Economic
Sustainable Diets require economies that balance people, planet and profits.
Sustainable Diets require economies that balance people, planet and profits.
Adequate amounts of nourishing foods that are affordable, accessible and desirable for people.
Intelligent Design principles transform our current linear system (inputs to waste) into circular thinking (inputs to inputs). Creating new systems that reduce food loss and waste, innovate around upcycled and underutilized ingredients, emphasize whole plant/animal/resource use, and minimize packaging and plastic.
Based on guidelines from The Chartered Institute of Purchasing & Supply (CIPS), ethical labor and sourcing are commonly defined as the process of ensuring that sourced products are obtained responsibility and sustainably, while any workers involved are safe, well treated and fairly compensated.
Different frameworks exist to evaluate how business assesses concerns such as social responsibility, equity, accountability, and environmental impact alongside profits. ESG (Environmental, Social and Governance, or Certified B Corporations are two examples, and refer to businesses that meet a clearly defined framework of practices regarding responsible governance, meeting the highest standards of verified social and environmental performance, public transparency, and legal accountability to balance profit and purpose.
Adequate amounts of nourishing foods that are affordable, accessible and desirable for people.
Intelligent Design principles transform our current linear system (inputs to waste) into circular thinking (inputs to inputs). Creating new systems that reduce food loss and waste, innovate around upcycled and underutilized ingredients, emphasize whole plant/animal/resource use, and minimize packaging and plastic.
Based on guidelines from The Chartered Institute of Purchasing & Supply (CIPS), ethical labor and sourcing are commonly defined as the process of ensuring that sourced products are obtained responsibility and sustainably, while any workers involved are safe, well treated and fairly compensated.
Different frameworks exist to evaluate how business assesses concerns such as social responsibility, equity, accountability, and environmental impact alongside profits. ESG (Environmental, Social and Governance, or Certified B Corporations are two examples, and refer to businesses that meet a clearly defined framework of practices regarding responsible governance, meeting the highest standards of verified social and environmental performance, public transparency, and legal accountability to balance profit and purpose.