Florida Blue is utilizing solar energy methods to reduce its carbon footprint at multiple locations statewide.
The state’s Blue Cross Blue Shield plan announced on Thursday it expects to reduce its overall carbon footprint by at least 50 percent by making its headquarters and other Jacksonville facilities 100 percent solar-powered.
Florida Blue added that it’s the first corporate participant to sign onto Jacksonville electric utility JEA’s SolarMax program, an energy sustainability project that focuses on increasing corporations’ use of solar energy for their primary source of power to help decrease companies’ carbon footprints.
“This partnership with JEA’s SolarMax project is an important piece to helping Florida Blue reach our goals for renewable energy,” said Pat Geraghty, Florida Blue CEO. “Whereas we previously measured our energy savings only in dollars, we now have a corporate goal for reducing our carbon footprint, as well. We want to be environmental leaders in our community. Our company’s mission is to help people and communities achieve better health, and improving our environment is one way we can live our mission.”
Since 2017, Florida Blue has reduced its carbon footprint by 22 percent through a combination of initiatives. The company noted that it switched to LED lighting in all seven of its headquarters campus office buildings and installed high-efficiency HVAC systems. Other environmentally sustainable initiatives by the company include using reclaimed water and captured rainwater for landscape watering, stocking its retention ponds with carp to reduce the need for chemicals, planting trees to replace paper it consumes and using a food dehydrator for food waste.
The company has also pledged to establish and maintain partnerships with suppliers that positively impact social determinants of health including climate change health impacts.
“As a community-owned, not-for-profit utility, JEA strives for environmental excellence and being a responsible steward of our natural resources. Using solar power reduces the level of emissions released into the environment and results in cleaner air and water for everyone,” said JEA Managing Director & CEO Jay Stowe.
In 2017, Florida Blue joined the Climate Registry for access to tools to help track its greenhouse gas emissions, and the company’s data is verified by a third party. Analyzing that data helps the company understand how it can reduce its carbon footprint even more.