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As You Sow is dedicated to ensuring that corporations and other institutions act responsibly and in the long-term best interests of the environment and the human condition. To achieve these goals, As You Sow: * Engages and challenges corporations through direct dialogue and shareholder advocacy; * Refines economic arguments to move corporations, other institutions, and financial markets toward environmentally and socially responsible practices; * Enforces environmental, consumer protection and right to know laws; * Provides grants to non-profit organizations primarily focused on toxics reduction, remediation and prevention and environmental education.
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Coca Cola, Anheuser Busch, Pepsi and Nestle Waters Receive Highest Grades in New Beverage Container Recycling Report
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(Justmeans.com / CSR News) - 23 U.S. Beverage Companies Evaluated for (December 17 -- San Francisco, CA) – A new beverage container recycling report was released today by the corporate responsibility watchdog As You Sow, who evaluated the recycling practices of 23 large beverage companies in the U.S. Coca-Cola received the highest grade with a “C”, followed by Anheuser Busch, PepsiCo, and Nestle Waters, who all received C minuses. “Despite some impressive progress, most beverage companies continue to fail basic criteria for dealing with the environmental implications of their packaging,” said Amy Galland, As You Sow’s Research Director and author of the study. More than 200 billion beverage containers are sold in the U.S. each year, but over 130 billion of those are still sent to landfills and incinerated, representing a huge waste of natural resources. The new publication -- Waste and Opportunity: U.S. Beverage Container Recycling Scorecard and Report – is based on original research that evaluated the beverage companies based on four criteria: As You Sow surveyed and evaluated 74% of the U.S. carbonated soft drink market, more than 60% of the U.S. bottled water market, and nearly half of the U.S. beer industry. The 23 companies evaluated in the report were: Coca-Cola (C), Anheuser Busch (C minus), Pepsi Co (C minus), Nestle Waters NA (C minus), Red Bull (D plus), Fiji Water (D), Honest Tea (D minus); and the following companies who all received failing grades: Dr. Pepper/Snapple, Miller Brewing Company, Coors Brewing Company, Starbucks, Cott, National Beverage, Hansens, Crystal Geyser, Adirondack, Arizona, Boston Beer, DS Waters, Jones Soda, Monarch Beverage, New Belgium Beer, and Polar Beverage. (Please see detailed list of grades below.) Key findings of the study: “Most people don’t realize that beverage container recycling has a direct impact on climate change and energy security,” said Amy Galland, As You Sow’s Research Director and author of this report. If all of the beverage containers that were wasted last year had been recycled, 15.6 million metric tons of greenhouse gases would have been avoided – the equivalent to emissions from 36.2 million barrels of oil – equal to 52 days of oil imports from Iraq. Companies can reduce emissions and energy use by using recycled materials in their beverage containers. Making containers from recycled content uses significantly less energy and fossil fuels in their production than using virgin materials: recycled aluminum uses 95% less energy, recycled plastic uses 30% less energy, and recycled glass uses 35% less energy. As a result of As You Sow’s first beverage container report in 2006, Nestlé Waters, NA vowed to improve its recycling and container performance. Last year, the company endorsed a new model of container deposit legislation marking a shift in decade-long efforts by the beverage industry to fight state container deposit legislation. “Having a major beverage company endorse a legislative deposit model could lead to a new generation of bottle bills at the state level,” said Conrad MacKerron, director of As You Sow’s corporate social responsibility program. Container recovery averages 70% in states with container legislation, more than twice that of states without bottle bills. The report offers seven key recommendations to the beverage industry to improve its recycling practices including: commit to using the highest possible levels of post consumer recycled content in beverage containers; support public policies that significantly increase the recycling of beverage containers; and publicly report on container recycling progress each year. |










