You’ve seen The Story of Stuff, right? That short and sweet video explanation of our “consumption problem” and what we can do about it? Well Annie Leonard and the gang at Free Range Studios (plus a few great partners, including… [[ This is a content summary only. Visit my website for full links, other content, and more! ]]
You’ve seen The Story of Stuff, right? That short and sweet video explanation of our “consumption problem” and what we can do about it? Well Annie Leonard and the gang at Free Range Studios (plus a few great partners, including… [[ This is a content summary only. Visit my website for full links, other content, and more! ]]
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The 8-minute Story of Bottled Water: Watch it, then stop drinking it
Which companies are doing the most to operate ethically, not just on paper but in real life? The Ethisphere Insitute has just released its list of the top 100 businesses that follow its credo of “Good. Smart. Business. Profit.†The think-tank scores companies based on their performance in several areas: integrity track record and reputation (20 per cent), corporate citizenship and responsibility (20 per cent), innovation (15 per cent), internal system and ethics/compliance programme (15 per cent), executive leadership and tone from the top (15 per cent), corporate governance (10 per cent) and industry leadership (5 per cent). So who are Ethisphere’s the ethical 100? They include: Accenture Adobe Systems The Aerospace Corporation Aflac American Express ARAMARK Ashland AstraZeneca Avaya Barrett Jackson Auction Company Becton, Dickinson and Company Best Buy Campbell Soup Company Caterpillar CH2M Hill Cisco Systems Cleveland Clinic Comme Il Faut CRH Cummins Deere & Company Dow Corning Corporation Duke Energy Dun & Bradstreet Eaton Ecolab Flint Hills Resources Fluor Ford Motor Company FPL Group Freescale Semiconductor Gap General Electric Co. General Mills Google Granite Construction Harris Corporation The Hartford Henkel Hewlett-Packard Company Hospital Corporation of America IKEA International Paper J M Smith Corporation Johns Hopkins Johnson Controls Jones Lang LaSalle Kao L’ORÉAL Mattel Milliken and Company National Grid Nike Nippon Yusen Kabushi Kaisha Noblis Novo Nordisk Parsons Patagonia Paychex PepsiCo Pitney Bowes Premier The Principal Financial Group Rabobank Rezidor Hotel Group Ricoh Rockwell Automation Rockwell Collins Inc. Royal Philips Salesforce.com Sempra Energy Sodexo Solae Standard Chartered Bank Starbucks Coffee Company Stora Enso Oyj Svenska Cellulosa Swiss Re Symantec Target Ten Thousand Villages Teradata Texas Instruments Thomson Reuters Time Warner Timken T-Mobile Trader Joe’s UPS Vodafone Group Waste Management Wegmans Westpac Banking Corporation Weyerhaeuser Whole Foods Market Wisconsin Energy Corporation Wisconsin Physicians Service Wyndham Worldwide Xerox Zappos Share this on del.icio.us Digg this! Share this on Reddit Stumble upon something good? Share it on StumbleUpon Share this on Technorati Post this to MySpace Share this on Facebook Tweet This! Subscribe to the comments for this post? Share this on Linkedin Related posts: Uptime Institute names ‘Global Green 100′ PGI names first sustainability officer Recycling group produces more hot air than profits
Which companies are doing the most to operate ethically, not just on paper but in real life? The Ethisphere Insitute has just released its list of the top 100 businesses that follow its credo of “Good. Smart. Business. Profit.†The think-tank scores companies based on their performance in several areas: integrity track record and reputation (20 per cent), corporate citizenship and responsibility (20 per cent), innovation (15 per cent), internal system and ethics/compliance programme (15 per cent), executive leadership and tone from the top (15 per cent), corporate governance (10 per cent) and industry leadership (5 per cent). So who are Ethisphere’s the ethical 100? They include: Accenture Adobe Systems The Aerospace Corporation Aflac American Express ARAMARK Ashland AstraZeneca Avaya Barrett Jackson Auction Company Becton, Dickinson and Company Best Buy Campbell Soup Company Caterpillar CH2M Hill Cisco Systems Cleveland Clinic Comme Il Faut CRH Cummins Deere & Company Dow Corning Corporation Duke Energy Dun & Bradstreet Eaton Ecolab Flint Hills Resources Fluor Ford Motor Company FPL Group Freescale Semiconductor Gap General Electric Co. General Mills Google Granite Construction Harris Corporation The Hartford Henkel Hewlett-Packard Company Hospital Corporation of America IKEA International Paper J M Smith Corporation Johns Hopkins Johnson Controls Jones Lang LaSalle Kao L’ORÉAL Mattel Milliken and Company National Grid Nike Nippon Yusen Kabushi Kaisha Noblis Novo Nordisk Parsons Patagonia Paychex PepsiCo Pitney Bowes Premier The Principal Financial Group Rabobank Rezidor Hotel Group Ricoh Rockwell Automation Rockwell Collins Inc. Royal Philips Salesforce.com Sempra Energy Sodexo Solae Standard Chartered Bank Starbucks Coffee Company Stora Enso Oyj Svenska Cellulosa Swiss Re Symantec Target Ten Thousand Villages Teradata Texas Instruments Thomson Reuters Time Warner Timken T-Mobile Trader Joe’s UPS Vodafone Group Waste Management Wegmans Westpac Banking Corporation Weyerhaeuser Whole Foods Market Wisconsin Energy Corporation Wisconsin Physicians Service Wyndham Worldwide Xerox Zappos Share this on del.icio.us Digg this! Share this on Reddit Stumble upon something good? Share it on StumbleUpon Share this on Technorati Post this to MySpace Share this on Facebook Tweet This! Subscribe to the comments for this post? Share this on Linkedin Related posts: Uptime Institute names ‘Global Green 100′ PGI names first sustainability officer Recycling group produces more hot air than profits

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Group names world’s top 100 most ethical companies
by Jody Singleton Clean Energy Act, RoHS & WEEE WEEE As of August 13, 2005, producers have been required to finance the collection, treatment, recycling and recovery of all Waste Electrical & Electronic Equipment RoHS As of July 1 2006 Electrical & Electronic Equipment may no longer be sold in the European Union …
by Jody Singleton Clean Energy Act, RoHS & WEEE WEEE As of August 13, 2005, producers have been required to finance the collection, treatment, recycling and recovery of all Waste Electrical & Electronic Equipment RoHS As of July 1 2006 Electrical & Electronic Equipment may no longer be sold in the European Union …
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Green Engineering, What Is It?
