Showing posts with label Environmental Accounting. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Environmental Accounting. Show all posts

Sunday, 28 April 2013

Behind the Mars Bar: looking deeper for sustainable food companies


Mars is the world’s largest privately owned food company with $30 billion in revenues and more than 65,000 workers around the world in 2012. It produced its first ever sustainability report recently in 2011. It was also one of the first big companies to deliver its CSR report on Facebook.

In a refreshing claim to appreciating longer time frames Paul Michaels writes in Mars's Five Principles report:  “As a private company governed by the Mars family, we think in terms of generations, not quarterly returns.” But the company does not take the step of recognising natural times scales.

Mars do have a high impact upon farming practices so adopting natural time scales would not be out of place in the company. Mars does after all call for a joint industry effort to scale up positive impacts for cocoa farmers and achieve higher yields without compromising limited natural resources so longer, more natural time scales are definitely required.

But perhaps the most significant step that Mars have taken lies in their Five Principles report. As one of the five principles, Mars have adopted Mutuality which they describe as follows:
·         A mutual benefit is a shared benefit; a shared benefit will endure.
·         We believe the standard by which our business relationships should be measured is the degree to which mutual benefits are created.
·         These benefits can take many different forms, and need not be strictly financial in nature. Likewise, while we must try to achieve the most competitive terms, the actions of Mars should never be at the expense, economic or otherwise, of others with whom we work.

According to Mars, the mutual benefits need not be financial in nature and yet they are to be the standard by which their business relations should be measured. Indeed rummaging around their website reveals a wealth measured in non-financial benefits including the sponsorship of science.

So how is Mars able to recognise these revolutionary steps in business management? At one level there is a simple answer that all companies can implement and that is they pay full attention to the knowledge we now possess of the world in which we live. A new Primal possibility of knowledge is present in the world and we are slowly taking advantage of all its exciting opportunities to make the world a better place.

The other answer is not so simple and it is likely few major companies can implement it in their present form. It is an answer that has to do with Keynes’ 1933 article on National Sufficiency:  “But experience is accumulating that remoteness between ownership and operation is an evil in the relations among men, likely or certain in the long run to set up strains and enmities which will bring to nought the financial calculation,” (see The Accountant’s Economic Revolution in the PR blog, 25th November 2012).

Mars is a private company. It does not have to worry about maintaining a position in the financial markets. In this sense Mars has greater freedom to adapt to the emerging Primal knowledge of our world; it is not for example constrained by overweening and restricting notions of Modern good financial performance. But Mars does have remote operations created and maintained throughout its supply chain; it therefore needs to ensure that the dictates of financial performance do not reduce overall Mutuality to considerations of dominant economic aspects.

Oxfam is more critical of Mars. In its assessment of the Big 10 food companies, Oxfam ranks Mars with a 30% score which is a “Poor” performance lying in fifth place behind Nestle, Unilever, Coca-Cola and Pepsico. Middle-ranking Mars received low scores with regards to supporting women and protecting land rights, but did better with transparency and small-scale farmers. 

Big 10 Food Companies Sustainability Scorecard
Taken from Oxfam's "Behind the Brands" Report

Sunday, 24 February 2013

Returns on Growth Pains


ROCE stands for Return On Capital Employed. It underpins economic growth and is the most important equation of our times.

All accounting students learn how to calculate and use this equation within the details of corporate finance but we are all familiar with the concept. ROCE is stated as follows:


ROCE        =             Returns
                                                       Investment

It calculates the ratio between an investment and the amount of increase the investment earns. It is better known as a percentage rate of return. For example a company investing $10 million in a new product and making $2 million profit a year enjoys a 20% ROCE. If PR can afford to invest £10 in a savings account, he might make 20 pence in a year; a 2% ROCE.

If more people are to enjoy getting returns out of investments, then our economy needs to grow. This is the theory that motivates pretty well all business people and political leaders in the West and in the East. This makes ROCE an important equation – it represents our increasing prosperity and source of additional wealth.

Friday, 1 February 2013

Not-Smart Phones: Costing the Earth


I have a smart phone. I love its style, functions and convenience… but its price is far too high.

Out of the thousands of apps we may download, is there one that tells us the true cost of our phones? This ought to be basic sales information. Companies should tell us the full cost of our beautiful little phones. 

Would you buy or replace your phone so quickly if it came with the sounds and images of the devastation it causes? What an app that would be!

Devastation App.

To the best of my knowledge there is no such app. PR would be pleased to hear from you if you have one.