HỌC TỐT TIẾNG ANH 11 THEO CHƯƠNG TRÌNH GLOBAL SUCCESS ĐÁP ÁN CHI TIẾT - CẢ NĂ...
Nis2011 01-business-sustainability-d pollard
1. Business
Sustainability
through
Environmental
& Social
Performance
Mr. Duncan
Pollard
Sustainability Advisor
These slides differ to those shown at
the Nestlé Investor Seminar 2011
June 7, 2011 Nestlé Investor Seminar
2. Disclaimer
This presentation contains forward looking
statements which reflect Management’s current
views and estimates. The forward looking
statements involve certain risks and uncertainties
that could cause actual results to differ materially
from those contained in the forward looking
statements. Potential risks and uncertainties
include such factors as general economic
conditions, foreign exchange fluctuations,
competitive product and pricing pressures and
regulatory developments.
1 7 June, 2011 Nestlé Investor Seminar
4. Consumers looking at brands more holistically
NHW
What’s in
my food?
Responsible Environmental
sourcing Consumer sustainability
preference
Where 60/40+ How
does it was it
come from? made?
3 June 7, 2011 Nestlé Investor Seminar
6. Nestlé Approach to Business
CREATING
Shared Value
Focussing on a few issues where
Nestlé will add value and leave a
net positive benefit
Constant performance
improvement on key metrics:
water, waste, energy, packaging
Laws, Codes of Conduct,
Business Principles, Core Values,
Societal Expectations,
5 June 7, 2011 Nestlé Investor Seminar
7. Continuous Improvement
2000-2010
Absolute
Change
443 Factories Production +73%
Water -32%
Waste -25%
GHG -16%
Agriculture Factories Logistics Consumer Use
6 June 7, 2011 Nestlé Investor Seminar
8. Creating Shared Value
Rural Development Water Nutrition
7 June 7, 2011 Nestlé Investor Seminar
9. Business Sustainability
Limits/Access to Resources The Needs of Society
Natural capital & Ecological limits 2500 Mn without improved sanitation
Biodiversity, water, soil, the atmosphere 1400 Mn in poverty & food insecure
Land allocation & productivity 1000 Mn without clean water
Peak oil, water tables, bee populations 215 Mn child labourers
Wild harvested populations 51 Mn: born/yr with no birth certificate
8 June 7, 2011 Nestlé Investor Seminar
10. Food Security
Definition Nestlé
Food Availability: sufficient quantities Food Availability: Operations in 83
of food of appropriate quality. countries. Sales in every country, every
day of the year.
Food Access: adequate resources for Food Access: 4860 Popularly
acquiring appropriate foods for a Positioned Products (PPPs), formulated
nutritious diet. & packaged to make accessible to
people on lower income levels.
Utilization: of food through adequate Utilization: micronutrient fortification &
diet, clean water, sanitation and health Nestlé Nutrition products.
care to reach nutritional well-being.
Stability: having access to adequate Stability: outspoken on biofuels,
food at all times, - no loss as a resilience to climate & water events,
consequence of sudden shocks or response to natural disasters (floods,
cyclical events. earthquakes)
Source FAO Food Security Brief 2006
9 June 7, 2011 Nestlé Investor Seminar
12. Diet & Nutrition
Projection based on 95% renewable energy
and diet similar to an average Malaysian diet
WWF Living Planet Report 2010 Source Data: Global Footprint Network, FAO, 2006
11 June 7, 2011 Nestlé Investor Seminar
13. Food Losses & Food Wastage
Western world: 670 Mn T Developing world: 630 Mn T
40% in retail & by consumer 40% in post-harvest & processing
12 June 7, 2011 Nestlé Investor Seminar
18. Moga, India: Options for Reducing Water Use
Intensified dairy production
Water efficient wheat & fodder
production
Reduce rice cultivated area
Delayed rice planting
Direct seeding of rice
Intermittent irrigation of rice
Laser assisted land levelling
Raising bund heights
Regulated power supply to farms
17 June 7, 2011
19. Water Stewardship
National / Int’l level
Stakeholder
engagement
Water
Resources
Review
Factory
Local level
Initiatives
Inside factory Outside factory
Area of influence
18 June 7, 2011
22. Biodiversity
Nestlé Position on
Deforestation & Forest Stewardship
Nestlé will ensure that all its raw material sourced from forested areas:
Has not led to deforestation
Has not led to loss of high conservation values
Complies with the Nestlé Supplier Code
• - business integrity, legal, human rights & working practices
Creates Shared Value for society and local communities
• - delivers rural development & small holder benefits
• - water stewardship plans
21 June 7, 2011 Nestlé Investor Seminar
26. Supply Chain Mapping
… and Supporting our Suppliers
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27. Rural Development
Income and Assets
26 June 7, 2011 Nestlé Investor Seminar
28. Social Issues
Child Labour
- Industry Association/Platforms
Nestlé Actions
- Consistent Approach Across Commodities
- Cocoa, Vanilla, Hazelnuts
- Engagement with NGOs
- Hire experts to systematically address supply chains
- Individual Child / Family Centric Approach
- Education/School Attendance
- Light Work
- Health & Safety
27 June 7, 2011 Nestlé Investor Seminar
29. Summary
Being Prepared
Values Based Approach
Impacts/Outcomes not Methods
Environmental & Social Performance
Business Sustainability
28 June 7, 2011 Nestlé Investor Seminar