ESG Loves Ultra-Processed Food
Ultra-processed food is neither environmentally nor socially friendly.
Wall Street was the architect of the modern American food supply. So it’s no wonder that corporate America’s Environmental, Social, Governance (ESG) standards would celebrate the manufacturers of ultra-processed food.
No one is surprised to learn ultra-processed food is fundamentally toxic for human health. They’re saturated in seed oils and added sugars that wreak havoc on metabolism while deprived of fiber and healthy fat. Yet three-fourths of the U.S. food supply is ultra-processed offering Americans cheap and immediate dopamine hits in the form of abundant carbs and sugar (although in the end, ultra-processed food is far from cheap). Corporate America, from Big Food to Big Pharma, would rather leave it that way. In turn, Wall Street’s ESG standards champion the industrial takeover of U.S. food.
Last week, the Massachusetts-based public relations firm 3BL published its annual “100 Best Corporate Citizens” list. The rankings score the largest 1,000 U.S. public companies and their compliance with ESG standards. Here’s my coverage of the roster in The Federalist:
Seven major American food processors made it on the list, five of which landed in the top 50. Corporations include PepsiCo at 6, Hershey at 10, Mondelez at 45, Kellogg at 40, and General Mills at 49. Kraft Heinz was listed at 61, and Coca-Cola at 79. These corporate food giants, however, are some of the worst offenders for environmental and public health.
Earlier this year, General Mills and Kellogg threatened the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) over new rules that could strip the “healthy” labels from the producers’ boxes of chemically processed grains drenched in sugary syrups marketed as cereal. The food companies behind Fruit Loops and Lucky Charms claim the FDA’s latest guidance discriminates against corporate free speech.
“We know cereal is a nutritious, affordable, accessible breakfast choice for many families across cultures, lifestyles, age and socio-economic demographics,” the companies wrote in a joint filing with Post Consumer Brands, the producer of Fruity Pebbles. ‘Yet, the restrictive criteria put forth in FDA’s proposed rule for ‘healthy’ would disqualify many grain foods, including the overwhelming majority of the ready-to-eat cereals on the market from using the term ‘healthy.'”
Cereals are also among the most contaminated products for endocrine-disrupting pesticides in the food supply. Beyond the average 20 grams of sugar per typical serving, which alone will cause blood sugar spikes leading to chronic disease and obesity, packaged cereals harbor toxic contaminants such as glyphosate, a key component of the popular weed killer Roundup.
Glyphosate is the most common weed killer in the United States. In the book Food Fix: How to Save Our Health, Our Economy, Our Communities, and Our Planet–One Bite at a Time, Dr. Mark Hyman cites a 2013 study that shows “just 0.1 ppb of glyphosate is enough to harm your gut bacteria and microbiome.” A recent report from the Environmental Working Group (EWG) found glyphosate levels dropping from 2018 but are still found in ultra-processed products at levels exponentially higher than 0.1 ppb.
Kellogg and General Mills were both on 3BL’s list of “100 Best Corporate Citizens” in 2019, 2020, 2021, and 2022. Many other companies on this year’s list have made repeat appearances. Hershey made the rankings in 2020, 2021, and 2022. Coca-Cola appeared in 2019, 2021, and 2022. Mondelez was listed in 2019, and PepsiCo was ranked in 2019, 2020, 2021, and 2022. The major soft drink producer came in second place last year. According to OpenSecrets, Coca-Cola and Hershey were among the top corporate lobbyists in the food industry last year. So was the American Beverage Association, of which Coca-Cola and PepsiCo are members.
The food industry has a long and well-documented history of manipulating science to sell ultra-processed products. The industry also has a history of lobbying governments to industrialize the world’s food supply with genetically modified organisms (GMO) to the detriment of environmental health (and, therefore, human health). The same “corporate citizens” praised for adhering to ESG standards have long been industry leaders driving this growth.
Dr. Hyman recounted in his 2020 book that Coke, Pepsi, General Mills, Kraft, and Kellogg joined Land O’Lakes to spend $12.6 million against GMO labeling laws.
GMO seeds, meanwhile, “have led to the rampant use of herbicides and pesticides, as pests and weeds became more resistant.”
“Ironically,” Hyman added, “agriculture is now locked in a hubristic arms race against superbugs and superweeds, which have evolved to resist the very chemicals that are supposed to kill them.” Sounds good for the environment for corporate environmental scores.
Corporate power players have tried to sell GMOs to Americans as safe. Industry data, however, is often contaminated with corporate-friendly bias to sell whatever products are being offered. In 2016, for example, The New York Times published an exposé on the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering and Medicine. The group operates as an advisory organization for the federal government, and its panel on biotechnology was found to be infected with significant conflicts of interest as members prepared a new report on genetically engineered seeds.
“The report could have broad implications for the industry,” the Times reported. “Big food companies like Coca-Cola and Archer Daniels Midland, for instance, have invested in synthetic biology, a term used for the more sophisticated genetic engineering now coming into use that was the panel’s area of study. Food companies are exploring its use in creating flavorings and sweeteners.”
Read the rest of the column here.
Links:
New York Post: Hot yoga could put this common mental illness in ‘remission’: study
Wall Street Journal: Ozempic Boom Is an Opportunity for Health Insurers
The Hill: Nutrition: The national security threat no one is talking about
Gallup: Poor Wellbeing Linked to Formation of New Chronic Conditions
New York Times: Is Pumpkin Good for You?
Wall Street Journal: Libraries Are the New Front Line in America’s Mental-Health Crisis
Daily Caller: Biden Admin’s Tobacco Survey Asks Kids About Their Gender Identity, Sexual Orientation
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