, which got its start as one of the world’s first “slavery free” chocolate bars 20 years ago. Lindt & Sprüngli, the Swiss company behind the ubiquitous gold foil-wrapped milk chocolate easter bunnies, received a yellow egg for traceability and transparency, but an orange one for deforestation and climate.
To a certain extent at least—Mondelez , Unilever, General Mills, Tesco, Walmart, and Whole Foods were awarded broken eggs for failing to take part in this year’s cocoa sustainability survey at all. “We believe that all companies selling chocolate products should be able to provide the information requested in the survey,” wrote the Chocolate Scorecard’s team in their
. “Consumers and investors have a right to be informed about the conditions under which chocolate is produced.” It appears that some companies agree: one of last year’s cracked eggs, Godiva, attained orange bunny status this year., not including carbon reduction efforts in the company assessments feels like a wasted opportunity. But overall, the Chocolate Scorecard earns a green bunny for helping to untangle chocolate’s complicated tradeoffs.
Ridiculousness.
Ok, give your children broccoli for Easter instead of chocolates, is there anything that some genius, can’t destroy and make life miserable
If you buy your chocolate based on sustainability, you deserve the chocolate you get…IThinkIAteDogPoop
EndWokeness
Oh shut up
How ethical is the religion they are meant to celebrate with those eggs?
Speaking from personal experience invest in the ones which score lowest in ESG. They offer great shareholder $ value.
which just so happens to be the inverse order of how long the companies will last
Eggs don’t have to “ethical”, they’re simply eggs.
machivallarino
If we ask a self-assured 'woke' young lady to answer this question then a slap in the face can be expected ... 🧐
'kiss the ring'
Check your spelling
& lead content hopefully
Cadberry owned by Mondelez at bottom with a whole 0😳