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cali

(114,904 posts)
7. It operates pretty independently from Unilever
Sun Jun 23, 2013, 07:03 PM
Jun 2013

has its own independent board.

<snip>

In 2010, Jostein Solheim, a Unilever executive from Norway, became the new CEO of the company and had this to say about the transition: "My mantra that I've repeated a hundred times since starting at Ben & Jerry's is: ‘Change is a wonderful thing,'" he said. "The world needs dramatic change to address the social and environmental challenges we are facing. Values led businesses can play a critical role in driving that positive change. We need to lead by example, and prove to the world that this is the best way to run a business. Historically, this company has been and must continue to be a pioneer to continually challenge how business can be a force for good and address inequities inherent in global business."[11]

In 2001, Ben & Jerry's U.S. completed transition to "Eco-Pint" packaging, which packaged all pint flavors in environmentally friendly unbleached paperboard Eco-Pint containers, a decision it later reversed. The use of brown-kraft unbleached paperboard had been a critical first step toward a totally biodegradable pint made without added chlorine. Due to what they described as increasing supply, quality, and cost challenges, Ben & Jerry's discontinued their use of the Eco-Pint in 2006, transitioning to a pint container made out of a bleached paperboard that it said was more readily available with superior forming characteristics.[citation needed]

On Earth Day in 2005, when a vote in the U.S. Senate proposed the opening of the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge to oil drilling, Ben & Jerry's launched a protest by creating the largest ever Baked Alaska, which weighed 900 pounds, and placed it in front of the U.S. Capitol Building.[12][13]

In March 2009, "CyClone Dairy"[14] launched an advertising campaign and a website to promote its milk products, which purportedly came exclusively from cloned cows.[15] On April 1, 2009 (April Fool's Day), Ben & Jerry's announced that it was behind this fake company. Ben & Jerry's had created the tongue-in-cheek hoax to raise awareness of the increasing presence of products from cloned animals within American food,[16][17] and to campaign for a tracking system of cloned-animal products.[18] The hoax was revealed on April Fool's Day with the message: "We believe you should have the right to choose which foods you eat – and not to eat cloned foods if you don’t want to. And that's why Ben & Jerry’s believes we need a national clone tracking system, so people and companies can know where their food is coming from."[19]

<snip>


http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ben_and_Jerry%27s

Recommendations

0 members have recommended this reply (displayed in chronological order):

... xchrom Jun 2013 #1
Cool - they raised the money for the vehicle malaise Jun 2013 #3
Stamp Stampede: love the idea handmade34 Jun 2013 #2
Yep I know malaise Jun 2013 #4
figured you knew... handmade34 Jun 2013 #5
LOL - apparently lots of people don't know malaise Jun 2013 #6
It operates pretty independently from Unilever cali Jun 2013 #7
Latest Discussions»General Discussion»Ben and Jerry's stampede ...»Reply #7