Sustainability has to be a team effort, especially when the goals are more ambitious than most, and so the editorial team was consulted from the start. Georgia Hall, Senior Production Coordinator, ran through each scenario with editorial. They would say ‘This is the sequence we want to create’, and Georgia and the team would look at the options and ask questions. Is there archive? Do we need to go to that location? Is it editorially important for that to be in? Can they come to us or do we go to them?
A lot of this decision-making can be seen in The Abundance Film’s Flight Decision Chart (see image). The team found the simple visuals and easily understandable thought process made for great engagement. A full environmental impact assessment for the shoots in Bhutan and the Philippines were conducted using a template which originated from Offspring Films and shared via the Filmmakers For Future: Wildlife (FF:W) network. FF:W aims to encourage collaboration across the industry on ways to reduce our carbon footprint, make more impactful content and give back to the people and places we film.
When flights were needed, the team looked at all the options to get UK crew (and any essential equipment) overseas and then to the specific shooting locations. Every scenario’s ‘carbon cost’ was calculated. In the end, only two UK crew members with 50 kilos of excess baggage were flown out to the Philippines then onto Bhutan saving the production roughly 36 tonnes of CO2 for the two shoots. This is compared to sending a crew of 6 people and 250 kilos of excess baggage, which would have been the case if local crew and local equipment weren’t used.