1 / 15

Chiquita & Fresh Express

Chiquita & Fresh Express. Corporate Social Responsibility. 2009. Our Company. International producer and marketer of high-quality fresh and value-added produce 106-year-old company $4.5 billion in annualized revenues Premium brand Healthy, convenient, high-quality, fresh

taite
Download Presentation

Chiquita & Fresh Express

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Chiquita & Fresh Express Corporate Social Responsibility 2009

  2. Our Company • International producer and marketer of high-quality fresh and value-added produce • 106-year-old company • $4.5 billion in annualized revenues • Premium brand • Healthy, convenient, high-quality, fresh • Operations in more than 60 countries • 25,000 employees worldwide • More than 14,000 farm workers, about two-thirds unionized • June 2005 acquisition of Fresh Express,U.S. market leader of packaged salads

  3. Corporate Responsibility – Part of Our Core Values Integrity Respect Responsibility Opportunity • Chiquita® Core Values

  4. Our Definition of Corporate Responsibility Integrity Respect Responsibility Opportunity • At Chiquita, we define corporate responsibility to include social responsibilities, such as respect for the environment and the communities where we do business, the health and safety of our workers, labor rights and food safety.

  5. Core Values * Code of Conduct * Standards Chiquita is the Industry Leader in Corporate Social Responsibility Food Safety Environmental Labor Certification to Leading Standards • 9 measurable and verifiable standards • Environmental and social • Tailored to address industry issues • Third-party Certification • Annual recertification farm by farm • Continuous improvement • 100% Owned; 96% AP’s certified • Credible and verifiable • Based on core International Labor Organization and other human rights standards • Multi-stakeholder supported • Management systems • External verification • Continuous Improvement • 100% Owned; 14% AP’s certified • Minimum standards acceptable to leading European retailers • Food Safety • Environmental stewardship • Reduced use of agrichemicals • Worker health and safety • Traceability • Record keeping and documentation; evidence of good practices • Third-party certification • 100% Owned; 56% AP’s certified

  6. Independent, Verifiable, CredibleHigh Standards of Corporate Responsibility • Environmental: Rainforest Alliance • 10 measurable and verifiable environmental and social standards for sustainable banana production • Measures performance from biodiversity, water and soil conservation to integrated pest and waste management • Validated by Conservation International and Tropical Science Center • Annual certification audits of each farm by independent conservation groups to ensure continued compliance • Social, Labor and Human Rights: Social Accountability 8000 • Based on core International Labor Organization and UN human rights conventions • Similar to Ethical Trading Initiative Base Code • External verification and certification by accredited auditors • Food Safety: EUREPGAP • Standards and procedures for good agricultural practices in fresh produce production

  7. Rainforest AllianceEnvironmental Certification • Rainforest Alliance certification: Much more than a management system - a real performance standard • 100% of bananas from owned farms certified annually since 2000 • 93% of purchased bananas certified in 2005, up from 33% in 2001 • Chiquita uses only the least-toxic agrichemicals necessary for quality banana production and only products approved for use by the EPA and the European Union "The Rainforest Alliance and associated members of the Sustainable Agriculture Network have been auditing Chiquita farms for more than ten years. We have seen remarkable progress toward more eco-friendly production and healthier working and living conditions. … We once again assessed all of the farms against our rigorous standards. Many of the audits were done without warning the farm managers in advance. I am pleased to report that all of the 115 farms were once again recertified.“ Tensie Whelan Executive Director Rainforest Alliance

  8. Rainforest AllianceEnvironmental Certification - Benefits • Environmental benefits of RA certification • Reforestation conserves water and soils – more than 1 million trees planted • Groundcover reduces herbicide use • Better storage and closed systems to avoid agrichemical runoff and improve safety • Improved waste management reduces pollution

  9. SA8000Social, Labor, Human Rights Certification • All of our farm employees now work at SA8000-certified operations • 100% of bananas from owned farms are SA8000-certified • Costa Rica (2002), Panama (2003), Honduras and Guatemala (2004) • 14% of bananas from independent growers are certified • Colombia farms certified prior to sale in 2004 • Chiquita farms were the first-ever to achieve SA8000 certification in each of these countries “Chiquita continues to impress. The transparency of its corporate responsibility reporting and the use of highly respected independent observers…is a track record which is unmatched in our work in Latin America. While the road is long, Chiquita has traveled far in a few short years.” Stephen Coats Executive Director U.S./LEAP

  10. IUF/COLSIBA/ChiquitaLabor Engagement • Landmark IUF-COLSIBA-Chiquita Agreement signed June 14, 2001 • Based on core ILO conventions • Collaboration on worker health and safety • Fair dealing and continuous improvement • Negotiate in good faith • Communicate in open, honest and straightforward manner • Avoid public international campaigns or anti-union retaliatory tactics • Committee to review serious or systemic violations “We have seen real progress as a result of the Agreement in a number of Chiquita operations. … I remain impressed with the good faith and serious intent Chiquita has brought to this process.” Ron Oswald General Secretary International Union of Foodworkers

  11. EurepGAPFood-Safety Certification • Added assurance of product safety and quality through risk-based food-safety standards of the Euro-Retailer Produce Working Group • 100% of bananas from owned farms are EUREPGAP-certified • 56% of bananas from independent growers are certified (2005) “Chiquita is a trailblazer, and I truly hope others will follow down the path toward sustainability.” Deborah Kane Executive Director Food Alliance

  12. Opened in Costa Rica in 2004 with Swiss retailer Migros and the Rainforest Alliance In 2005, GTZ, a German sustainable development organization, made a sizable commitment to expand In early 2006, Costa Rican government awarded Nogal official wildlife refuge status Research & Projects • With Clean Cargo Working Group, developed new environmental performance measurement tool to gauge the impact manufacturers, retailers and shippers make when moving goods by sea • Food and Agriculture Working Group addressing sustainable agriculture issues • August 2005: six-year agreement with World Wildlife Fund to reduce environmental impacts caused by commercial agriculture in Honduras & Guatemala • Evaluate current agricultural practices to reduce negative downstream impacts of banana & pineapple production on Mesoamerican Caribbean Reef

  13. Research & Projects • EPA SmartWay – Chiquita-Fresh Express North American Logistics Group has recently joined the EPA program SmartWay, as a full-participation member dedicated to decreasing GHG and air pollution • Recycling and Reuse – We are actively pursuing recycling and plastics reuse programs. (E.g., Fresh Express West Plant is recipient of local Mayor’s award for environmental stewardship; recycles vegetable waste; acts as model for other facilities) • Water Management – Companywide working group is actively engaged in water management strategies throughout our facilities (E.g., Fresh Express HQ already testing to waterless urinals each with a savings of 40,000 gallons of water per year)

  14. Timeline of Key Corporate Responsibility EventsContinuous Improvement Yields Significant Accomplishments 1992 2000 2002 2003 2005 Rainforest Alliance Engagement Code of Conduct(SA8000) CR Officer 1st internal audits 100% RA Certification CERES-ACCA Sustainability Reporting Award SAI Advisory Board; Corporate Conscience Award SA8000 in Colombia and Panama EurepGAP in Colombia, Panama and Costa Rica 100% EurepGAP certification KLD’s Domini 400 Social Index Chiquita / RA campaign in Europe WWF Agreement on Mesoamerican Reef Italian Ethic Award; Swiss Ethics Finalist 2nd internal audit with observers ETI member Worker training Top 20 Sustainable Stock Picks (SB20) SA8000 in Costa Rica BSR Board 1998 Steering Committee Created 1999 2006 Core Values 3rd-party pilot audits 2001 2004 Nogal Named Official Wildlife Refuge Contribution to Community Award from AmCham (Costa Rica) IUF / COLSIBA Agreement 1st CR Report OAS Corporate Citizen of the Americas Award 100% SA8000 certification

  15. Corporate Social ResponsibilityAn Integral Part of Our Global Business Strategy Integrity Respect Responsibility Opportunity • Respect for the environment • Respect for the communities where we do business • Commitment to the health and safety of our workers • Commitment to labor rights • Commitment to consumers through food safety

More Related