ConAgra Foods' green strategy: Award
employees for sustainability efforts
Last year, ConAgra Foods -- the U.S.
packaged-foods company behind such well-known brands as Hunt's Ketchup and
Reddi-Wip -- saved millions of dollars while dramatically cutting its energy
consumption. It accomplished this by not relying on major process changes or
heavy investments hailing from top executives. Instead, it turned to its
employees.
The accomplishments stemmed from an awards program, launched in 1992, developed to encourage employees to proactively look for ways to eliminate waste and reduce water and energy consumption. By allowing different divisions to set their own sustainability goals and awarding employees that met those goals, the Nebraska food giant saved 300 million gallons of water, eliminated 61,000 tons of landfill waste and reduced its carbon emissions by more than 43,000 metric tons. These efforts also saved the company $28 million.
The accomplishments stemmed from an awards program, launched in 1992, developed to encourage employees to proactively look for ways to eliminate waste and reduce water and energy consumption. By allowing different divisions to set their own sustainability goals and awarding employees that met those goals, the Nebraska food giant saved 300 million gallons of water, eliminated 61,000 tons of landfill waste and reduced its carbon emissions by more than 43,000 metric tons. These efforts also saved the company $28 million.
Gail Tavill, ConAgra's vice president of
sustainable development, spoke with GreenBiz about how the program works,
lessons learned and challenges the program has faced.
GreenBiz: How
did you reduce water usage by 300 million gallons of water?
Tavill: Almost half of that was from one manufacturing facility. The
winner this year was a potato processing facility, which reduced water by 24
percent -- 150 million gallons -- by tracking daily water usage and posting
daily metrics in the plant. That gave employees awareness about how much was
being used and where. They did not invest a whole lot in this, it was more
about green awareness from the metrics posted. Within six months, the water
reduction began because of employee efforts, and not the re-engineering of
processes. The team did simple things like changing nozzles and finding out
where water was wasted, then found ways to avoid it. In terms of expenses, it
was a month's payback.
GreenBiz: Where
did the balance of the water savings come from?
Tavill: Our pudding factory saved about 5 million gallons of water. A
frozen foods plant in Arkansas
put together a drip team that located drips wherever they found them, and
fixing drips led to water savings. What we found on water conservation is it's
really more behaviorally-based, rather than requiring capital-intensive
projects.
GreenBiz: So
was there thoughtless wastage before?
Tavill: Here's a conundrum we face -- water is undervalued. Any
business focuses on things with high value. Until we made water usage a goal,
it wasn't a focus because water is cheap. Until we started to give water a
business value beyond dollars, it wasn't a priority. That is why we made water
conservation a specific target when we set sustainability goals two years ago.
GreenBiz: Did
employee attitude make the difference in energy conservation too?
Tavill: Energy continues to be a big area for us to work on -- there are
a lot of savings associated with it. It also tends to be more capital intensive
than other areas like reducing water use. We're looking at how much we can save
through behavior improvements and how much through capital investments, so
we're working hard on balancing both sides. We went into this thinking we'd
have to save energy with capital investments and we're finding there's a lot of
opportunity to save energy through behavior improvements.
GreenBiz: How
did you communicate the goals from top down to the divisions and then to the
shop floor?
Tavill: Solid waste is my particular passion with solid opportunities
for our divisions. We set a goal to divert at least 75 percent of our solid
waste from landfills to other uses. We knew some of it went to animal feed and
so on but we didn't track it, so the first challenge we had was that we had no
data. We knew there was opportunity there, both from cost savings and cost
avoidance, so we set that goal.
We then spent the first six months collecting
that data. We spoke to suppliers and we worked with the farmers to whom we
divert food waste for animal feed. Then we looked at how to handle this -- is
composting better? We knew diverting from landfill was important, so I spoke to
the [US Environmental Protection Agency], used their hierarchy for handling
waste, then told our management we wanted to use this for our facilities.
For food waste, we used EPA hierarchy to move
up the value chain, and for packaging we tried to reduce or recycle and also
reduce what we sent to landfills.
We set individual goals for manufacturing
facilities and threw out a challenge to them: The company would recognize
anyone who reduced waste by 95 percent. I have been absolutely thrilled with
how quickly our factories have gotten onboard with this. We passed our 75
percent diversion goal already and we are closer to 90 percent diversion.
Now we are focusing on reduction of actual
waste generated -- not only landfill, but also that which we divert.
GreenBiz: What
about reducing packaging?
Tavill: It's really just putting a new name on something that's been
going on for years -- packaging professionals have worked on less expensive
packaging for a long time, but now it's termed "sustainable." Design
goals have focused on using less material, less resources and therefore less
money.
One of the dangers of reducing packaging too
much is that it could allow the food to spoil, so we're very sensitive to that.
Traditionally, when you buy something in an
aerosol can, it's in a three-piece metal can with epoxy coating. That
technology hasn't changed in decades. We found an opportunity to work with a company
to change that to a two-piece can and in converting to that process, we found
ways to dramatically reduce the steel needed and use much less chemicals to
create the can itself. The product ended up having superior quality, and it
took less energy and material to manufacture.
So it really hit that sweet spot of
performance, cost and environmental benefits. PAM and Reddi-Whip cans use this
new technology, which comes from a new supplier.
GreenBiz: What
are some lessons learned from this process?
Tavill: One of the biggest lessons we learned is that waste is a
cultural phenomenon, in that when you manufacture something, since the
industrial revolution, a certain amount of waste is considered acceptable as
part of doing business. So challenging that thinking was one of our issues.
The financial accounting of waste materials
has no value in our systems, which we found when we dug into those streams
going to landfills or compost or animal feed, so we began thinking of their
environmental value and how to push them up the hierarchy value.
For example, we make meat snacks. When we make
them in long strips and cut it into pieces, you lose the ends. The waste
generated was then diverted to landfills. They were edible but ugly looking, so
we put together a proposal with a food rescue organization close to our
facility to take that waste and repackage it for people who are food insecure.
So we've diverted more than a million servings of protein from landfills to
help feed those people.
We're constantly looking under rocks for
opportunities to avoid waste and divert it to food rescue and other outlets.
The Grocery Manufacturers Association and Food
Marketing Association, between them, represent most of our industry and have
policies and best practices on food waste. We work with them on addressing
those issues, since we waste a lot of food in this country.
GreenBiz: Were
there challenges in getting different divisions on board with these goals,
given they have their own bottom-line concerns?
Tavill: We knew we had to have external goals, so we went through an
internal process where we worked to build the goals from the bottom up so they
could buy into it, and we also worked with our leadership teams, so that when
we proposed the goals they'd be happy to communicate it. So we worked top down
and bottom up. You make an important point about each division having their own
goals and checks and balances.
Not all plants or products were created equal,
so we couldn't set the same goals. So when we began, we knew that our potato
process facility would have more impact on our water goal than our popcorn
plant. On the other hand, the microwave popcorn plants could deliver much
bigger results in terms of waste reduction or diversion.
So we didn't unilaterally say every plant
would have a set goal, since that wouldn't make sense.
The reason we do these awards is for these
plants to strive to reach best practices goals that can be communicated across
the company. It's easy to share it passively by posting goals or sending it
out, but it's more effective to set goals and reward divisions or plants and
have these facilities talk to each other about how they went about it. It's
easier than for them to come to us -- when they talk to each other, that's when
it's really rewarding for us.
Published May 10, 2012
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