Behind The Brands: Food Justice and The 'Big 10' Food and Beverage Companies
Behind The Brands: Food Justice and The 'Big 10' Food and Beverage Companies
Behind The Brands: Food Justice and The 'Big 10' Food and Beverage Companies
BEHIND THE
BRANDS
Food justice and the Big 10 food and beverage companies
Over the past century, powerful food and beverage companies have
enjoyed unprecedented commercial success. But these companies
have grown prosperous while the millions who supply the land,
labor and water needed for their products face increased hardship.
Now, a rapidly changing environment, affected communities and an
increasingly savvy consumer base are pushing the industry to
rethink business as usual. In this report, Oxfam assesses the
social and environmental policies of the worlds ten largest food
and beverage companies and calls on them to take the critical next
steps to create a just food system.
www.oxfam.org
SUMMARY
In Pakistan, rural communities say Nestl is bottling and selling valuable
groundwater near villages that cant afford clean water.1 In 2009, Kraft
was accused of purchasing beef from Brazilian suppliers linked to cutting
down trees in the Amazon rainforest in order to graze cattle.2 And today,
Coca-Cola is facing allegations of child labor in its supply chain in the
Philippines.3
Sadly, these charges are not anomalies. For more than 100 years, the
world's most powerful food and beverage companies have relied on
cheap land and labor to produce inexpensive products and huge profits.
But these profits have often come at the cost of the environment and
local communities around the world, and have contributed to a food
system in crisis.
The vast majority of the hungry are the small-scale farmers and workers
who supply nutritious food to 23 billion people worldwide,6 with up to 60
percent of farm laborers living in poverty.7 At the same time, changing
weather patterns due to greenhouse gas emissions8 a large
percentage of which come from agricultural production are making
farming an increasingly unreliable occupation.
Adding to the vulnerability of poor farmers and farm workers, food prices
continue to fluctuate wildly, and demand for soy, corn, and sugar to feed
affluent diets is on the rise. And to top it off, the very building blocks of
the global food system fertile land, clean water, and reliable weather
are growing scarce.
These facts are not secrets; companies also realize that agriculture has
grown risky and are taking steps to guarantee future commodity supplies
and to reduce social and environmental risks along their supply chains.
Today, food and beverage companies speak out against biofuels,9 build
schools for communities and cut back on water usage in company
operations. New corporate social responsibility programs are proliferating
and declarations of sustainability are now ubiquitous. The CEO of
PepsiCo, Indra Nooyi, in fact noted in 2011, It is not enough to make
things that taste good. PepsiCo must also be the good company. It
must aspire to higher values than the day-to-day business of making and
selling soft drinks and snacks.10
But such claims of better environmental and social behaviour have thus
far been extremely difficult to assess, despite rapidly growing consumer
demand to know the truth of these claims.
2
Now, Oxfams Behind the Brands campaign evaluates where
companies stand on policy in comparison with their peers and challenges
them to begin a race to the top to improve their social and
environmental performance. By targeting specific areas for improvement
along the supply chain, the campaign pinpoints policy weaknesses and
will work with others to shine a spotlight on the practices of these
companies.
At its core, the campaign features the Behind the Brands scorecard.
The scorecard examines company policies in seven areas critical to
sustainable agricultural production, yet historically neglected by the food
and beverage industry: women, small-scale farmers, farm workers,
water, land, climate change, and transparency.
Yet the scorecard also clearly shows that all of the Big 10 including
those which score the highest have neglected to use their enormous
power to help create a more just food system. In fact, in some cases
these companies undermine food security and economic opportunity for
the poorest people in the world, making hungry people even hungrier.
Behind the Brands reveals that the social responsibility and sustainability
programs which companies have implemented to date are typically tightly
focused projects to reduce water use or to train women farmers, for
example. But these programs fail to address the root causes of hunger
and poverty because companies lack adequate policies to guide their
own supply chain operations.
3
Companies are not taking sufficient steps to curb massive
agricultural greenhouse gas emissions responsible for climate
changes now affecting farmers;
Most companies do not provide small-scale farmers with equal
access to their supply chains and no company has made a
commitment to ensure that small-scale producers are paid a fair
price;
Only a minority of the Big 10 are doing anything at all to address
the exploitation of women small-scale farmers and workers in
their supply chains.
4
1 INTRODUCTION
Stop and consider for a moment:
The Big 10 are the most visible industry players within the global food system and wield
immense power. Collectively, they generate revenues of more than $1.1bn a day. Their
annual revenues of more than $450bn are equivalent to the GDP of the worlds low-income
countries combined. A shift in policies and practices from the Big 10 would reverberate
across the value chain.
Source: Oxfam
Yet making sure everyone always has enough nutritious food to eat has
not been the focus of these powerful members of the global food system.
For the past century the food and beverage industry has used cheap land
and labor to produce the least expensive products possible often of low
5
nutritional value while maximizing profits. Costs like the impact of
drained water resources, rising greenhouse gas emissions, and
exploitative working conditions have remained off company ledgers,
while the industry and its shareholders have prospered.
Today the Big 10 are also under increasing scrutiny as diseases such as
diabetes and obesity global epidemics now considered as pressing as
hunger are linked directly to the consumption of the junk food and
sugary beverages they produce.21
Of course, these companies are not the only ones responsible for hunger
and poverty in the world. But, as is described in this report, their success
has hinged on the availability of cheap land and labor supplied by poor
communities around the world. Additionally, the Big 10 today have the
power to exert substantial influence over the traders and governments which
control and regulate global food supply chains. They are also the most
visible part of the industry, and are putting their own reputations at risk as
consumers grow more concerned about what they buy and from whom.
Companies are also now aware that the very supply chains they rely
upon are now in jeopardy as competition for fertile land and clean water
increases, climate change makes weather uncertain, and farmers leave
agriculture in droves due to low income and dangerous working
conditions. Paul Polman, CEO of Unilever, which stopped reporting
quarterly profits in 2009, has stated:
business will have to change. It will have to get off the treadmill
of quarterly reporting and operate for the long term. It will have to
see itself as part of society, not separate from it. And it will have
to recognise that the needs of citizens and communities carry the
same weight as the demands of shareholders. We believe that in
[the] future this will become the only acceptable model of
business. If people feel that the system is unjust and does not
work for them, they will rebel against it. And if we continue to
consume key inputs like water, food, land and energy without
thought as to their long-term sustainability, then none of us will
prosper.22
6
As part of Oxfams GROW campaign an initiative aimed at building a
better food system the Behind the Brands campaign
tracks company progress in seven fundamental areas with Oxfams
Behind the Brands scorecard. These criteria assess company
policies and rank corporate commitment to creating a sustainable and
just food system;
will drive public actions bringing to light controversial practices and
weak policies of the Big 10. The campaign will also recognize and
applaud companies when they make needed progress;
hosts an interactive website where individuals can access scorecard
rankings, find helpful resources and communicate directly with
companies to urge them to take responsibility for their actions.
7
2 THE FOOD AND
BEVERAGE INDUSTRY: A
FORGOTTEN LEGACY
Walk into any supermarket in the world and youll be immediately
surrounded by a startling amount of food. Thousands of boxes of cereal,
yogurt in every size and flavor, rows and rows of condiments and frozen
food products the modern-day American supermarket carries more
than 38,000 products.25 In China, where no supermarkets existed in
1989, annual supermarket sales today total $100bn.26
Figure 2: Which brands do the big food and beverage companies own?
Source: Joki Gauthier for Oxfam 2012. For more information on this figure, and to see it online, visit
http://www.behindthebrands.org
8
But perhaps more troubling is that since the global food system has
become so complex, food and beverage companies themselves often
know little about their own supply chains. Where a particular product is
grown and processed, by whom, and in what conditions are questions
few companies can answer accurately and rarely share with consumers.
Yet in the process, these early ventures left their mark on local
communities worldwide. The emissions caused by the industrial
processing of food, the draining of water resources, and the impact of
harsh working conditions, while seemingly a free ride for businesses,
were costly for communities around the world.
9
From the lands of the poor came the sweets of
the rich
Cadbury chocolates (now owned by Mondelez), Lipton tea (Unilever),
Wrigleys chewing gum (Mars), and Nescaf coffee (Nestl) as the
popularity of the young brands of the early 20th century grew in Europe
and the USA, so too did the need for tropical land to cultivate the raw
materials required to produce them.
Caribbean colonies and Cuban haciendas churned out sugar for sweets
in Europe, while tea consumed throughout the British Empire was grown
in India36 and Sri Lanka. West African oil palm plantations planted by
private companies like Lever Bros (now Unilever) brought new supplies
of raw materials for products like margarine to markets across Europe.37
Land given over to these farms and plantations was hotly contested and
the struggle for ownership of fertile land continued after colonized
countries gained their independence.38 Privatization often meant that
those with the most power and influence gained access to land, while
less affluent residents often women lost control over communal and
private property alike.39
Today, the controversial leasing and selling of land is alive and well, and
increasing.40 Since 2000, more than 900 large-scale land deals have been
recorded (see Figure 3),41 the vast majority of which took place in 32
countries with alarming or serious levels of hunger.42 More than 60
percent of foreign land investors intend to export everything they produce,
and in many cases, what is grown will be processed not into food but fuel.43
To make matters worse, land acquired between 2000 and 2010 in these
deals could have produced enough food for 1 billion people.44
Source: Land Matrix, the online public database on land deals, http://landportal.info/landmatrix/get-
the-detail?mode=map (accessed December 2012)
10
While land is rarely directly owned by the Big 10 (or their subsidiaries), they
have largely ignored the questionable acquisition of land by their suppliers.45
And as companies grow and merge, responsibility for displacement and
other land rights violations is inherited by the acquiring company.
46
Unilever sources palm oil from Wilmar International, a company accused
in 2011 of illegally clearing forest and other land and violently driving
people off their land in Indonesia after longstanding disputes. Unilever
47
continues to purchase palm oil from Wilmar as it is satisfied with the
companys decision to participate in the World Bank CAO-led mediation
process. This process, initiated when affected communities brought
repeated complaints to the Bank about its support to the company and the
impacts of Wilmars plantations, brings the company and the communities
to the table to address the grievances of the affected people.
Closely related to the race for land is the race for water, and like land,
there will not be enough to go around. Water scarcity is already affecting
almost one-fifth of the worlds population, and water use has increased at
more than twice the rate of population growth over the last century.48
Agriculture is the single largest use of the worlds fresh water with
about 70 percent used for irrigation.49 Water contamination is also a
major threat to human health; the food sector is responsible for 54
percent of organic water pollutants.50
Sadly, the exploitation, and often enslavement, of workers has still not
ended, although slavery in agriculture is less prevalent than a century
ago. Families who have toiled in Sri Lankas tea estate districts for
generations, for example, continue to have lower incomes, higher rates
of malnutrition, and lower levels of educational attainment than other
laborers in the country.55 (See Box 3)
11
Box 3: Bonded labor in tea production
In the 1890s, Thomas Lipton (of Lipton Tea, now owned by Unilever)
bought his first four tea plantations in the Nuwara Eliya district of Sri Lanka
56
(then Ceylon). The region became known for extreme poverty, lack of
57
clean drinking water and high alcoholism rates. These plantations were
bought by Unilever in 1972 and were again disposed of more than a
decade ago. Today, the company has promised to source 100 percent of
58
tea from Rainforest Alliance-certified farms globally. However, studies
59
critical of Rainforest Alliance certification have recently been published,
and very few independent evaluations are available on the costs and
benefits for producers and workers of participation in certification
60
schemes. In correspondence with Oxfam, Unilever asserted their positive
impact, declaring that: The Rainforest Alliance program has led to
improved conditions for tea smallholders and workers of the tea estates
and that impact assessments have pointed to higher yields and improved
profitability for farmers and workers, improved understanding of fertilizers
and safer agrochemical use.
12
Pushing small-scale farmers out of the picture
Over the past 100 years, small-scale farmers have been displaced from
their lands by governments and companies in search of fertile land.
Sprawling sugar, oil palm, and, more recently, soy plantations pushed
families to poor quality land on the arid sides of mountains, often far from
water, where they then attempted to farm. These plantations not only
monopolized natural resources, they also benefited from credit and
infrastructure that smaller farms did not have access to.
Today, an estimated 404 million farms cultivate less than two hectares of
land and support the livelihoods of about a third of the worlds
population.69 But as most of these farmers are forced to also buy the bulk
of their food, when food prices increase families are often left choosing
between feeding themselves, educating their children or maintaining
essential health care.
The vast majority of small-scale farmers produce for their families and for
local and regional markets and are not integrated into international
supply chains (with the notable exceptions of cocoa and coffee). Yet the
total number of small-scale farmers selling commodities to multinational
companies is growing, and the presence of agribusinesses in
communities impacts the ability of all farmers to access natural
resources, markets, credit and technical support.
Cash crops like coffee and tea in colonial and post-colonial times
became the domain of men, who received training from companies and
government extension services while women were restricted to hired
labor working the fields.74 Often, trading licences like those issued in
13
Kenya were only given to men.75
Due in part to this legacy, women continue to have less access than men
to land and other resources vital to food production. Yet these inequities
have been renewed and reproduced consistently over the past century,
and today women small-scale farmers in Africa, for example, own just 1
percent of agricultural land, receive only 7 percent of extension services,
and less than 10 percent of agricultural credit is offered to women.76
14
Today, demand for transparency is coming from all sides investors,
consumers, retailers, governments, and NGOs and the ability to more
easily track and report issues within supply chains now exists. In the oil,
gas, and mining industry, for example, public pressure led to the adoption
of rules in the U.S. Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer
Protection Act,84 requiring US-listed companies to report payments to
governments on a country-by-country and project-by-project basis. The
electronics industry too is showing increased willingness to voluntarily
provide supply chain transparency: Hewlett-Packard, Intel, and Apple
now publish lists of their suppliers. And back in 2005, Nike85 became the
first company in the apparel industry to make public its global suppliers
and associated manufacturing information. Yet in the food and beverage
industry, the Big 10 insist they must be secretive about their supply chain
to maintain a competitive advantage. Few voluntarily disclose any
information about who produces their raw materials, where, and how
much.
15
3 WHY MUST COMPANIES
ACT?
If companies have a long legacy of abuse and created many of the issues
now endemic in the food system, why does Oxfam believe they could play
a leading role in the fight against poverty, hunger and food insecurity?
Oxfam sees four reasons why the Big 10 have a vested interest in
creating a more just and sustainable food system. First, all companies
have human rights responsibilities. Second, social pressure and
environmental changes are forcing the industry to do things differently.
Third, some of the Big 10 believe doing well by doing good makes good
business sense. Last, and perhaps of greatest significance, consumers,
investors and governments are increasingly demanding better
sustainability and social responsibility and are pushing companies to
implement significant and far-reaching reforms.
In fact, many of these companies began with the stated intention to help
those in need. For example, John Harvey Kellogg developed corn flakes
initially to offer a more nutritious breakfast to both the American wealthy
and poor.92 And Isaac Carasso founder of Danone began making and
selling yogurt when he saw children in his home country of Spain
suffering from intestinal problems at the end of World War I.93
16
Womens Empowerment Principles. There are also several positive
examples of projects wherein companies have made an effort to address
supply chain challenges (see Box 6).
17
degradation and deforestation worsens.101 This is combined with a rising
demand for meat and dairy, expanding biofuels production and a growing
global population. And as supply booms and busts, food prices rise, making
commodities attractive to financial speculators. Thus the cycle continues,
with serious consequences for people living in poverty.102
Additionally, low pay, irregular work and dangerous conditions for In Ghana, small-scale
workers currently provide little incentive for young people to stay in cocoa growers earn just
agriculture. In Ghana, for instance, small-scale cocoa growers earn just 80 cents a day.
80 cents a day.103 In Thailand, natural disasters and the rising cost of
fertilizers are driving rice farmers into cumulative debt.104 And workers on
banana plantations are often forced to use dangerous agrochemicals
without protective clothing, leading to severe health problems.105
Many of these communities are now fighting back and rejecting bad
working conditions and the taking of their natural resources by
governments and companies. Local communities in Indonesia, for
example, filed complaints with the Compliance Advisor Ombudsman
office of the International Finance Corporation against Wilmar (a Unilever
supplier) for land rights violations (see Box 1).106 Similarly, in Senegal,
groups representing small-scale farmers have banded together to
declare their commitment to small-scale family farming and their
condemnation of the grabbing of our natural resources (land, water,
forests) and granting them to agro-industrial stakeholders.107
CEOs cite a variety of reasons why it makes business sense for them to
be attentive to corporate responsibility, including meeting ethical and
philanthropic responsibilities, developing and maintaining legitimacy and
reputational capital, and building stronger relationships with
stakeholders.108
18
Additionally, indices such as the Dow Jones Sustainability Index (DJSI)
and FTSE4Good show that companies which embrace the essential
qualities of corporate responsibility generally outperform their peers.111
Harvard Business School professor Michael Porter says data now shows
that doing well by doing good makes sound business sense,112 and the
concept of shared value has been adopted by a number of companies,
including Nestle.113
Shareholders are increasingly demanding companies be more In the U.S., one out of
transparent in their operations and develop long-term strategies to every nine dollars
professionally managed
manage social and environmental risks in their supply chains. In the U.S.,
is now invested as a
one out of every nine dollars professionally managed is now invested as sustainable or
a sustainable or responsible investment with assets in these funds responsible investment;
totalling $3.31 trillion in 2012.114 assets in these funds
totalled $3.31 trillion in
A wide range of institutional investors now also seek to influence 2012.
companies through shareholder advocacy. In the last two years alone,
more than 200 institutional investors and management firms filed or co-
filed shareholder resolutions on environmental, social or governance
issues, representing well over a trillion dollars in assets.115 Kraft, for
example, was the subject of a shareholder resolution in 2012 urging the
company to provide information on its impact on deforestation.116
19
Figure 4: Consumers are concerned about how their food is produced
100
Disagree strongly
Tend to disagree
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Source: Oxfam (2012) The Food Transformation: Harnessing Consumer Power to Create a Fair
Food Future, Oxford: Oxfam International http://oxf.am/Jnu
Company reputations and sales are also on the line when consumers
learn of wrongdoing along the supply chain. In China, a two-year study
carried out in nearly all of Chinas provinces found more than three-
quarters of respondents are willing to not purchase or reduce their
purchasing of fast moving goods (snacks, beverages, etc) produced by
companies who are not socially responsible.121 Weber Shandwick found
70 percent of consumers in the U.S. now avoid buying products from
companies they do not like,122 and almost as many say they are
increasingly checking products to find out who makes them. The study
also reported that almost two-thirds of a companys market value is
attributable to its reputation.
These findings are not limited to academic surveys. In 2011, global sales
of just one fair trade certification initiative, Fairtrade International,
increased by 12 percent in one year.123 Another fair trade producer,
Equal Exchange, grew 29 percent in 2011,124 and Cafdirect is now the
fifth largest coffee brand and seventh largest tea brand in the UK.
Oxfam has played an active role in the fair trade movement since its
beginning. Over the last four decades, the fair trade movement has
sought to respond to the failure of conventional trade to deliver
sustainable livelihoods for small-scale farmers in the developing world.
While fair trade cannot be effective in isolation from the structural
changes needed in the food and beverage industry, it has provided a
lifeline to hundreds of thousands of producers and has helped to inform
and empower consumers. Annual sales of Fairtrade certified goods are
now considerable, reaching a total of $5.8bn in 2009.125
20
people initiated more than 200,000 protest emails to Nestl after
Greenpeace revealed weak palm oil sourcing practices in one of the
companys most popular brands, KitKat. The campaign forced Nestl
executives to introduce better policies against deforestation. The
company has since invested in a Digital Acceleration Team to monitor
online sentiment about their brands.127
21
4 WHAT IS THE BEHIND
THE BRANDS CAMPAIGN?
Currently, trying to assess company sustainability programs and claims
of social responsibility is like trying to look at cells without a microscope.
Because companies keep supply chain information hidden from view, it is
difficult to see how talk of environmental or social improvements along
the supply chain actually play out on the ground.
The scorecard will then serve as the core of the Behind the Brands
campaign, an initiative to work with consumers, governments and
companies to hold the food and beverage industry accountable for its
social and environmental impact on farmers, workers and communities
worldwide.
Women
Women account for 43 percent of the agricultural work force and are Women make up 43
responsible for the vast majority of domestic tasks,131 yet are often percent of the
excluded from land ownership, are paid less than men for the same jobs agricultural
and have limited opportunities. Because women are the backbone of the workforce.129
workforce in so many areas of the world, eliminating gender In Cameroon, women
discrimination and supporting women in accessing and leading produce up to 80
community activities and worker organizations could impact millions of percent of the food, yet
people around the world. own only 2 percent of
the land.130
The Behind the Brands scorecard examines whether the policies of the
Big 10 promote womens welfare and encourage their inclusion in the
food supply chain on equal terms. The scorecard also looks for policies
which guarantee a discrimination-free workplace.
22
Small-scale farmers
Successful small-scale farms contribute to rural development and create More than 400 million
local jobs.134 They also take better care of the environment than large farms worldwide are 2
agribusiness when small-scale farmers rotate crops and use chemicals hectares or smaller
less intensively. Because they diversify crops, smaller farms are also (less than 5 acres).132
potentially more nutritionally efficient than larger ones,135 often meaning
400500 million small
better food security for poor regions. farms provide
livelihoods for
The scorecard assesses how the Big 10s policies ensure that those who approximately 23
feed the world dont go hungry themselves. The scorecard looks for billion people
policies which guarantee small farms access to company supply chains worldwide.133
on equitable terms, allow farmers to earn a decent income, and channel
investments to them (such as agricultural services, credit and inputs)
which boost productivity. It also assesses the commitment of companies
to ensure that supply chains comply with sustainable production
standards, including Fairtrade, Utz Certified and Rainforest Alliance.
Farm workers
With more than 1 billion people employed in the sector (nearly 35 percent More than 1 billion
of the global workforce), agriculture is the second largest source of people work in
employment worldwide.137 Paying farm workers a living wage and agriculture 35 percent
guaranteeing safe and protected working conditions can therefore help of the global workforce.
billions of people escape from poverty and will ensure that millions of More than half (53
children will not be forced to work in order for their families to survive. percent) of the 215
million child laborers
The scorecard assesses whether business policies enforce fair working worldwide are involved
conditions along the supply chain, allowing farm workers to organize and in agriculture.136
access grievance procedures and ensuring that agricultural workers earn
enough to meet the basic needs of their families (a living wage).
Climate change
The vulnerability of farmers is exacerbated by a changing climate, Up to 29 percent of all
created in part over the past 100 years by the food and beverage sector greenhouse gas
one of the industries most responsible for greenhouse gas emissions. emissions come from
Up to 29 percent of all greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions come from food systems.
food systems,139 and yet little is being done to assess and prevent such Globally, 1.7 billion
emissions. farmers are highly
vulnerable to climate
The scorecard looks for company policies which lead in mitigating change impacts.138
harmful GHG emissions as well as assessing and implementing long-
term solutions to changes already in motion.
23
Land
In the past decade, an area of land amounting to eight times the size of In the past 10 years, an
the UK has been sold off or leased globally; from mid-2008 to 2009 alone area eight times the
agricultural land deals with foreign investors in developing countries size of the UK has been
increased by almost 200 percent.140 acquired by investors.
Water
Water is the lifeline of agricultural communities and is a human right. By 2025, 1.8 billion
Increasingly it is also a scarce resource, and today communities around people will be living in
the world are fighting for local control of water as businesses also countries or regions
demand access. Many companies, through initiatives like the CEO Water with absolute water
scarcity. Two-thirds of
Mandate,143 are starting to address these concerns. Yet there is much
the worlds population
more to be done. are expected to have
limited access to clean
The scorecard assesses policies which demonstrate a companys water.141
commitment to respecting the human right to water, to disclosing and
reducing water use and discharges throughout its operations, and to Over the next 40 years,
better managing the use of water from water-stressed regions. the world's water will
have to support
agricultural systems to
Transparency feed and create
livelihoods for an
Transparency is essential if consumers, producers, governments and additional 2.7 billion
communities are to genuinely hold companies accountable for the people.142
impacts they have on small-scale farmers and their families, and to
substantiate company claims of sustainability. At a minimum, this means
disclosure of information about where products are from and from whom
the company purchases raw materials. Given their powerful role in
advising governments on how to regulate the global food system,
company lobbying efforts and financial contributions to governments
must also be made public.
24
campaigns rather than for guiding practice in the field. Company
performance ultimately depends on how the company chooses to do
business and whether it implements policies through internal training,
incentives, control systems and performance measures which bring
teeth to policies. Otherwise, they may not be worth the paper they are
written on and care must be taken not to confuse company policy with
action.
25
5 HOW ARE COMPANIES
DOING? RANKS AND
TRENDS
The Behind the Brands scorecard scores companies based on policies in
the seven key areas outlined in Section 4. A more detailed explanation of
how companies were scored is available online at
www.behindthebrands.org. Appendix A also includes information on how
the scorecard was tabulated. Oxfams scoring and rankings should in no
way be construed as an endorsement of a particular company.
Table 1:
This scorecard was made on 26 February 2013. The latest version is available at
http://oxfam.org/behindthebrands
26
Unilever and Nestl are higher performing companies than the rest,
having developed and published more policies aimed at tackling social
and environmental risks within their supply chains. However, the
scorecard also reveals that these two companies are apparently ignoring
urgent, escalating problems. Land-grabbing and the exploitation of
women are largely ignored in the sector and Nestl and Unilever are no
exception.144 They have failed to declare zero tolerance against land
grabs, even though millions of acres of land have been unjustly seized
from poor farmers and rural communities over the last decade.145 And
both companies have failed to issue company policies addressing the
crushing poverty and exploitation of women farmers and agricultural
workers.
At the other end of the rankings, Associated British Foods (ABF) and
Kellogg have also not addressed land rights concerns or the poverty and
lack of opportunity for women working in the supply chain. Kellogg has
made an initial effort in Mexico to analyze and understand the challenges
small-scale farmers face and the impacts of its operations on them,146 but
has not made any commitments to improve the livelihoods of farmers
supplying their raw materials. ABF has no clear policies on land rights
and land tenure security in its supply chain, even though the company is
a major producer of sugar, a commodity which is often produced on
plantations plagued with land rights violations.147
It is clear that all of the Big 10 must do much more to create a food
system which ensures everyone has enough to eat, always. Below are
the key trends revealed by the scorecard.
27
not offer details of how much soy, cocoa, wheat and dairy they source.
General Mills148 and Kellogg149 only provide information on palm oil and
release no information on any other commodity.
28
156
Box 7: Water for life or luxury in Pakistan
Over the past decade, only PepsiCo has taken the crucial first step of
publicly recognizing that water is a human right and committing to consult
local communities on plans to develop water resources. Other companies
have made significant progress on measuring and reporting water
impacts but do not address the fundamental issue of water ownership or
the rights of local communities to clean water.
All of the companies have taken steps to measure and reduce emissions
from direct operations (such as electricity usage). Yet only five
Mondelez (Kraft), Danone, Coca-Cola, Unilever and Mars measure and
report agricultural emissions associated with their products. Unilever is
alone in making a commitment to cut its overall greenhouse gas footprint
in half by 2020, although even this commitment lacks a specific target for
agricultural emissions reductions.
29
Most companies do not provide small-scale farmers with equal
access to their supply chains and no company has made a
commitment to ensure that small-scale producers are paid a fair
price
No company is committed to paying a fair price to farmers, nor are they
committed to fair business arrangements with farmers. Only Unilever,
which is the top-ranked company with respect to small-scale farmers,
incorporated specific supplier guidelines to promote improved conditions
for small-scale farmers. Yet even with such guidelines in place, companies
must continually assess and ensure guidelines are implemented, as
Unilevers vanilla supply chain illustrates below (see Box 8).
Unilever is one of the largest and most influential buyers of vanilla in the
world, and purchases roughly 8 percent of all the vanilla produced in
Madagascar for use in its ice cream products. However, the production of
vanilla in Madagascar by small-scale farmers is allegedly plagued with
problems of unsustainable farm gate prices and child labor. According to
the International Labor Organization, studies show that child labor in vanilla
production affects about one-third of all children in Madagascar between
163
the ages of 12 and 17 years.
164
In response, Unilever has said it only buys vanilla from a few large global
suppliers and regional producers, and that they comply with Unilevers
Supplier Code and exercise the necessary diligence with their own
165
suppliers to ensure systemic child labor is not deployed. The company
has also said it has no direct responsibility for auditing vanilla production on
.166
the island, but that child labor is unacceptable
In communications with Oxfam in 2012, Unilever noted that it is working
with vanilla suppliers to address the needs of vanilla growing communities.
Only a minority of the Big 10 are doing anything at all to address the
exploitation of women small-scale farmers and workers in their
supply chains
In spite of the structural abuse and exploitation of women in agriculture
today, none of the Big 10 are currently engaged in resolving the
hardships and challenges women face within their supply chains.
30
whether women have equal access to the safer, better paid and more
stable jobs often reserved for men at the farm level. While all companies
have a non-discrimination policy for their own employees, they do not
extend this right to women farmers those who are the most vulnerable
and for whom the infringement of their rights is the least visible.
31
6 THE BIG 10 RESPOND
Over the past decade, Oxfam has communicated with food and beverage
companies about their impact on the food system. And during the months
leading up to the launch of the Behind the Brands campaign, Oxfam
presented the evidence gathered to the Big 10 and asked for their
feedback.170
Yet these responses do not exempt food and beverage companies from
taking an active role in promoting social and economic fairness along the
supply chain, even if others in the industry appear to be moving in the
wrong direction. The Big 10 are uniquely positioned to introduce positive
changes in the food system.
But earlier colonial and dictatorial support of business has now translated
into governments neglecting to regulate multinationals, by ignoring anti-
trust laws created to stop or reverse the consolidation of the agribusiness
sector, or labor laws enacted to protect workers.171 Today there is a
dramatic concentration of wealth and power in the food and beverage
industry worldwide, and in many cases, governments have lost control of
the sector within their own boundaries, creating a significant governance
gap.172 In addition, companies have at times vigorously lobbied and
spent considerable funds to obtain favorable treatment before
governments and multi-lateral institutions.
Governments should take urgent steps (see section 7) to reverse this on-
going trend. But at the same time, the Big 10 hold considerable sway
with governments. Companies must align this political influence with their
public commitments, and deploy it in a transparent and responsible
manner.
32
THE HIDDEN POWER OF TRADERS
Traders are a powerful, unique and often invisible part of the food
system. The major traders Archer Daniels Midland (ADM), Bunge,
Cargill and Louis Dreyfus, collectively known as ABCD play a
significant role in every part of the system, controlling, for example, 90
percent of the global trade in grains. Other emerging market trading
companies such as Olam, Sinar Mas and Wilmar are also quickly
establishing a global presence.173
Traders are central to almost every aspect of the modern food system:
they provide seed and fertilizer to farmers and control the companies that
buy, transport, store and sell their grain. They act as landowners, cattle
and poultry producers, food and biofuel processers, and provide financial
services in commodity markets.
As a result, food and beverage companies are already working with their
suppliers through multi-stakeholder initiatives. Oxfam welcomes the food
companies concerns about traders and encourages even greater efforts
to help reform those who supply their raw materials.
CONSUMER RESPONSIBILITY
Some Big 10 companies claim their role is simply to respond to
consumer demand and that, because consumers want ever cheaper
snack food, they can only remain competitive if they keep production
costs as low as possible. Guaranteeing a living wage to those working
along the supply chain and continually assessing where products are
grown and under what conditions is expensive, they argue, and
shareholders will not accept a fall in profits due to such expenses.
Yet the notion that companies are at the mercy of consumer demand is
disingenuous at best. The industry plays a substantial role in
manufacturing consumer demand and in hiding the reality of their
impacts on communities. Companies spend millions annually to conceal
sourcing practices and routinely engage in sophisticated lobbying,
marketing and public relations campaigns in order to shape public
opinion about food and how it is made. In this way, companies
33
themselves are key drivers and generators of consumer demand.
34
7 CONCLUSION
Once upon a time, the food and beverage industry gained unrestricted
access to cheap land and labor and made huge profits at the expense of
communities and habitats around the world.
Todays food system is broken and unsustainable. 1.4 billion people are
considered overweight and nearly 900 million people are chronically
hungry. Water and land resources are growing ever more scarce, and
food prices are volatile. And consumers and governments are pushing
companies to prioritize the nutrition and vitality of far-away communities.
In other words, the food system is poised for change, and the Big 10 can
help or hinder its progress.
The Big 10 must develop a vision to include and support men and
women small-scale farmers, farm workers and producers, while ensuring
that their operations are sustainable and fair. Global supply chains
should provide everyone with an opportunity to escape poverty and
hunger, and cannot allow the few to profit at the expense of the many. To
deliver this vision, Oxfam is calling on food and beverage companies,
consumers, and governments to take the following actions.
RECOMMENDATIONS
Food and beverage companies
The seven areas used to assess company policies in the Behind the
Brands scorecard need urgent attention. As a first step, the Big 10 need
to be transparent about how they do business and from where and whom
they buy their commodities. They also need to improve their
understanding of their supply chains by knowing and showing their
impacts and disclosing the commodities and regions where injustices are
most prevalent. Lastly, and most importantly, companies must commit to
eliminating the injustices in their supply chains and explicitly require their
suppliers to raise their standards to ensure actual practices on farms are
drastically improved.
Oxfam urges the Big 10 and others to adhere to the following policies
within their supply chain:
1. Recognize responsibility for all significant social and
environmental impacts of agricultural production within the
supply chain. Set ambitious, transparent and time-bound targets for
sustainable and equitable sourcing of key commodities, working with
publicly disclosed suppliers to meet commitments. Publish progress
on these targets annually.
35
2. Assess the number and gender of small-scale farmers and
workers currently in the supply chain. Conduct participatory and
transparent assessments of social and environmental impacts of
operations and sourcing on farmers, workers, women and affected
communities. Establish time-bound remedial action plans with
suppliers.
3. Assess the number and role of women involved in the supply
chain as farmers or workers and the issues they are facing.
Ensure that contracts and provision of services account for the risks
and constraints women face, including mobility and transportation of
products, the protection of contracts and assets from seizure, lack of
access to training and womens time-poverty caused by unpaid care
activities and household responsibilities. Ensure women are able to
participate equally at every level of the company and that they
confirm fair treatment. Companies should also promote womens
empowerment in the workplace, and womens control of land they
farm.
4. Develop targets for including small-scale farmers in the supply
chain and ensure their inclusion generates positive benefits for
these farmers, their families and communities. Special attention must
be given to the inclusion and support of women in the supply chain.
5. Recognize and promote the human right to water, as defined by
the United Nations. Monitor and disclose data on agricultural water
use and the quality and quantity of water discharged into rivers and
lakes. Reduce water use at all levels, Companies must identify and
disclose operations which source from water-stressed regions, and
develop specific policies for those areas, in consultation with affected
communities.
6. Declare and implement zero tolerance for land grabbing (as
defined under the Tirana Declaration)176 and water grabbing. A
zero tolerance policy should be implemented throughout a
companys agricultural operations. Company policy should ensure
free, prior and informed consent of farmers and rural communities.
7. Establish supply chain standards and policies which ensure
that agricultural supply chains meet international labor
standards established under International Labor Organization
Conventions.177 This includes freedom of association and the right
to bargain collectively, fair working conditions that protect workers
health and safety, an anonymous grievance process to register and
address labor violations, and public recognition that all agricultural
workers should earn enough to meet the basic needs of their families
a living wage.
8. Disclose agricultural greenhouse gas emissions in company
supply chains and set targets to achieve deep absolute
reductions in emissions from large-scale producers. Disclose
climate change risks and how they will affect small-scale producers,
as well as implement programs and strategies that build their
resilience.
36
9. Use political and economic power to influence government
policies and change industry practices. Food and beverage
companies should lobby transparently and accountably, consistent
with their social responsibility commitments, to make the global food
system more just and sustainable. They should collectively challenge
governments as well as agricultural traders to curtail practices that
sustain higher and more volatile food prices, including commodity
speculation and the conversion of food to fuel. And they should
demand more ambitious and multilateral action by governments and
other industries to tackle climate change, both through emissions
reductions and the provision of public finance for adaptation,
especially for small-scale food producers.
10. Use convening power to promote collective solutions to
systemic problems in the industry. The Big 10 have outsized
power to bring business, government and civil society leaders
together. Working with key stakeholders, food and beverage
companies should support collaborative efforts at the local, national
and global levels to address the most pressing challenges.
Governments
Governments bear the responsibility for protecting their citizens rights,
including the rights of male and female small-scale farmers and farm
workers and ensuring that businesses do not violate these rights. This
should be accomplished through comprehensive laws and effective
oversight, consistent with international human rights and labor
conventions, and key principles agreed upon at the Committee on World
Food Security. Governments must ensure that citizens have access to
effective judicial mechanisms to protect their basic rights.
37
2. Support diversified farm systems that take into account the roles of
women and men and avoid creating dependence of smallholders on
one company, through investments that enhance trade in alternative
or local markets, or markets for secondary or complementary
products.
3. Prioritize the needs of small-scale farmers and producers in
developing countries where the biggest gains in productivity and
resilience can be achieved. Develop and implement policies that
guarantee small-scale farmers access to natural resources,
technology and markets, and policies that provide men and women
with equal access.
4. Require robust environmental, social and governance disclosure for
food and beverage (and other agribusiness) firms, especially those
publicly listed on stock exchanges, whether for direct or indirect
agricultural operations.
5. Work with other governments to implement ambitious domestic and
multilateral action to tackle climate change, both through deep
emission reductions and the provision of public finance for
adaptation, especially for small-scale food producers; including
through agreement of a fair, ambitious and legally binding global
agreement on climate change by 2015.
6. Together with industry, develop and foster partnerships with farmers
that:
a. Deliver fair returns that meet national living wage standards and
ensure agricultural workers rights are protected;
b. Ensure fair sharing of risks (production risks due to weather,
pests and other factors affecting harvests) and provide support in
adapting to climate change, timely communication about supply
and demand, flexibility for farmers to respond to changing
conditions, and financial risk management schemes;
c. Set out clear commitments for the company to purchase products
at guaranteed fair prices, with transparent terms of trade, quality
standards and pricing structure, and to maintain a set price for
inputs. A dispute resolution mechanism should be established
that can engage the wider community, beyond the smallholders
directly involved.
Consumers
In the face of such large and powerful companies, many individuals see
themselves as powerless. Yet consumers have enormous power over
food and beverage companies and can exert pressure on them in order
for the food system to change.
38
Consumers can also:
1. Learn more about the Behind the Brands campaign at
behindthebrands.org, and invite friends and family to get involved by
sharing information through social media.
2. Take action on issues by contacting the companies directly to urge
them to provide better conditions for small-scale farmers and
workers in their supply chains.
3. Make changes in how they buy and consume food. Oxfam's GROW
Method suggests five easy ways to make a difference: reducing food
waste, so were making the most of the precious resources that go
into making food; buying products and brands that ensure small-
scale producers in developing countries get a fair deal; cooking
smart, to cut down on wasted water and energy; buying food thats in
season, so cutting down on greenhouse gas emissions; eating less
meat and dairy to reduce both greenhouse gas emissions and water
use.
4. Join the GROW campaign and take action with hundreds of
thousands of other concerned citizens to urge governments,
companies and other powerful institutions to play their part in
creating a more just food system.
39
APPENDIX A
SCORECARD METHODOLOGY
Oxfams Behind the Brands scorecard assesses, scores and ranks food
and beverage companies on their corporate policies and commitments
aimed at taking responsibility for the social and environmental injustices
that lie within their agricultural operations.
Only publicly disclosed policies are considered for the scorecard. Policies
which have not been published are not oriented toward promoting
transparency, a key element of the scorecard and a prerequisite for a just
food system.
Oxfam acknowledges that policies are just a first step toward promoting
socially and environmentally acceptable practices, and many companies
do not actually enforce such policies within their supply chains.
40
APPENDIX B
DECLARATION OF INTEREST: FINANCIAL
AND PROGRAMMATIC TIES BETWEEN
OXFAM AND THE BIG 10
Prior to the launch of the GROW campaign (in 2011) Oxfam already had
relationships with a number of food and beverage companies featured in
Behind the Brands. Oxfam takes a multi-faceted approach to working
with the private sector, including campaigning, collaborations and
fundraising. The nature of any engagement Oxfam undertakes with a
company depends on its goals, the context and the company.
41
NOTES
1 http://www.worldcrunch.com/poisoning-well-nestl-accused-exploiting-water-supplies-
bottled-brands/business-finance/poisoning-the-well-nestl-accused-of-exploiting-water-
supplies-for-bottled-brands/c2s4503/
2 http://www.savingiceland.org/2009/09/plundering-the-amazon/. Purchases were made
by Kraft Italy.
3 http://www.cnn.co.uk/2012/05/01/world/asia/philippines-child-labor/Index.html. In
response, Coke noted the following to Oxfam in 2012: Similarly, while we are not
aware of any instance of child labor in our direct supply chain, the Company
acknowledges that child labor exists in sugar cane fields in Philippines and other
countries around the world. We are working, along with governments, NGOs, civil
society and others, to help address it. We believe the issue requires both a global and
a local approach. By enabling the creation of a school in Bukidnon, The Coca-Cola
Company is providing not only an alternative to working in the fields, but also an
opportunity for the children to get an education so that they have the potential to rise
out of poverty and to enjoy a better future.
4 www.ifad.org/operations/food/farmer.htm
5 FAO (2011), Global food losses and food waste: Extend causes and prevention.
http://www.fao.org/docrep/014/mb060e/mb060e00.pdf
6 www.ifad.org/operations/food/farmer.htm
7 P. Hurst (2007) Agricultural Workers and Their Contribution to Sustainable
Development. A collaborative report by the FAO, International Labor Organization and
the International Union of Food, Agricultural, Hotel, Restaurant, Catering, Tobacco and
Allied Workers Association, http://www.fao-
ilo.org/fileadmin/user_upload/fao_ilo/pdf/engl_agricultureC4163.pdf (last accessed
November 2012).
8 P. Smith and D. Martino (eds.) (2007) Agriculture in B. Metz, O.R. Davidson, P.R.
Bosch, R. Dave and L.A. Meyer (eds) (2007) Climate Change 2007: Mitigation of
Climate Change, Contribution of Working Group III to the Fourth Assessment Report of
the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, Cambridge: Cambridge University
Press, http://www.ipcc.ch/publications_and_data/ar4/wg3/en/ch8.html (last accessed
November 2012).
9 he worlds appetite for biofuels is pushing up global food prices and driving people off
their land, resulting in deeper hunger and malnutrition in poor countries. Nestle,
Unilever and PepsiCo have publically called on world leaders to no longer divert food
for fuel as the demand for biofuels has contributed to food shortages and competition
for land and scarce water, disproportionately affecting the most vulnerable people,
while often having a negative greenhouse gas balance. See:
www.oxfamamerica.org/press/pressreleases/global-food-and-beverage-companies-
call-for-g20-action-on-biofuels-high-food-prices
10 J. Seabrook (2011), Snacks for a fat planet: Pepsi, snack foods and the obesity
epidemic, The New Yorker. See:
http://www.newyorker.com/reporting/2011/05/16/110516fa_fact_seabrook#ixzz2EJ5HS
fof
11 C. Carpenter (2012), Nestls global Nescaf coffee sales equal 4,000 cups a second,
Bloomberg, 7 March at http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2012-03-07/nestle-s-global-
nescafe-coffee-sales-equal-4-000-cups-a-second.html (last accessed November
2012).
12 Coca-Cola. 125 Years of Sharing Happiness: A Short History of the Coca-Cola
Company, p 5.
13 TCC Cocoa Barometer (2010) p.5. www.teacoffeecocoa.org/tcc/Publications/Our-
publications
14 World Bank. Gross Domestic Product 2011. Nestles 2011 revenue was approximately
105 billion USD.
15 Oxfam chose these 10 companies because they had the largest overall revenues
globally. Oxfam also based its choice on the Forbes 2000 annual ranking, which
measures companies size on the basis of composite sales, assets, profits and market
value. However, since the Behind the Brands Scorecard aims to include both public
and private companies, and the Forbes 2000 ranking does not include private
companies, Mars the worlds largest privately owned food and beverage company
is included in the rankings even though it does not appear on the Forbes 2000 list.
42
16 Based upon the Forbes 2000 list at www.forbes.com/global2000/list/. Regarding
revenues (sales without deducting costs), and taking into account 2011 data (excepting
for Mars, as only 2010 data were available), the top 10 food and beverage companies
earn $418.08bn in 2011, which is equivalent to $1.145bn a day.
17 Based on Oxfams internal research of the top 10 F&B companies.
18 The food sector includes traders, grocers and food and beverage companies, among
others. See:
http://www.etcgroup.org/sites/www.etcgroup.org/files/publication/pdf_file/ETC_wwctge_
4web_Dec2011.pdf. See also http://www.imap.com/industries/
19 http://www.etcgroup.org/sites/www.etcgroup.org/files/publication/pdf_file/
ETC_wwctge_4web_Dec2011.pdf.
20 Dow Jones Factiva, M&A Trends in the Food and Drinks Market: In-Depth Analysis
and its Impact on the FMCG Landscape, cited in Food and Beverage Industry Global
Report. The industry made almost $6 trillion in 2008 and is still growing.
http://www.imap.com/imap/media/resources/IMAP_Food__Beverage_Report_WEB_A
D6498A02CAF4.pdf
21 IMF (2012) World Economic Outlook, op. cit.
22 http://www.unilever.com/sustainable-living/ourapproach/messageceo/index.aspx
23 In response to FLAs recommendations, Nestl developed an action plan outlining
three phases of improvement activities to be completed by the end of 2012, 2013 and
2016. In the short-term, Nestl agreed to develop a clear, illustrated guide to its
supplier code by October 2012. Nestl will distribute the guide to more than 20,000
farmers participating in Nestls sustainability initiative, the Nestl Cocoa Plan. The
company also agreed to conduct trainings empowering all employees who deal directly
with farms to look for violations and encourage compliance with the labor code.
Additionally, Nestl agreed that its key suppliers will work with training agencies to fully
incorporate the supplier code into training programs. See:
http://www.fairlabor.org/blog/entry/fla-highlights-underlying-challenges-child-labor-after-
extensive-investigation-nestl%C3%A9
24 See http://blogs.hbr.org/ideacast/2012/05/unilevers-ceo-on-making-respon.html. Paul
Polman, CEO of Unilever, notes: ...we have developed products that are more
relevant in resource scarce environments. We've worked up the supply chain to look at
sustainable sourcing in a different way that is economically very attractive and gives us
less of the shocks and shifts that you've seen in the last few years, especially when it
comes to agriculturally based materials. Take sustainable sourcing for any of our
materials that we look at. Well-managed, sustainable sourcing gives you a high yield
per acre. And as a result, over time, not only do you have sourcing, the cost is down,
the tea bushes last longer, the soil management is more responsible. You work with
the communities around there that you create livelihoods that then buy your products.
25 Food Marketing Institute (2012) Supermarket Facts: Industry Overview 2010,
http://www.fmi.org/research-resources/supermarket-facts (last accessed November
2012).
26 T. Reardon and A. Gulati (2008) The Rise of Supermarkets and Their Development
Implications: International Experience Relevant for India, IFPRI Discussion Paper
00752, p 6, International Food Policy Research Institute,
www.ifpri.org/pubs/dp/ifpridp00752.pdf (last accessed November 2012).
27 Supermarket chains tend to source from medium-sized and large suppliers when they
are available and source from small farmers only indirectly through wholesalers and
processors. These small farmers tend to be well-resourced. See:
http://www.ifpri.org/sites/default/files/pubs/pubs/dp/ifpridp00752.pdf See also T.
Reardon and C.P. Timmer (2007) Transformation of markets for agricultural output in
developing countries since 1950: how has thinking changed?, chapter 13 in R.E.
Evenson, P. Pingali, and T.P. Schultz (eds.) (2006) Handbook of Agricultural
Economics (Vol 3): Agricultural Development: Farmers, Farm Production and Farm
Markets, Amsterdam: Elsevier Press.
28 Odwalla is now owned by Coca-Cola.
29 Stonyfield Organic website, Our extended family, http://www.stonyfield.com/about-
us/our-story-nutshell/our-extended-family (last accessed November 2012). Stonyfield
Organic sold 85 percent of its shares to Danone in 2003.
30 Twinings is now owned by Associated British Foods.
31 Twinings was bought by Associated British Foods in 1964. See Twinings History,
http://www.twiningsusa.com/twinings-heritage.php?id=8 (last accessed November
2012).
43
32 The FAOs Panel of Eminent Experts on Ethics in Food and Agriculture states that
there are serious power imbalances arising from the concentration of economic power
in the hands of a few. Excessive concentration in output markets (trading, processing,
manufacturing and retailing) can work against the interests of the producers, either by
creating barriers to market entry, or by worsening the terms on which they engage in
trade. Concentration among food and beverage companies is a key part of this
problem. See: http://dfid-agriculture-consultation.nri.org/summaries/wp13.pdf. See also
http://www.ukfg.org.uk/docs/UKFG-Foodinc-Nov03.pdf and
http://www.fao.org/docrep/003/X9600E/x9600e05.htm.
33 P. Hurst (2007) op. cit.
34 See: http://canwefeedtheworld.wordpress.com/2012/10/31/fao-releases-new-
conservative-hunger-numbers/. The UN Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO)
defines chronic hunger as people being undernourished because they don't eat
enough to get the energy they need to lead active lives. http://www.fao.org/hunger/en/.
35 P. Smith and D. Martino (eds.) (2007) op. cit.
http://www.ipcc.ch/publications_and_data/ar4/wg3/en/ch8.html (last accessed
November 2012).
36 S. Mintz (1986) Sweetness and Power: The Place of Sugar in Modern History, Penguin
Books.
37 K. F. Kiple and K. C. Ornelas (eds.) (2000) The Cambridge World History of Food,
section II.E.3 Palm Oil, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Unilever
established plantations with its subsidiary United Africa Company. Unilever noted in an
e-mail to Oxfam: Unilever no longer owns any of these plantations and they have all
been disposed of. Our West African palm oil plantations were sold some 3-5 years ago.
Many of the buyers of these plantations view these businesses as contributing
positively to the local community, benefiting productivity and generating employment.
38 An example of this is contested land redistributed during the rule of Malawis former
President, Hastings Banda.
39 K. Izumi (1999) Liberalisation, gender and the land question in sub-Saharan Africa,
Gender & Development, 7(3): 918. Special issue, Women, Land and Agriculture.
40 The 2008 spike in food prices is widely recognized as having triggered a surge in
investor interest in land: from mid-2008 to 2009 reported agricultural land deals by
foreign investors in developing countries rocketed by around 200 per cent. The main
drivers for the surge in land investment are the predicted medium and long-term
increasing food prices, the increasing global demand for food and animal feed stock,
the increased demand for biofuels, and carbon-trading mechanisms that place a
commercial value on standing forests and rangelands. http://www.landcoalition.org/cpl
41 http://landportal.info/landmatrix
42 Article about the International Food Research and Policy Institutes 2012 Global
Hunger Scorecard found on http://www.irinnews.org/Report/96521/FOOD-Land-
grabbing-linked-with-hunger
43 W. Anseeuw, et al (2012) Transnational Land Deals for Agriculture in the Global South.
Analytical Report Based on the Land Matrix Database, CDE/CIRAD/GIGA as cited in
K. Geary (2012) Our Land Our Lives, http://oxf.am/Jtx.
44 J. Vidal (2012) Land acquired over past decade could have produced food for a billion
people, the Guardian, 4 October, http://www.guardian.co.uk/global-
development/2012/oct/04/land-deals-preventing-food-production (last accessed
November 2012), citing K. Geary (2012) Our Land, Our Lives op. cit.
45 The Tirana declaration of the International Land Coalition defines large-scale land
acquisition as land grabs when they do one or more of the following: violate human
rights, particularly the equal rights of women; flout the principle of free, prior and
informed consent (FPIC) for affected communities ; they are not based on a thorough
assessment of, or disregard, social, economic and environmental impacts, including
the way they are gendered; avoid transparent contracts with clear and binding
commitments on employment and benefit-sharing; and/or they eschew democratic
planning, independent oversight and meaningful participation.
http://www.landcoalition.org/about-us/aom2011/tirana-declaration
46 Unilever (and Wilmar) are members of the Roundtable on Sustainable Palm Oil
(RSPO), whose mission includes the responsible consideration ofcommunities
affected by growers and mills). See: http://www.rainforest-rescue.org/press-
releases/4030/unilever-indifferent-to-victims-of-palm-oil-business.
47 https://www.rainforest-rescue.org/mailalert/747/the-bloody-products-from-the-house-of-
unilever
44
48 http://www.un.org/waterforlifedecade/scarcity.shtml
49 http://www.unwater.org/statistics_use.html
50 http://www.unwater.org/statistics_pollu.html
51 C. Off (2008) Bitter Chocolate: The Dark Side of the Worlds Most Seductive Sweet,
New Press. Also Agricultural Society of Trinidad, Proceedings 1907. Page 305.
Archived online at Google Books. Cadbury was one of the first companies to be
concerned with allegations of using forced labor and investigated the supply chain on
their own in the early 1900s. Also Anti-Slavery International (2004) The Cocoa Industry
in West Africa: A History of Exploitation, p. 5,
www.antislavery.org/includes/documents/cm_docs/2008/c/cocoa_report_2004.pdf
52 Anti-Slavery International (2004) op. cit.
53 Ibid
54 http://www.fairtrade.org.uk/press_office/cadburys_announcement_your_comments.aspx
55 See: http://transcurrents.com/news-views/archives/7375 (last accessed November
2012)
56 http://www.unilever.ca/brands/foodbrands/lipton_tea.aspx
57 Plantation Community in Nuwara Eliya District in Sri Lanka at
kamome.lib.ynu.ac.jp/dspace/bitstream/10131/7426/1/7-Kurihara.pdf
58 http://www.unilever.com/brands-in-action/detail/Lipton/292025/
59 http://somo.nl/news-en/precarious-work-in-certified-tea-production-for-unilever
60 In correspondence with Oxfam, Unilever states otherwise, declaring that:The
Rainforest Alliance program has led to improved conditions for tea smallholders and
workers of the tea estates and impact assessment have pointed to higher yields and
improved profitability for farmers and workers, improved understanding of fertilizers
and agrochemical use.
61 ILO/FAO (2012) Decent Employment for Agricultural and Rural Development and
Poverty Reduction, http://www.fao-ilo.org/ilo-dec-employ/en/?no_cache=1 (last
accessed November 2012). See also: P. Hurst (2007) op. cit. , p. 20,
62 http://somo.nl/news-en/precarious-work-in-certified-tea-production-for-unilever
63 See: http://www.unilever.com/sustainable-
living/news/news/ResponseToReportBySOMO.aspx and http://www.business-
humanrights.org/media/documents/company_responses/updated-response-unilever-
17-april-2012.pdf
64 Nestl invited Fair Labor Association to conduct the assessment and mapping of its
cocoa supply chain.
65 D. Doherty and S. James (2012) Nestl audit finds child labor violations in cocoalabor
supply, Bloomberg News, 29 June, http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2012-06-29/nestle-
must-address-child-labor-in-cocoa-supply-fla-says.html (last accessed November 2012).
66 Ibid.
67 See footnote 19.
68 Comisso Pastoral da Terra CPT, and Ministrio do Trabalho e Emprego, MTE. The
US Department of States Labor Trafficking in Persons Report 2012 (Brazil) also
reported that thousands of Brazilian men are subjected to trabalho escravo [slave
labor] within the country, often on cattle ranches, logging and mining camps, sugar-
cane plantations, and large farms producing corn, cotton, soy and charcoal.
http://www.state.gov/j/tip/rls/tiprpt/2012/192366.htm (last accessed November 2012).
69 International Food Research and Policy Institute. Global Food Index 2012. Article
found at http://www.ifpri.org/ghi/2012/centrality-land-water-energy-smallholders.
70 Xinhua, Chinese Milk Farmers Say Nestle Pocket Their Pay, 24 October 2011, at
news.xinhuanet.com/english2010/china/2011-10/24/c_131210122.htm (8 May 2012)
and http://news.xinhuanet.com/fortune/2011-10/23/c_111117450.htm (12 Nov 2012)
71 Xinhua, Nestle Promises Improvements After Allegations, 26 October 2011,
http://www.china.org.cn/china/2011-10/26/content_23735336.htm
72 A. Otikula and J. Solotaroff (2006) Gender Analysis of Labor in Sri Lankas Estate
Sector, World Bank publication, p.7. See also: A. Wickramasinghe and D. Cameron
(2005) Human and Social Capital in the Sri Lankan Tea Plantations: A Note of
dissent, Culture beyond Universal and National Cultural Dimensions p. 10
http://www.mngt.waikato.ac.nz/ejrot/cmsconference/2005/proceedings/strategy/Wickra
masinghe.pdf
45
73 E. Boserup (1970) Loss of status under European rule, in Womens Role in Economic
Development, Chapter 3, London: Earthscan Publications, pp 5365. European
settlers, colonial administrators and technical advisors are largely responsible for the
deterioration in the status of women in the agricultural sectors of developing nations. It
was they who neglected the female agricultural labor force when they helped to
introduce modern commercial agriculture to the overseas world and promoted the
productivity of male labor.
74 Ibid.
75 P. O. Ndege (1992) The Colonial State, Capital, Patriarchy and the Subordination of
Women Traders in Western Kenya, Research Paper 9226, Department of History and
Regional Research Institute, West Virginia University. As the years wore on [women]
would eventually even lose their position as owners, occupants and managers of
property.
76 International Labor Organization (ILO) (2009) Global Employment Trends for Women
2009, Geneva: ILO
77 See: SOFA Team & Cheryl Doss (2011).The role of women in agriculture, ESA
Working Paper No. 11-02, FAO publication, p. 2
http://www.fao.org/docrep/013/am307e/am307e00.pdf
78 For example, in cocoa supply chains, see: UTZ CERTIFIED, Solidaridad and Oxfam
Novib (2009) The role of certification and producer support in promoting gender
equality in cocoa production, p.5
http://api.ning.com/files/zKGtTtKz5rpxD*9tNGabeaIhAHvB1Cbk6qH*Ixh145eMOdc22y
2DNq61l5eDFpNh0pMTu0Zw-
E64DPQ*GqKljLtemFTJJV7H/CocoaGenderreport_UTZSolidaridad.pdf
79 http://www.mars.com/global/about-mars/mars-pia/our-approach-to-business/climate-
change.aspx
80 Environmental Protection Agency, US Government,
http://epa.gov/climatechange/ghgemissions/global.html Agricultural activities accounted
for 14 percent of 2004 emissions, land use change was 17 percent of emissions,
including deforestation and land clearing due to agriculture, and transportation. Also,
food production accounts for up to 29 per cent of man-made greenhouse gases, twice
the amount the United Nations has estimated comes from farming, from CGIAR report
Climate Change and Food Systems
81 A. Eitzinger, K. Sonder and A. Schmidt (2012) Tortillas on the Roaster: Central
American Maize-Bean Systems and the Changing Climate, Catholic Relief Services,
International Center for Tropical Agriculture and International Center for Improvement
of Maize and Wheat, http://www.crsprogramquality.org/storage/pubs/agenv/climate-
change-maize-beans-summary.pdf
82 IFRPI, Global Food Index, p. 31,
http://www.ifpri.org/sites/default/files/publications/ghi12.pdf
83 Palm oil is especially emblematic of this trend. See:
http://worldwildlife.org/industries/palm-oil Accessed 22 November 2012
84 http://www.gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/PLAW-111publ203/html/PLAW-111publ203.htm
85 http://nikeinc.com/pages/manufacturing-map
86 Carbon Disclosure Project, Collective responses to rising water challenges,
https://www.cdproject.net/en-US/Pages/HomePage.aspx (last accessed November
2012).
87 Global Reporting Initiative, https://www.globalreporting.org/Pages/default.aspx (last
accessed November 2012).
88 For example, the GRI does not require food and beverage companies to provide
comprehensive information on the social impacts of agricultural operations. Similar
gaps can be found across other sectors.
89 The UN Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights represent the culmination
of various initiatives aimed at defining the human rights responsibilities of corporations.
They are supported by the OECD Guidelines on Multinational Enterprises, the ILO
Tripartite Declaration on Multinational Enterprises and Social Policy, the UN Global
Compact, the European Union Strategy for Corporate Social Responsibility, the
International Finance Corporation Performance Standards, and various multi-
stakeholder and industry initiatives, all reinforcing the basic principle that corporations
must not infringe human rights including labour rights, non-discrimination, and rights
to health, water and food.. See: J. Ruggie (2012) The Corporate Responsibility to
respect Human Rights, United Nations publication p. 1, see
http://www.ohchr.org/Documents/Publications/HR.PUB.12.2_En.pdf. There are three
46
core principles: The first is the State duty to protect against human rights abuses by
third parties, including business enterprises, through appropriate policies, regulation,
and adjudication. The second is the corporate responsibility to respect human rights,
which means that business enterprises should act with due diligence to avoid infringing
on the rights of others and to address adverse impacts with which they are involved.
The third is the need for greater access by victims to effective remedy, both judicial and
non-judicial.
90 UN News Centre (2011) UN Human Rights Council endorses principles to ensure
businesses respect human rights, 16 June,
http://www.un.org/apps/news/story.asp?NewsID=38742&Cr=human+rights&Cr1 (last
accessed November 2012).
91 http://www.ihrb.org/commentary/board/
building_on_landmark_year_and_thinking_ahead.html
92 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Harvey_Kellogg
93 http://www.danone.com/en/press-releases/cp-mai-2009.html
94 http://www.livepositively.com/
95 http://www.rspo.org/en/member/662
96 http://www.abf.co.uk/documents/pdfs/2010/2010_corporate_responsibility_report.pdf
97 See: http://twinings.co.uk/media/173171/two_code_of_conduct.pdf
98 Unilever Sustainable Living Plan Progress Report 2011, p. 35. However, Unilever has
not provided details regarding how this will be implemented and how many
stakeholders they are already engaging with in this way (the baseline).
99 See: http://www.nestle.com/CSV
100 http://www.generalmills.com/Media/NewsReleases/Library/2012/April/
CSRReport.aspx?p=1
101 http://www.ifpri.org/ghi/2012/sustainable-food-security-under-land-water-energy-
stresses
102 The UN Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD) notes that commodity
speculation results in negative effects for producers and consumers alike. See:
http://unctad.org/en/Docs/gds20111_en.pdf
103 A. Gerrie (2010), Chocolate: worth its weight in gold?,The Independent, 8 November,
http://www.independent.co.uk/life-style/food-and-drink/features/chocolate-worth-its-
weight-in-gold-2127874.html
104 The New York Times (2012) Thai youth seek a fortune away from the farm, 4 June,
http://www.nytimes.com/2012/06/05/world/asia/thai-youth-seek-a-fortune-off-the-
farm.html?pagewanted=2&_r=5&smid=tw-share. (Last accessed November 2012).
105 Banana Link (2012) Social problems: working conditions,
http://www.bananalink.org.uk/node/7 (last accessed November 2012).
106 Compliance Advisor Ombudsman, Resolving land disputes in the palm oil sector
through collaborative mediation. October 2009. Accessed December 2012 at:
http://www.cao-ombudsman.org/cases/document-
links/documents/Wilmar_Conclusionreport-Oct09.pdf
107 National Council for Rural Consultation and Cooperation and ROPPA (Network of
West-African Farmers and Producers Organizations) International Forum November
2022, 2012. Family Farms Constitute the Primary Food and Wealth Suppliers in West
Africa. Last accessed December 2012 at
http://viacampesina.org/downloads/pdf/en/final-statement-forum-dakar-cncr.pdf
108 N. Exeter and S. Cunha (2011) The Business Case for Being a Responsible Business
Business in the Community, March,
http://www.bitc.org.uk/resources/publications/the_business_case.html (last accessed 8
December), p 4;
A.B. Carroll and K. N. Shabana (2010) The Business Case for Corporate Social
Responsibility: A Review of Concepts, Research and Practice, International Journal of
Management Reviews, vol 12:1, 15 January 2010,
http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/j.1468-2370.2009.00275.x/pdf (last accessed
December 2012), p 97.
109 Oxfam America, Exploring the links between international business and poverty
reduction (2011). See: http://www.oxfamamerica.org/publications/exploring-the-links-
between-international-business-and-poverty-reduction
47
110 N. Exeter and S. Cunha (2011) op. cit. , p 15; See also: A.B. Carroll and K. N. Shabana
(2010) op. cit. , p 98.
111 C. Alphonsus (2012) Making a business case of corporate sustainability, Green
Purchasing Asia, issue 11, April 2012, http://www.laverypennell.com/wp-
content/uploads/2012/04/120401-Green-Purchasing-Asia.pdf (last accessed 8
December), p 17; G. Heyns (2012) Companies that Invest Sustainably Do Better
Financially Bloomberg, 20 September 2012, http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2012-
09-21/companies-that-invest-in-sustainability-do-better-financially.html (last accessed 8
December); See also: R. G. Eccles, I. Ioannou and G. Serafeim (2011) The Impact of
a Corporate Culture of Sustainability on Corporate Behavior and Performance Harvard
Business School, Working Paper no. 12035, 25 November 2011, p 67.
112 A Brief History of Doing Well by Doing Good - Harvard Business Review (video) at
http://blogs.hbr.org/video/2012/06/a-brief-history-of-doing-well.html
113 M. E. Porter and M. R. Kramer (2011) Creating Shared Value Harvard Business
Review, January 2011, http://hbr.org/2011/01/the-big-idea-creating-shared-
value/ar/1?conversationId=3185714 (last accessed 8 December). The company
chairman of Nestle, Peter Brabeck-Letmathe, recently remarked, We came to the
conclusion that, in the area of nutrition, of water, and of rural development, this
Creating Shared Value concept would be optimally utilized, and thats why we are
concentrating there.
114 http://ussif.org/resources/pubs/documents/USSIFTrends2012ES.pdf at page 11.
115 Ibid. Page 13.
116 Investor Network on Climate Risk, Shareholder resolutions: Kraft Sustainable Forestry
2012, http://www.ceres.org/incr/engagement/corporate-dialogues/shareholder-
resolutions/kraft-sustainable-forestry-2012 (last accessed November 2012). In 2009,
Kraft was accused of purchasing beef linked to Amazon deforestation through its
Brazilian suppliers Bertin (subsequently acquired by JBS) and directly from JBS, the
worlds biggest meat company. See
http://www.greenpeace.org/international/Global/international/planet-
2/binaries/2009/7/slaughtering-the-amazon-part2.pdf and
http://www.savingiceland.org/2009/09/plundering-the-amazon/.
117 A Nielsen Report. The Global, Socially-Conscious Consumer, March 2012. A similar
study in Indonesia found consumers were also willing to pay more for tea that improved
farmer welfare. Research Team of Business Watch Indonesia. Quantitative Research
Individual Tea Consumers, 2010.
118 http://www.oxfam.org/en/grow/policy/food-transformation
119 Oxfam, Global Urban Mothers Intelligence Regional Summary, February 2011,
InVision Research Base: 1,0007,000 online respondents per country aged 1664
(China 1654), 2010. Also, see Oxfam (2012) Mothers want to help fix our broken food
system, http://www.oxfam.org/en/grow/pressroom/pressrelease/2012-07-18/mothers-
want-help-fix-our-broken-food-system (last accessed November 2012).
120 http://www.oxfam.org/en/grow/policy/food-transformation
121 This is an increase from 68.7% of respondents in 2009. See: Ruder Finn and Media
Survey Lab, Tsinghua University. Ethical Consumption of Fast Moving Consumer
Goods, 20092010
122 Weber Shandwick (2012) Seventy percent of consumers avoid products if they dislike
parent company, Weber Shandwick survey finds,
http://www.webershandwick.com/Default.aspx/AboutUs/PressReleases/2012/Seventy
PercentofConsumersAvoidProductsIfTheyDislikeParentCompanyWeberShandwickSur
veyFinds (last accessed November 2012).
123 http://www.fairtrade.net/single_view1.html?&cHash=66a761f0ab9353f5965eba91d39a
2c55&tx_ttnews%5Btt_news%5D=312
124 Equal Exchange. Company Statistics & Financial Data
http://www.equalexchange.coop/fast-facts
125 http://www.fairtrade.net/fileadmin/user_upload/content/2009/about_us/FLO_Annual-
Financials-Sales_2010.pdf
126 Banana Link (2012) Ecuador government legislates in face of mounting pressures, 27
September, http://bananalink.org.uk/ecuador-government-legislates-face-mounting-
pressures (last accessed November 2012).
127 Reuters, Insight: At Nestle, Interacting with the Online Enemy.
http://www.reuters.com/article/2012/10/26/us-nestle-online-water-
idusbre89p07s20121026. (last accessed November 2012)
48
128 Most of the policies Oxfam has suggested for upstream agricultural sourcing are
related to their (responsible) supply chain policies. Even a company with relatively
large direct sourcing like Nestl sources 90 percent of its raw agricultural materials
from suppliers. For companies like Coca-Cola it is close to 100 percent.
129 FAO (2011) The State of Food and Agriculture 201011 Women in Agriculture:
Closing the Gender Gap for Development,
http://www.fao.org/docrep/013/i2050e/i2050e00.htm
130 National Institute of Statistics, Cameroon, cited in Cameroon: Giving Women Land,
Giving Them a Future, IPS.
131 See: https://blogs.oxfam.org/en/blogs/seeds-and-sisterhood. See also:
http://www.gatesfoundation.org/learning/Documents/gender-value-chain-exec-
summary.pdf
132 IAASTD (2008) Agriculture at a crossroads, International assessment of agricultural
knowledge, science and technology for development. Washington DC: IAASTD.
133 www.ifad.org/operations/food/farmer.htm
134 http://www.iied.org/can-small-scale-farmers-feed-world
135 http://www.srfood.org/index.php/en/component/content/article/1174-report-
agroecology-and-the-right-to-food
136 See:
http://www.ilo.org/wcmsp5/groups/public/@dgreports/@dcomm/@publ/documents/publ
ication/wcms_155428.pdf
137 ILO (2012) Agriculture; plantations; other rural sectors,
http://www.ilo.org/global/industries-and-sectors/agriculture-plantations-other-rural-
sectors/lang--en/index.htm (last accessed November 2012).
138 http://www.oxfam.org/policy/people-centered-resilience
139 Climate Change and Food Systems. Annual Review of Environment and Resources.
Vol. 37: 195-222 (Volume publication date November 2012)
140 The number of reported land deals by foreign investors in agriculture in the global
South increased from around 35 in mid-2008 to 105 in mid-2009. See K. Geary (2012)
op. cit.
141 http://www.unwater.org/statistics_use.html
142 http://www.unwater.org/statistics_sec.html.
143 http://www.unglobalcompact.org/issues/environment/ceo_water_mandate/
144 For example, Unilever and Nestl have not: committed to ensuring land tenure security
for impacted security, committed to free, prior and informed consent for all communities
(or only affected communities), declared zero tolerance for land grabbing in company
operations, subjected all agricultural activities to free, prior and informed consent for all
land rights users or included a stop land grab clause in their supplier code.
145 Unilever has communicated to Oxfam that: One of the elements in our Sustainable
Agriculture code is that all of our suppliers must provide us with proof of their land
ownership, so that we know its not in dispute. We have been supporting calls for
action on this issue at an international level through the G20 (we co-chaired the Food
Security Working Group) and were also supporting the FAOs Committee on World
Food Security (CFS) voluntary guidelines on land tenure.
146 http://kelloggcorporateresponsibility.com/sustainable-agriculture/supporting-
community-development
147 http://www.sucre-ethique.org/IMG/pdf/Sugarcane_and_the_Global_Land_Grab-2-2.pdf
148 http://www.generalmills.com/Home/Responsibility/Sourcing/palm_oil_statement.aspx
149 Kellogg Company 2011 Corporate Responsibility Report, p. 96
http://www.kelloggcorporateresponsibility.com/pdfs/2011_Kelloggs_CRR.pdf
150 Oxfam is also a member of the RSPO. Oxfam believes that working within the RSPO,
despite the challenges, can help to create meaningful change in palm oil production
worldwide.
151 See Responsible Sourcing Guidelines: Framework for Forest-based materials at
http://www.nestle.com/asset-library/Documents/Media/Statements/2012-
October/Nestl%C3%A9%20Responsible%20Sourcing%20Guidelines%20for%20Fores
t-based%20Materials%20October%202012.pdf. This commitment for free, prior and
informed consent is for forest-based materials, including soy and palm oil.
49
152 Much of this progress can be tracked with 7 out of the 10 companies disclosing
information through the CDP Water Program for the last two years
https://www.cdproject.net/CDPResults/CDP-Water-Disclosure-Global-Report-2012.pdf;
https://www.cdproject.net/CDPResults/CDP-Water-Disclosure-Global-Report-2011.pdf.
In 2013, water will be added to CDPs supply chain program and companies are just
beginning to acknowledge indirect supply chain responsibility around water
management. See www.cdproject.net/water.
153 The Coca-Cola Company, The Water Stewardship and Replenish Report 2012 pg
1214
154 http://www.pepsico.com/Download/PepsiCo_Water_Report_FNL.pdf pg 3. Unilever
conducts social impact studies in water-scarce areas but does not have a policy in
place requiring community consultation on plans to develop water resources. See:
http://www.unilever.com/sustainable-living/water/reducingwateruseinmanufacturing/
155 Nestle (2012) Water: supply chain initiatives,
http://www.nestle.com/csv/water/supplychain/SupplyChainInitiatives/Pages/SupplyChai
nInitiatives.aspx (last accessed November 2012).
156 Based on the documentary, Bottled Life The Truth about Nestl's Business with
Water by Swiss filmmaker Urs Schnell and journalist Res Gehriger, December 2011.
See <http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=czfSwjx4yYA>
157 http://www.nestle.pk/brands/bottledwater/Pages/purelife.aspx
158 http://kinzulemaan.blogspot.hk/2011/06/marketing-strategy-of-nestle-nestle.html
159 http://www.bottledlifefilm.com/index.php/the-story.html
160 http://www.worldcrunch.com/poisoning-well-nestl-accused-exploiting-water-supplies-
bottled-brands/business-finance/poisoning-the-well-nestl-accused-of-exploiting-water-
supplies-for-bottled-brands/c2s4503/
161 www.nestle-waters.com/bottledlife.
162 www.nestle-waters.com/bottledlife. See also : http://www.worldcrunch.com/poisoning-
well-nestl-accused-exploiting-water-supplies-bottled-brands/business-
finance/poisoning-the-well-nestl-accused-of-exploiting-water-supplies-for-bottled-
brands/c2s4503/
163 http://www.ilo.org/ipec/projects/global/tackle/madagascar/lang--en/index.htm
164 SOMO, Unilever overview of controversial practices 2010, May 2011,
somo.nl/publications-en/Publication_3653/at_download/fullfile (19 July 2012) p. 6
165 In communications with Oxfam in 2012, Unilever stated that Symrise, a major German
fragrance and flavour producer, commissioned an independent report and found no
incidences of child labor in their supply chain.
166 SOMO, Unilever overview of controversial practices 2010, May 2011,
somo.nl/publications-en/Publication_3653/at_download/fullfile (19 July 2012) p. 6.
167 For example, see Unilever Sustainable Living Plan Progress Report (2011), Nestl
Creating Shared Value Report (2011), http://www.mars.com/global/about-mars/mars-
pia/our-supply-chain/cocoa.aspx and
http://www.mondelezinternational.com/DeliciousWorld/sustainability/coffeemadehappy.
aspx
168 The Womens Empowerment Principles were developed by the United Nations
Development Fund for Women (UNIFEM, part of UN Women) and the United Nations
Global Compact. The principles set out the business case for corporate action to
promote gender equality and women's empowerment, highlighting cases of best
practice. See United Nations Global Compact, Equality means business,
http://www.unglobalcompact.org/issues/human_rights/equality_means_business.html
(last accessed November 2012).
169 According to its website, WEConnect International, a corporate led non-profit,
facilitates inclusive, sustainable economic growth by empowering and connecting
women business owners globally. WEConnect identifies, educates, registers, and
certifies women's business enterprises that are at least 51% owned, managed, and
controlled by one or more women. WEConnect is making history by connecting women
business owners to our corporate members that collectively represent over US$700
billion in annual purchasing power. See: http://www.weconnectinternational.org/
170 Oxfam solicited feedback from the top 10 companies by providing its own assessment
of company policies and asking companies to provide feedback and their own data on
publicly available policies that would improve upon Oxfams own assessment. Multiple
opportunities were provided to companies to respond to Oxfams feedback in order to
ensure accuracy.
50
171 http://www.actionaid.org.uk/doc_lib/48_1_competition_policy_wto.pdf
172 The failure to enforce existing laws that directly or indirectly regulate business respect
for human rights is often a significant legal gap in state practice. Such laws might range
from non-discrimination and labour laws to environmental, property, privacy and anti-
bribery laws. It is important for states to consider whether such laws are currently being
enforced effectively, and if not, why this is the case and what measures may
reasonably correct the situation. Guiding Principles for Business and Human Rights,
UN Human Rights Council, pg.8:
http://www.ohchr.org/documents/issues/business/A.HRC.17.31.pdf
173 S. Murphy et al. (2012) Cereal Secrets: The World's Largest Grain Traders and Global
Agriculture, Oxford: Oxfam International, http://www.oxfam.org/en/grow/policy/cereal-
secrets-worlds-largest-grain-traders-global-agriculture (last accessed November 2012).
174 Power hungry: six reasons to regulate global food corporations, Action Aid International
p. 4. See http://www.actionaid.org.uk/_content/documents/power_hungry.pdf
175 S. Murphy et al. (2012) op. cit. This includes Glencore speculating on wheat prices,
Bunge charged by the CFTC for manipulating trading in derivatives markets, plus less
related to food are accusations of Dreyfus and cotton markets and ADM and lysine
price fixing.
176 http://www.landcoalition.org/about-us/aom2011/tirana-declaration
177 For relevant ILO conventions, see: http://www.ilo.org/global/standards/introduction-to-
international-labour-standards/conventions-and-recommendations/lang--en/index.htm
178 http://policy-practice.oxfam.org.uk/publications/exploring-the-links-between-
international-business-and-poverty-reduction-a-case-112492
179 http://www.oxfamamerica.org/files/coca-cola-sab-miller-poverty-footprint-dec-2011.pdf
51
Oxfam International February 2013
This paper was written by Beth Hoffman. Oxfam acknowledges the assistance in
its production of Shen Narayanasamy, Andrea Maksimovic, and Rohit Malpani,
as well as numerous Oxfam staff members and external contributors. It is part of
a series of papers written to inform public debate on development and
humanitarian policy issues.
For further information on the issues raised in this paper please e-mail
[email protected]
This publication is copyright but the text may be used free of charge for the
purposes of advocacy, campaigning, education, and research, provided that the
source is acknowledged in full. The copyright holder requests that all such use
be registered with them for impact assessment purposes. For copying in any
other circumstances, or for re-use in other publications, or for translation or
adaptation, permission must be secured and a fee may be charged. E-mail
[email protected].
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