fbpx
Print this page
Friday, 13 December 2013 16:05

Oz streets ahead on green ice cream

Written by 

AUSTRALIAN DAIRY farmers have gained a ‘green tick’ from the world’s biggest ice cream maker.

 

Unilever has credited the Australian dairy industry with meeting its Sustainable Agriculture Code (SAC). So now all Australian-produced milk helps the company meet its ‘sustainable sourcing’ goal. 

“Dairy Australia is delighted to be the first dairy industry in the world recognised as meeting Unilever’s sustainability standards,” said Ian Halliday, managing director of Dairy Australia. “All credit to [Unilever] for taking an industry-wide approach.”

Dairy companies Murray Goulburn and Fonterra were among those that prompted Unilever to work with Dairy Australia to see whether the industry’s production standards met Unilever’s worldwide SAC requirements. 

“We took an industry-level approach to avoid duplicative efforts across dairy companies’ milk suppliers and, once the results were in, to provide broader assurances about all Australian milk production,” says Halliday. 

Unilever owns Streets Ice Cream in Australia and New Zealand. Its brands include Magnum, Paddle Pop, Blue Ribbon and Cornetto.

The company has ambitious sustainability targets and has set a target of 100% sustainably sourced materials by 2020. To meet this goal Unilever must accelerate through partnerships, e.g. the work with Dairy Australia.

“We have worked hard with Dairy Australia in the past year to benchmark the Australian dairy industry’s milk production standards against our SAC standards,” says Dirk Jan deWith, Unilever spokesman.  The industry was found 100% compliant.

Three specific gaps – in soils, biodiversity and waste – were identified, and to remedy this Dairy Australia, Murray Goulburn, Fonterra and several other dairy companies will work with 100 farms in eight dairy regions, “to show continuous improvement in gap areas,” says Halliday. 

 “[We aim] to ensure Australian dairy’s sustainability standards evolve and improve,” he says.

Featured

Brendan Attrill scoops national award for sustainable farming

Brendan Attrill of Caiseal Trust in Taranaki has been announced as the 2025 National Ambassador for Sustainable Farming and Growing and recipient of the Gordon Stephenson Trophy at the National Sustainability Showcase at in Wellington this evening.

Wilmar hands over US$725m ‘court security’ in Indo graft case

Reuters reports that giant food company Wilmar Group has announced it had handed over 11.8 trillion rupiah (US$725 million) to Indonesia's Attorney General's Office as a "security deposit" in relation to a case in court about alleged misconduct in obtaining palm oil export permits.

National

Machinery & Products

Farming smarter with technology

The National Fieldays is an annual fixture in the farming calendar: it draws in thousands of farmers, contractors, and industry…

RainWave set to cause a splash

Traditional spreading via tankers or umbilical systems have typically discharged effluent onto splash-plates, resulting in small droplet sizes, which in…