Release Date: June 27, 2025
News Source: FEDS
FEDS received the 1.5°C Temperature Control Target Label from CommonWealth Magazine and was rated as "Outstanding Performance," symbolizing that the company's carbon reduction planning and net-zero commitment align with the ambitious temperature control targets required by the Paris Agreement. This honor stems from the "Corporate Carbon Reduction Thermometer" platform jointly developed by CommonWealth Magazine and Tunghai University. This year's survey covered 1,200 companies across 72 industry categories, estimating that FEDS will control global temperature rise to 1.492°C by 2100, lower than the department store industry average of 1.536°C and the overall corporate average of 1.998°C, making it the most outstanding performer in the department store and retail industry, demonstrating the company's firm commitment to combating climate crisis.

Facing increasingly severe global climate change challenges, FEDS actively integrates energy conservation and carbon reduction into its core business operations, establishing five major action directions: "energy conservation, carbon reduction, green energy, waste reduction, and green procurement." The company responds to environmental impacts caused by operational processes through concrete actions and regards "energy conservation and carbon reduction" as its top priority. Through energy-saving projects, replacing energy-consuming equipment, increasing green electricity usage, electrifying company vehicles, and other diverse measures, FEDS effectively reduces carbon emissions. To promote low-carbon operational transformation, FEDS has incorporated green building concepts into department store design for all fourth-generation stores opened since 2011, currently owning five eco-friendly green buildings. These newly opened store formats effectively reduce resource consumption, becoming green landmarks that combine sustainability and fashion in cities. In the future, FEDS will continue to respond to climate challenges through concrete actions, actively working toward the 2050 net-zero vision and contributing to global climate action.