PepsiCo Pooh-Poohs Plastic Waste Problem
PepsiCo has backed away from a pledge it made 2 years ago to use more refillable packaging to reduce plastic waste.
PepsiCo has backed away from a pledge it made 2 years ago to use more refillable packaging to reduce plastic waste.
Shareholders of Deere & Co. voted overwhelmingly today to reject a proposal seeking to curb the company’s diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) plans. According to MarketWatch, this is the latest sign of investor resistance to conservative efforts to end diversity practices. At its annual shareholders meeting on February 26, 2025, … [continued]
Leading global companies involved in the clean power transition have been beating fossil fuels on financial performance.
As You Sow has been raising the shareholder voice to increase corporate responsibility on a broad range of environmental issues such as waste reduction and waste management, as well as social issues including racial justice, diversity, equity, and inclusion in the workplace. Shareholder advocacy works.
Pesticide-intensive agriculture has become the default for how food is grown in the United States. Did you know agriculture uses more than one billion pounds (1,000,000,000 lb) of conventional pesticides in the US each year? Failures abound. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s (CDC) biomonitoring has found pesticide residues … [continued]
If Proctor & Gamble can’t be transparent about its diversity practices, can it be trusted to succeed in its sustainability goals?
New York is suing Exxon Mobil, claiming it mislead investors about its future liability for the costs associated with climate change. In response, Exxon is playing hardball with potential witnesses
As You Sow and Corporate Knights released today its sixth update of the Carbon Clean 200™, a list of the 200 publicly traded companies that are leading the way among their global peers to a clean energy future.
Siemens AG again topped out the latest update of the Carbon Clean 200 list of the 200 largest publicly traded companies in the world making significant revenue from clean energy, and China continues to have far and away the most companies on the list, as clean energy stocks generated returns almost double that of fossil fuel stocks.
German manufacturing and electronics company Siemens has ranked first on the latest Clean200 list from As You Sow and Corporate Knights, a list of the largest publicly traded companies making significant revenue from clean energy.