equivalents (CO2e) or more during the manufacturing process.
Manufacturing a new sofa | 90kg of CO2e |
Manufacturing a new office chair | 72kg of CO2e |
Manufacturing a new wooden cabinet | 48kg of CO2e |
New furniture also has to be shipped. Depending on the country of manufacturing and your destination, new furniture may travel further with higher carbon emissions than shipping your existing furniture.
Broadly speaking, buying 12 items of new furniture would exceed the CO2e impact of shipping a 20' container one way from London to New York.
Renting furniture sounds ideal, but it also comes with a carbon footprint.
Most people want to rent new or like-new furniture. As a result, most rental furniture has a life cycle of only three to four years (two to three contracts) – a much shorter life cycle than furniture purchased for personal use.
Given the potential environmental costs of buying or renting new furniture, you may be feeling better about shipping your household goods overseas.
But you should still only move the items you will need going forward.
Rightsizing the volume of your home move can help:
Another way to reduce your carbon footprint while living overseas is to reduce the number of flights you take.
Using shipping calculators, we can see that international flights often generate much higher emissions than household goods shipping:
Many cities offer ways to be environmentally responsible. Look for:
Recycling programmes/centres
Water conservation
Composting
Renewable energy options
Cycle hire
Public transport or ride sharing
Used furniture/thrift stores
Sterling Lexicon is proud to be rated Ecovadis Silver for our sustainable procurement systems. We are part of industry-wide sustainability efforts to help protect the environment, including leading a pilot programme to reuse packing cartons while measuring and certifying the environmental impact.
Let’s work together to move you safely and happily around the world – with only the things you need to make your move a success.
Resources:
Based on the article “Does ending HHG shipping really make global mobility programmes more sustainable?” by Stuart Jackson, Sterling Lexicon Account Director
https://www.transportenvironment.org/discover/rail-10-times-better-air-london-paris-co2-comparison