domingo, 1 de noviembre de 2015

CEOs of 10 Major Food Companies Demand Climate Action

 

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The 10 signatories to the food company carbon letter

The days of business push-back on environmental legislation are in the rearview mirror, at least for the food industry. So long, don’t let the door hit you on the way out!
Yesterday 10 major food companies — coordinated by Ceres and led by Mars — released a letter to U.S. and global leaders calling for action on climate change. The signatories are a mix of major food conglomerates and mid-sized companies with a known sustainability bent: MarsGeneral MillsNestle USAUnileverDanone Dairy North AmericaStonyfield FarmBen & Jerry’sKellogg CompanyNew Belgium Brewery and Clif Bar.
“Climate change is bad for farmers and for agriculture. Drought, flooding and hotter growing conditions threaten the world’s food supply and contribute to food insecurity,” the letter, which also ran in full page ads in the Washington Post and Financial times, states.
Beyond calling for action in Paris, the letter includes three commitments: re-energize our companies’ continued efforts to ensure that our supply chain becomes (sic) more sustainable, talk transparently about our efforts and share best practices, and use our voices to advocate for governments to set clear, achievable measurable, enforceable science-based targets for carbon emissions reductions.
This last commitment — to lobby for carbon targets — is the most exciting of the bunch. These ten companies have holdings and work with suppliers all around the world and in districts all around the U.S.. By making their preference for a carbon target known to their legislators, they influence the political process and offer a path through the political minefield that supporting environmental legislation has become.
The letter signing was announced at a Washington D.C. roundtable attended by Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse (D-RI) and Rep. Christopher Gibson (R-NY), who have joined together across the aisle to advocate for action on climate change. At the roundtable, Sen. Whitehouse spoke from the heart,
“Modern life has put a great many of us into a private bubble of consumption. There is too much distance between us and the natural world, we are no longer dependent on nearby farms. So the signals of distress that the earth and atmosphere are sending are falling on deaf ears. It’s really important that the big agriculture and food companies that provide the bridge between natural world and our bubble understand the importance of action on climate change.”
He spoke to the courage the companies took in taking this position in favor of climate action.
His words were echoed and seconded by representatives from 4 of the signatories who were present for the announcement. Barry Parkin Chief Sustainability Officer, Mars Inc. explained, “Mars is a global food business with operations around the world and a presence in 150 companies. We have a big carbon footprint due to all the agriculture and we have a big responsibility.” The company has set an aggressive target to eliminate or offset 100% of emissions from its direct operations by 2014. While laudable, direct operations only account for 14 percent of Mars’ total carbon footprint, so there is more work to be done
Parkin explained why Mars was taking a leadership position, “It’s the right thing to do. We’re doing this for our kids, grandkids and future generations. We’re also doing it for the millions of farmers in our supply chain. Many are smallholders living on the edge. Many of us will get by [survive climate change], they may not.”
Tom Langan from Unilever echoed the business case, “Climate change impacts our business directly to the tune of three hundred million euros a year.” He spoke passionately about the droughts occurring with greater frequency around the world, “Water is a major problem. Consumers need water to use our products.” Deforestation is also a big concern and the company is tracking impacts in palm oil, soy, and deforestation around the world. “We want to be influential voice on climate change. But we need to work together. We can reach all our goals and it won’t make a difference. We need government support because we live in a carbon based economy. This is our message for Paris. We can’t change ourselves. We’re calling for a responsible, meaningful carbon price.”
Mindy Lubber, CEO of Ceres, closed the session, stating, “The leaders sitting here today have helped to emphatically dispel notions that this [climate change action] is for liberals…. There isn’t a leader anywhere who wouldn’t jump in front of a truck to save children. Climate change is that truck.”
One hopes that as these ten companies take a stand, others will fall in step and that this pressure will build to make climate action more politically palatable. One way or the other, it is looking likely that the U.S. will sign on to some kind of commitment in Paris. Whether or not congress will be able to pass legislation to support it is another question entirely. It looks like they’ll be at the table, even if they have to be dragged there kicking and screaming.

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