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Corporate Social Responsibility
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6.05.2007 - 02:45pm ET
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The Coca-Cola Company Pledges to Replace the Water It Uses in Its Beverages and Their Production
Multi-year Partnership Announced with WWF to Conserve and Protect Freshwater Resources
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BEIJING--(BUSINESS WIRE)--June 5, 2007--The Coca-Cola Company (TCCC)
today pledged to lead its global beverage operations, including those of
its franchise bottlers, to replace the water it uses in its beverages and
their production. The Company will focus its actions in three core areas:
1) reducing the water used to produce its beverages, 2) recycling water
used for beverage manufacturing processes, and 3) replenishing water in
communities and nature.
The pledge was announced at the annual meeting of WWF in Beijing,
where the Company launched a multi-year partnership with WWF to conserve
and protect freshwater resources. This $20 million (US) commitment from
The Coca-Cola Company to WWF will be used to help conserve seven of the
world's most important freshwater river basins, support more efficient
water management in its operations and global supply chain, and reduce the
Company's carbon footprint.
"We are focusing on water because this is where The Coca-Cola Company
can have a real and positive impact," said E. Neville Isdell, Chairman and
CEO of The Coca-Cola Company. "Our goal is to replace every drop of water
we use in our beverages and their production. For us that means reducing
the amount of water used to produce our beverages, recycling water used
for manufacturing processes so it can be returned safely to the
environment, and replenishing water in communities and nature through
locally relevant projects."
"The Coca-Cola Company is answering the call to help solve the global
freshwater crisis through this bold partnership," said James Leape,
Director General of WWF International. "The Company is stepping into new
and uncharted territory, and we look forward to working together to meet
the bold commitments they have made to water stewardship."
In 2006, The Coca-Cola Company and its franchised bottlers used
approximately 290 billion liters of water for beverage production. Of that
amount, approximately 114 billion liters were contained in the Company's
broad portfolio of beverages sold in markets around the world, and another
176 billion liters were used in beverage manufacturing processes such as
rinsing, cleaning, heating and cooling.
The Company's pledge to replace the water it uses has three core
components: reduce, recycle and replenish.
Reduce: The Coca-Cola Company will set specific water efficiency
targets for global operations by 2008 to be the most efficient user of
water within peer companies. These targets will build on improvements
already made by The Coca-Cola Company and its bottlers in water-use
efficiency over the past five years, a period where total water use has
decreased by 5.6% while sales volume has increased by 14.6%. In that same
period, water efficiency improved 18.6%.
Recycle: The Company will align its entire global system in returning
all water that it uses for manufacturing processes to the environment at a
level that supports aquatic life and agriculture by the end of 2010. While
water is treated currently to comply with local regulations and standards,
the Company has wastewater treatment standards that are more stringent than
applicable standards in many parts of the world. Nearly 85 percent of
Company and independent bottling operations are aligned with the Company's
higher standards, and the Company pledged to align 100% of its entire
global system.
Replenish: The Company will expand support of healthy watersheds and
sustainable communities to balance the water used in its finished
beverages. Engagement will include a wide range of locally relevant
initiatives, such as watershed protection, community water access, rain
water harvesting, reforestation and agricultural water use efficiency.
Numerous projects are already underway: the Company has community and
watershed programs in 40 countries focused on education and awareness,
productive water use, watershed management and water supply, sanitation
and hygiene; the Company has some 300 rainwater harvesting structures
throughout its global operations; and, last week, in Brazil, The Coca-Cola
Company and FEMSA announced a partnership with SOS Mata Atlantica to
reforest over three million trees on 3,000 hectares of Atlantic
rainforest. Unlike carbon, the concept of balancing water use is not well
defined, and WWF, The Coca-Cola Company and its bottling partners will work
together to measure the impact of these activities on water
availability.
In recognition of the impacts on water resources from the "embedded" water
in agricultural commodities and packaging, WWF and TCCC will work together
to encourage efficient water use in the Company's supply chain, beginning
with sugar cane. Work with WWF's Better Sugar Initiative has already
demonstrated the Company's commitment to steward its supply chain's use of
water. Measurable targets will be set for improvements of water use, in
time, with its agricultural partners.
"Society is just beginning to understand the world's water
challenges," continued Isdell, "No single company or organization has all
of the answers or holds ultimate responsibility, but we all can do our
part to conserve and protect water resources. Our Company will need time
and cooperation from our bottlers, our suppliers and our conservation
partners to accomplish the goal of replacing the water we use. We will be
open about our progress and engage others to better understand what it
takes."
WWF Partnership
TCCC and WWF have been working together for several years on a number
of pilot projects to conserve water, address water efficiency in the
Company's operations and protect species. The partners are expanding their
work together to achieve meaningful and large-scale results.
The partnership will focus on measurably conserving seven of the
world's most critical freshwater river basins: China's Yangtze; Southeast
Asia's Mekong; the Rio Grande/Rio Bravo of Southwest United States and
Mexico; the rivers and streams of the Southeastern United States; the
water basins of the Mesoamerican Caribbean Reef; the East Africa basin of
Lake Malawi; and Europe's Danube River. These river basins (also know as
watersheds) span more than 20 countries in North America, Europe, Africa
and Asia and were chosen because of their biological distinctiveness,
opportunity for meaningful conservation gains, and potential to advance
issues of resource protection.
"The water crisis is as important as climate change," said Carter
Roberts, President of WWF-US. "Thousands of people die each day from
polluted water. Freshwater species are more at risk for extinction. These
conditions will only get worse with climate change. The Coca-Cola
Company's commitment to water neutrality is a first. We need more
companies to step up and make similar commitments if we are going to
reverse these current trends."
With WWF as a partner, The Coca-Cola Company also will work to further
improve upon efficient use of water in its manufacturing system's
operations. Teams of experts from The Coca-Cola Company and WWF will
collaborate on innovative ways to help Coca-Cola be even more efficient in
its use of water.
Also recognizing the impacts of climate change on the water cycle, WWF
and TCCC will work together on climate protection. WWF and TCCC experts
have already led a series of energy and climate protection workshops for
many of the Company's bottling partners. Targets will be set for
climate-related emission reductions in the next year.
"Freshwater resources are under growing stress around the world," said
Jeff Seabright, Vice President, Environment and Water Resources, The
Coca-Cola Company. "This partnership will leverage the best of both
organizations to make a real and positive impact on one of the greatest
sustainability challenges we face."
To learn more about the partnership, please visit www.thecoca-colacompany.com
or www.worldwildlife.org.
The Coca-Cola Company's environmental protection efforts - 1) global
water stewardship, 2) package design, recovery and reuse, and 3) energy
and climate protection - address the areas that are most important to its
business and are where the Company can make the greatest impact.
About The Coca-Cola Company
The Coca-Cola Company is the world's largest non-alcoholic beverage
company. Along with the Coca-Cola(R) trademark, recognized as the world's
most valuable brand, the Company markets four of the world's top five
nonalcoholic sparkling beverage brands, including Diet Coke(R), Fanta(R)
and Sprite(R) beverages, and a wide range of other non-alcoholic
beverages, including diet and light beverages, waters, juices and juice
drinks, teas, coffees, energy and sports drinks. Through the world's
largest beverage distribution system, consumers in more than 200 countries
enjoy the Company's beverages at a rate exceeding 1.4 billion servings each
day. For more information about The Coca-Cola Company, please visit our
website at www.thecoca-colacompany.com.
About WWF
For more than 45 years, WWF has been protecting the future of nature.
As a global conservation organization, WWF is one of the world's largest
working in 100 countries. It is supported by 1.2 million members in the
United States and close to 5 million around the world. WWF's unique way of
working combines global reach with a foundation in science, involves action
at every level from local to global, and ensures the delivery of innovative
solutions that meet the needs of both people and nature. For more
information, visit www.worldwildlife.org.
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Copyright Business Wire 2007
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