Cargill has taken steps to advance its commitment to protect forests and promote rural agricultural development across its supply chains with the launch of a South America Sustainable Soy Policy, a Human Rights Commitment, and an updated Forest Policy.
With the publication of the three policies, Cargill has outlined a complete approach to fully sustainable supply chains across soy, cocoa, and palm. The policies are designed to:
The policies reinforce Cargill’s intent to make the necessary changes to achieve a deforestation-free supply chain. Yet no single company can achieve zero deforestation alone. Cargill has joined forces with industry partners, direct and indirect suppliers, customers, governments, and farmer groups, as the practices of deforestation and land conversion are driven by complex economic forces that span the globe.
“Ending deforestation requires a balance of competing environmental, economic, and social priorities,” said Ruth Kimmelshue, senior vice president of Cargill Business Operations and Supply Chain. “We are committed to convening the critical stakeholders necessary to achieve our shared goal: deforestation-free supply chains across the globe.”
The company has established a corporate Sustainability Hub to ensure the efforts are operationalized across the organization. The Hub shares learnings and best practices across the company’s supply chains and with the broader industry to drive sector-wide transformation.