2Sustain

A blog focused on sustainable business issues and challenges

Dole Banana Farm in Costa Rica Receives Sustainability Award

August 20, 2010 | No Comments →

Dole Food Company, Inc., the world’s largest producer and marketer of high-quality fresh fruit and fresh vegetables and the leading producer of organic bananas, announced that Bananito, a Dole farm located in Costa Rica, has received a ‘Plan A’ farming award from British retailer Marks & Spencer.

Earlier this year, Marks & Spencer announced plans to become the world’s most sustainable retailer by 2015, and the company uses its Plan A farming award to recognize and promote farmers and growers who are taking steps to improve the sustainability of their business. This year, the application process was open for the first time to non-UK farmers.

Bananito is an 850-hectare Company-owned farm that has produced bananas since 1989, and it supplies Marks & Spencer as well as other customers. According to the Dole website, all of the 589 workers at Bananito receive at least the minimum wage, with the average being 92 percent above the minimum. Dole also provides workers with affordable housing, medical programs, education opportunities, training programs and other “social wellbeing” services. (more…)

Tyson Releases New Sustainability Report

August 13, 2010 | No Comments →

Tyson Foods, Inc., has released its third sustainability report, titled “Rooted in Tradition. Growing Responsibly.” The report, which is only available online, highlights progress the company has made on a wide range of social, environmental and economic goals in its US operations for fiscal 2008 and 2009.

For instance, Tyson has: (more…)

Del Monte Announces Environmental Sustainability Goals

August 04, 2010 | No Comments →

Building on its agricultural roots and ongoing commitment to support the communities in which it operates, Del Monte Foods recently announced formalized environmental sustainability goals.

The company says it has heightened its focus on three specific areas: reducing waste, lowering water consumption and improving air quality.

For instance, Del Monte has committed to a 75 percent reduction in the amount of waste it sends to landfills (compared to a 2007 baseline), and the company wants to meet this goal by 2016. Both the Milk-Bone plant in Buffalo, New York, and the Del Monte Foods Distribution Center in Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania are already zero-landfill facilities, meaning that 100 percent of their waste has been diverted from landfill. As a result of these and other efforts, Del Monte has reduced its waste to landfill by almost 70 percent, and so it appears the company is well on its way to achieving its goal.

In addition, Del Monte has committed to: (more…)

Sainsbury’s Uses Real Time Supply Chain Technology to Improve Efficiency, Reduce Waste

June 14, 2010 | No Comments →

UK retailer Sainsbury’s is testing new technology that it says will help improve supply chain efficiencies and reduce food waste.

Specifically, Sainsbury’s new system will monitor the food coming off supermarket shelves on a minute by minute basis, enabling the company to make real-time decisions on where to send food from its warehouses. (more…)

Cleveland Makes Headlines with Large-Scale Composting of Food Waste

May 17, 2010 | No Comments →

Businesses in Cleveland are out in front, pioneering what some are calling the “next green wave:” large-scale composting of food waste.

According to The Plain Dealer, several of the city’s major food-waste makers are spearheading an effort to keep tons of biodegradable food scraps out of landfills. They dump their food waste into biodegradable bags (often made out of potato starch), and then a composting company hauls them away to be turned into a high-quality soil additive. (more…)