Climate Action Plan

ARVA FLOUR MILLS

Farm to Table Since 1819

Climate Action Plan

Reference: B Lab CA 2.1   ·   First issue: June 2026   ·   Next full update: June 2029

1. Purpose and 1.5°C Commitment

Arva Flour Mills has milled flour on the same site north of London, Ontario since 1819. We support the global ambition to limit warming to 1.5°C above pre-industrial levels and intend to run this business in a way that is consistent with that ambition. This plan sets out how Arva will measure, manage, and reduce its environmental impact over the years ahead.

2. Scope of the Plan

This plan covers all of Arva Flour Mills' operations within the scope of B Corp certification:

       The mill (roller milling, packaging, storage, and shipping).

       The Mill Store retail operation.

       The Red River Café (on-site café and bakery).

       Owned and operated vehicles used by the business — currently a 100% electric fleet (one electric delivery truck running ~40,000 km/yr, plus one electric passenger vehicle used for sales calls).

       On-site Level 2 EV charging infrastructure, including a public-access charger offered free of charge to the community and listed publicly on PlugShare and other EV-charging apps as a destination charger.

Co-packed product (Red River Cereal at Everspring Farms; gluten-free baking mixes at BCC Foods) is sourced from named Ontario co-packers operating their own certified facilities. Their environmental performance is reviewed annually under our Procurement Human Rights Assessment (HR 4.2) and supplier review process.

3. Identified Impact Areas

Arva's footprint is shaped by a small number of clear impact areas. We have identified each qualitatively in this first plan and will quantify them once the FY2026 baseline is complete.

       Energy — hydro electricity for milling, retail, café equipment, refrigeration, lighting, and EV charging (mill fleet plus public Level 2 charger).

       Fuel — propane for the mill's forklift (the only propane use at Arva; building heat and process heat are electric). Arva's on-road vehicle fleet is fully electric; there is no operational gasoline or diesel use by company vehicles.

       Upstream grain transport — primarily from Arva Grain Corp. across the highway and other Ontario / Canadian growers, kept deliberately short.

       Downstream delivery — wholesale and e-commerce shipments run on the electric delivery truck (~40,000 km/yr), with the fuel impact concentrated in upstream grid electricity rather than tailpipe emissions.

       Packaging materials — paper bags, boxes, and labels sourced from Canadian printers.

       Waste — cardboard, paper, café organics, and landfill residuals.

       Water — municipal use for café, retail, and washroom operations.

4. Actions and Targets (SMART)

In line with B Lab's CA 2.1.2(b) guidance, targets may be qualitative or quantitative and need not include a specific GHG reduction number at this stage. Arva commits to the following actions:

 

Action / Target

Type

Timeframe

Owner

Measure FY2026 utility baseline: hydro (kWh), forklift propane (L), water (m³), and waste tonnage. This becomes the reference point for future quantitative targets.

Quantitative — baseline

By Dec 31, 2026

Mark Rinker, with Dustin Blackall (operations)

Set quantitative reduction targets for hydro electricity and waste once FY2026 baseline is complete; record in the next annual climate plan update. Evaluate transition options for the propane forklift (electric replacement at end of life).

Quantitative — to be set

By Jun 30, 2027

Directors (Mark, Jo-elle)

Maintain 100% Ontario / Canadian grain sourcing through Arva Grain Corp. and named regional growers (transport distance kept inside Ontario).

Qualitative

Ongoing, reviewed annually

Matthew (Sales) + Dustin

Continue LED lighting retrofit across mill, Mill Store, and Red River Café; complete any remaining fixtures.

Quantitative — fixture count

By Dec 31, 2027

Dustin Blackall

Maintain a 100% electric vehicle fleet for business use (delivery truck ~40,000 km/yr plus electric passenger vehicle for sales calls). Replace only with electric when vehicles reach end of life.

Quantitative — % electric fleet

Ongoing

Mark Rinker

Maintain free public Level 2 EV charging at the mill as a community decarbonisation contribution. The mill is listed as a destination charger on PlugShare and other EV apps so the wider region can find and use it. Track utilisation once metering allows.

Qualitative → quantitative once metered

Ongoing; metering review by Dec 31, 2027

Dustin Blackall

Maintain Medway H.S. co-op placements each semester and continue community tours — keep the mill's footprint as an educational anchor in the local community.

Qualitative

Ongoing, reviewed annually

Mark Rinker

Consolidate delivery routes for Mill Store wholesale and e-commerce shipments to reduce kilometres per order on the electric delivery truck.

Qualitative → quantitative once baseline measured

Review by Dec 31, 2026

Matthew (Sales)

Maintain waste diversion practices (cardboard, paper, organics from the Café) and document tonnage diverted vs. landfill once baseline is measured.

Qualitative → quantitative

Baseline by Dec 31, 2026

Dustin Blackall

Publish this Climate Action Plan on the Arva Flour Mills website footer alongside the Responsible Lobbying Policy.

Qualitative

Within 30 days of Directors' signature

Mark Rinker

Review and refresh the Climate Action Plan at minimum every 36 months; light-touch progress check at each PSG 5.1 Annual Directors' Review.

Governance

Next full update: Jun 2029

Directors (Mark, Jo-elle)

5. Resourcing (Human, Technical, Material)

Implementation of this plan is the responsibility of the Directors of Arva Flour Mills (Mark Rinker, Jo-elle Rinker), supported by:

       Dustin Blackall (General Manager and Head Miller) — operational lead for energy, equipment, and waste actions.

       Matthew — Sales lead for shipping consolidation and customer-facing communication of climate commitments.

       External support as needed — utility audits, lighting contractors, and B Lab guidance materials.

A specific budget line for climate-related capital and operating spend (lighting, equipment efficiency, baseline measurement) is reviewed at each PSG 5.1 Annual Directors' Review. Arva is a small, owner-operated business; resources are committed at the scale Arva can responsibly carry, and adjusted year to year.

6. Stakeholder Engagement

Arva's stakeholder map (PSG 2.1.1) and stakeholder engagement process (PSG 2.1.2) feed directly into this plan. Material input from any of the groups below is reviewed by the Directors and reflected in plan updates where appropriate.

 

Stakeholder Group

How Their Input Reaches This Plan

Workers (Dustin, Matthew, café & retail staff, co-op students)

Annual Worker Feedback Survey (PSG 2.1.3); day-to-day operational suggestions captured by Dustin and reflected in equipment, lighting, and waste decisions.

Arva Grain Corp. (primary grain supplier)

Standing dialogue on variety performance, harvest quality, and transport. Feedback shapes grain sourcing decisions which are the largest upstream impact in our footprint.

Co-packers (Everspring Farms, BCC Foods)

Annual supplier review under HR 4.2 / FW procurement assessment — includes their own environmental practices.

Café and retail customers

Direct feedback at the counter and via e-commerce contact; recurring themes (packaging, local sourcing, organic options) are reviewed at PSG 5.1.

Sourdough forum members and workshop participants

Community channel for feedback on product range, packaging, and sourcing values.

Medway H.S. co-op program

Educational partner; placements give younger community members visibility into mill operations and create a feedback channel from the next generation.

Local community (Arva and London region)

Tours, school groups, and direct neighbour relationships — informal but real input on Arva's footprint as a near-residential operation.

7. Publication and Access (CA 2.1.1)

This Climate Action Plan is published on the Arva Flour Mills website footer, alongside the Responsible Lobbying Policy (GACA 1.1). The plan is publicly accessible at no cost and without account creation. A printed copy is also available at the Mill Store on request.

8. Review and Update Cycle (CA 2.1.3)

       Light-touch progress review at each PSG 5.1 Annual Directors' Review.

       Full plan refresh at minimum every 36 months. Next full refresh due June 2029.

       Material changes (new impact area, retired target, change of governance) are recorded in the Annual Review Record and an updated version of this plan is reissued and republished.

9. Approval by Highest Governing Body (CA 2.1.2.e)

Arva Flour Mills is owner-operated. The highest governing body within the scope of certification is the Directors, Mark Rinker and Jo-elle Rinker. By signing below they approve this plan and commit Arva to its implementation.

Approved by the Directors of Arva Flour Mills

____Mark Rinker___________________________

Mark Rinker, Director

Date: ____June 6, 2026________________

_____Jo-elle Rinker__________________________

Jo-elle Rinker, Director

Date: ___June 6. 2026_________________