PepsiCo has announced a $216 million, multi-year
investment in long-term, strategic partnership agreements with three of the most
well-respected, farmer-facing organizations — Practical Farmers
of Iowa (PFI), Soil and Water Outcomes
Fund (SWOF), and the IL Corn Growers
Association (ICGA) — to drive adoption of
regenerative agriculture practices across the United States. The combined
impact of these three strategic partnerships is expected to support the
accelerated uptake of regenerative practices on more than three million acres
and deliver approximately three million metric tons of greenhouse gas (GHG)
emission reductions and removals by 2030.
PepsiCo will work alongside the three organizations to establish and scale
financial, agronomic and social programs that enable the transition to
regenerative growing practices through education, upfront investment in
outcomes, peer coaching and networking, and cost-sharing.
PepsiCo's strategic investment in PFI, SWOF and ICGA is essential to supporting
the US farming community as it makes changes that aim to secure production
volumes and mitigate the impacts of climate change while still cultivating
quality, bountiful crops to feed the world's growing population.
"PFI farmers have known for years that a supply chain that encourages farmers to
grow only a couple of crops is not sustainable — it's not diverse or resilient
enough for our changing world," said Sally
Worley, Executive Director
at Practical Farmers of Iowa. "The PFI model is proven — when we plug farmers
into our powerful network and connect them with a peer network, educational
resources, funding and technical support, they're able to build more resilient
farms. We're excited to continue partnering with PepsiCo and look forward to
working together to create a more diversified and resilient agriculture."
As the largest food and beverage company in North America, and
second-largest globally, a resilient food system is essential to PepsiCo's
business and its ability to meet its ambitious PepsiCo Positive
(pep+)
targets — the company's strategy for end-to-end business transformation — which
include regeneratively farming seven million
acres
(approximately equal to its entire agricultural footprint) by 2030.
"As the climate crisis continues to escalate, the threat to our food system
increases as well," said Jim Andrew,
Chief Sustainability Officer at PepsiCo. "It's critically important to partner,
for the long term, with organizations that have earned the trust of farmers as
they make the transition to adopt climate-smart agriculture
practices.
We intend to be shoulder-to-shoulder with farmers as they work to make soil
healthier, sequester carbon, improve watershed health and
biodiversity,
and improve their livelihoods."
Through these partnerships, by 2030, PepsiCo will work with PFI to reach
approximately 1.5 million acres; SWOF to reach nearly 1 million acres; and the
ICGA to reach approximately 600,000 acres. Based on progress to date, these
collaborative efforts are expected to deliver more than 500,000 regenerative
acres by the end of 2023.
"We are excited to expand our partnership with PepsiCo and farmers in its supply
chain to support the adoption of regenerative agriculture practices that have
measurable impacts on soil health, the environment, and farm sustainability,"
said Adam Kiel, managing
director of the Soil and Water Outcomes Fund. "By providing high-quality and
customized agronomic assistance to farmers implementing new practices, we help
them reduce emissions and nutrient loss, unlock a new revenue stream, and
increase the value of their farmland for current and future generations."
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Sustainable Brands Staff
Published Mar 28, 2023 8am EDT / 5am PDT / 1pm BST / 2pm CEST