Sustainability Compliance for Fishing & Outdoor Brands

How Reducing Utility Expenses Improves EBIT, Sustainability, and Operational Excellence

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In today’s rapidly evolving business climate, operational excellence is no longer just about efficiency — it’s about resilience, sustainability, and long-term value creation. Whether you’re facing uncertainty about how tariffs will impact your business, or increased pressure from retailers and customers, reducing your utility expenses — from energy to waste to water — is one of the most effective ways to improve EBIT (Earnings Before Interest and Taxes) while also driving positive environmental and social impact. While there may be lots of uncertainty in today’s business environment, I always recommend to my clients to focus on what you can control, which is your own operations.

This approach delivers on the Triple Bottom Line:

Sustainability is about becoming the best version of your brand and pursuing excellence, and at Emerger Strategies, we help you make the business case for sustainability by tying your sustainability goals to real business outcomes. Let’s take a deeper dive.


Profit: How Reducing Utility Costs Improves EBIT

1. Energy Efficiency, Renewable Energy, and EVs Power Profitability

Energy is often one of the largest controllable operating expenses. Improving efficiency across facilities, equipment, and processes drives cost savings that drop straight to your bottom line. Renewable energy can significantly reduce, or in some cases, create a new revenue stream depending on how much power you are delivering to the grid. Electric vehicles eliminate fuel costs, and when you are powering your fleet with renewable energy, it’s even better.

Example: We worked with our client, Z-Man Fishing Products, by conducting a Sustainability Assessment that included collecting baseline data, such as energy, waste and water usage. I noticed they were consuming a large amount of electricity and their annual energy costs were around $80,0000, so I recommended pursing solar because they owned their building. The results? They eliminated their energy utility cost, and in some months, their utility pays them for the excess energy they are providing!

2. Water Conservation Reduces Risk and Operating Costs

From process improvements to smart water metering, reducing water use protects your business from rising utility costs and supply risk — while saving money and strengthening operational resilience.

Example: Gap Inc. committed to conserving 10 billion liters of water by 2020, using 2014 levels as a baseline. The company collaborated with its suppliers through the Clean by Design program—an initiative comprising best practices that are both easy to implement and yield measurable operational benefits. By Earth Day 2020, Gap had exceeded its goal, saving 11.2 billion liters of water, combining resource-efficient improvements and processing innovations. While specific dollar savings aren’t disclosed, drastically reducing water consumption—especially on such a large scale—inevitably lowers production costs. This enhances margins and, by extension, the company’s profitability.

3. Waste Reduction Improves Efficiency and Cuts Costs

Waste is a symptom of inefficiency, and as my friend and sustainability pioneer calls it, waste are simply “sqandered corporate assets.” Streamlining operations, minimizing material usage, and increasing landfill diversion rates reduces hauling costs and improves production flow.

Example: Hobie Eyewear recently released a new line of sunglasses made from upcycled plastic from the production of Hobie Kayaks, which historically would have been destined for the landfill. They are taking the plastic waste and making a new product that is already the #1 bestseller on their website because anglers support brands and products that align with their values.


Planet: Environmental Performance as Operational Excellence

Reducing energy, water, and waste isn’t just about sustainability performance — it’s about achieving operational excellence that is lean and more resilient. By doing so, your business:

This positions your brand to meet growing sustainability expectations, qualify for retailer sustainability programs, and even anticipate regulatory shifts like Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR) and climate disclosures.


People: The Social Bottom Line

Operational improvements don’t just benefit the environment and your balance sheet — they also enhance employee well-being, community health, and brand trust.

Here’s how:

When employees and communities thrive, so does your brand’s reputation and resilience.


Achieving the Triple Bottom Line Through Operational Excellence

By reducing utility expenses, you’re not just cutting costs — you’re operationalizing sustainability. This is the heart of the Triple Bottom Line:

Operational excellence today requires sustainability at its core.


Let’s Simplify Sustainability for Your Business

Laying in a tent looking at the mountains.

At Emerger Strategies, we help fishing, outdoor, and consumer brands turn sustainability into a competitive advantage. Whether you need help with energy audits, EPR compliance, or CDP reporting, our team simplifies complex sustainability challenges — and helps you build a business that performs better across all three bottom lines.

👉 Download our free Sustainability Checklist for Fishing & Outdoor Brands to assess where your company stands.

Let’s build something better — together.

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