I am an outspoken critic of Nestlé's unethical business practices. Although I have been aware of some of the issues with Nestlé for years, I have become more aware of the depth and breadth of the issues since my interaction with both Nestlé and the Nestlé Family Bloggers starting last September. This post provides an overview of the Nestlé problem, links to key resources, and links to my past posts and discussion on this issue.
Nestlé defends its unethical business practices and uses doublespeak, denials and deception in an attempt to cover up or justify those practices. When laws don't exist or fail to hold Nestlé to account, it takes public action to force Nestlé to change. Public action can take on many forms, including boycotting Nestlé brands, helping to spread the word about Nestlé's unethical business practices, and putting pressure on the government to pass legislation that would prevent Nestlé from doing things that put people, animals and the environment at risk.
Nestlé is accused by experts of unethical business practices such as:
- Promoting infant formula with misleading and harmful strategies that violate the International Code of Marketing of Breastmilk Substitutes and put babies at risk (see Baby Milk Action's Briefing on Nestle Updated July 2010 and the Boycott Nestle - and other action to protect infant health blog);
- Using suppliers that violate human rights (e.g purchasing milk from Mugabe, buying cocoa from suppliers that use child slaves) and destroy the environment (e.g. palm oil from rainforest);
- Controlling and abusing of water sources in its bottled water operations (e.g. in United States and in Brazil);
- Promoting unhealthy food, especially for young children;
- Trade union busting activities and denying the rights of workers to collectively bargain;
- …and more (see Nestle Critics Portal and Corporate Watch: Nestle SA: Corporate Crimes).
Nestlé defends its unethical business practices and uses doublespeak, denials and deception in an attempt to cover up or justify those practices. When laws don't exist or fail to hold Nestlé to account, it takes public action to force Nestlé to change. Public action can take on many forms, including boycotting Nestlé brands, helping to spread the word about Nestlé's unethical business practices, and putting pressure on the government to pass legislation that would prevent Nestlé from doing things that put people, animals and the environment at risk.
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DeleteNestlé has several corporate practices that rank low on an ethical scale. Here are some findings
ReplyDeletei) Heavily promoting infant formula in developing countries despite it being known to be much less safe than breastfeeding.
ii) Being a global leader in bottled water, attempting to greenwash the public on the issue, and tapping water supplies to the detriment of local ecosystems and communities.
iii) Having a poor record on supply chain for commodities such as cocoa, where child labor and slavery are prevalent.
iv)Poor track record on sustainability of ingredient sourcing, from palm oil to coffee.
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ReplyDeleteYes i competly agree with your view points nestle should stop these unethical practices and should never indulge in these practices to maintain its goodwill
ReplyDeleteGood that we share the same point of view
DeleteThese type of blogs which have some valid point,which aware people about the unethical practices and wrong doings of these capitalist systems.These companies or organisations often survive because of our corrupt politicians.These politicians whom we vote for our betterment and for our better future but in return they do opposite of this.
ReplyDeleteActually point is that there is more need of blogs like these because they aware people about the real problems rather than beating around the bush...
True my exact thinking is the same
DeleteI just found your blog and I am so grateful for this!....I did not not know about it at all.
ReplyDeleteOnly thing we can do is boycott the product and raise awreness.
But Nestlé owns a lot of brands and is the biggest food company in the world, so people wishing to boycott their brands need to do a bit of homework first to familiarize themselves with the brand names to avoid in the stores.
Yes my exact thinking
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Your dedication and commitment to this work deserve a lot of appreciation. I must say we should spread this important information so that we can prevent ourselves from these unethical practices.
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Captivating work! Highly appreciating!
ReplyDeleteCool I've been boycotting Nestle without even thinking about it. Dont buy any of these things. AND THX FOR YOUR INFORMATION..
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DeleteHOLY crap. Nestlé genuinely seems like one of the most evil companies out there . # boycott nestle, save nature .....
ReplyDeleteSure whatever u say
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ReplyDeleteBoycott of nestle was just for a week about in the market... can u explain why?
ReplyDeleteBecause nestle aggresively markets baby milk in ways that undermine breastfeeding and break international marketing rules.
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DeleteAmazing write-up ....Only thing we can do is boycott the product and raise awareness
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Deletethe best we can say is that we didn’t knew about all this. this blog had made us aware and we probably should share this blog so that everyone will get to know. plus society needs few people like you who can make these kind of awareness.
ReplyDeleteYes my thoughts exactly
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ReplyDeleteYes definitely. Thanks for commenting
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