Unilever announced its half-year figures on July 25th. Looking good, with shareholders apparently very happy. Unilever’s stakeholders not so much, as they try and work out if the company, once dubbed as “ESG’s poster child” is in full-on retreat, or just retrenching pragmatically in response to today’s crazy zeitgeist. This is hotly contested territory. But the watering down of targets, the reduced ambitions, the internal and external incoherence, the “preferencing” of shareholder interests are all indisputable. And all tell us a lot about the contribution that “corporate sustainability” might or might not make to a more sustainable world over the next decade.
Spoiler alert: very little, I’m afraid.
Indeed, there is a case to be made that the backsliding going on in Unilever at the moment marks the definitive end of a period of “win-win” ESG/ corporate sustainability that has lasted for more than 20 years. More on that later.
I write this extended blog much more in sorrow than in anger. It’s pretty shitty inside Unilever at the moment, with yet another round of reorganisation, and a lot of job cuts going on all over the place. I feel really sorry for erstwhile Unilever colleagues finding themselves working for a company they no longer quite recognise or trust. If there’s anger in this mix, for me, it’s not directed against those who’ve done all the heavy lifting on sustainability over the last 20 years, but against Unilever’s Board, its current CEO, and its now rather spineless Executive Leadership Team. More on that later too!
28 YEARS ADVISING UNILEVER
A bit of context first. I started advising Unilever on sustainability issues when I was invited to join the Unilever Environment Group (UEG) back in September 1996 – bringing a little bit of “forthright NGO advocacy” to leaven the weight of extensive scientific and business expertise on the brand new UEG.
I’ve loved working with Unilever from that point on. It’s been by far my most rewarding, emotionally entangling and inspiring corporate partnership, transacted mostly through Forum For The Future, and latterly on a freelance basis up to March this year. Alan Jope, then CEO, hosted my farewell party from Forum For The Future in their HQ in London, and this is what I said about Unilever in my speech:
“I sort of love this company – for its integrity, it’s searching after the truth of what it knows it needs to be doing, and for inspiring so many others to think differently about what they need to be doing”.
So, this is a personal. And deep: I know of what I speak.
Back to those early days. The UEG eventually morphed into the Unilever Sustainable Development Group (bringing together all its environmental and social endeavours), which was eventually superseded by the Unilever Sustainable Living Plan Council (brought together by CEO Paul Polman in 2010), ending up as the Unilever Sustainability Advisory Council when the Unilever Sustainable Living
Plan was replaced by CEO Alan Jope’s Compass.
RECONCILING PROFITABILITY AND SUSTAINABILITY?
Both the Unilever Sustainable Living Plan (“doubling the size of the company; halving its footprint”) and the Compass were about the same thing: reconciling an ever more pressing set of sustainability challenges with shareholder returns, market share, margins etc. Accepting the realpolitik of shareholder primacy was always there, but tempered (to some extent) by the growing emphasis on purpose, particularly through certain “hero brands”. With lots of fairly febrile “win-win” or “shared value” rhetoric along the way.
Because Unilever has always struggled to outperform its principal competitors in the FMCG category, “shareholder expectations“ have been a constant preoccupation for Unilever Boards and Leadership Teams. When Kraft Heinz launched a dramatic takeover bid for Unilever back in February 2017 (with no less than Warren Buffett as the principal financial backer), enough shareholders were persuaded by Paul Polman and others that the short-term benefit that they would have undoubtedly secured could only be bought at a very high long-term cost. Polman memorably described the Kraft Heinz team as “the Barbarians at the gate”.
I wrote a blog about all this at the time, in which I said:
So there’s nothing new about this, even though those particular Barbarians backed off. But in today’s neoliberal, profit-maximising capitalist system, there are always more Barbarians gearing up for further rape and pillage. The pressure is constant. Five years on, in July 2022, the Unilever Board gave in to that pressure by inviting Nelson Peltz (activist investor, Visigoth-in-chief) to join the Board. Hein Schumacher (CEO at that time of Friesland Campina, a sustainability-free dairy company, who worked with Peltz when he was at Heinz before that) was brought on as a Non-Executive Director. Alan Jope promptly decided/was persuaded it would be a good time to step down, and Hein Schumacher became CEO in July 2023. As far as the “shareholder-first, profit-maximising Barbarians” were concerned, the job was done.
But it’s only this year that the bloodletting really got going.
THE NEW REGIME
Having spent his first nine months as CEO channelling Nelson Peltz, whilst remaining silent on sustainability issues, Hein Schumacher decided in April that it was time to explain what this new reality for Unilever was all about – and chose to do that through an interview with Dasha Afanasieva at Bloomberg News.
I’m being polite in describing this interview as a total shit show for Schumacher. He revealed that a whole raft of environmental and social pledges were going to be watered down or completely done away with. Scoring a quite spectacular own goal, he described ESG as “cyclical”, critical one day, not so much the next.
“It’s cyclical. When you have a huge drought for a number of months, but everything else is going fine, the attention is on climate. These days it’s about wars, and rightly so, that’s at the forefront.”
Unilever’s PR team is usually pretty “on it.” So they can’t have been surprised by the storm this interview gave rise to (“ESG poster child waters down green pledges” etc etc). Schumacher himself referred to the response to his words as a “very significant backlash”. And all that was nothing compared to the internal storm.
I don’t think Unilever consulted anyone externally about these changes. Its Sustainability Advisory Council had already been “stood down” in the second half of 2023, notionally to give Schumacher time to get his head around Unilever’s very broad sustainability agenda given that he had no serious experience of any of Unilever’s principal sustainability challenges – other than his Friesland Campina knowledge of the dairy industry. There was no contact with the Council from that point on, other than a standard letter thanking colleagues “for their services”.
The Bloomberg News article lifted the lid on the full-scale retrenchment then going on. Even Unilever, in its reborn shareholder-first mode, realised that this was not a good look, and started planning for a damage-limitation event on May 8th. For me personally, this was a deeply depressing experience, with endless corporate speak about “refocusing”, “doubling down on delivery”, about “really, truly believing” that this was the right way to go, “ambitious realism”, “we have a huge urgency burning within us”, and so on. All a bit cringeworthy, to be honest.
I was impressed, however, at the readiness of many of the NGOs present to “cut Schumacher some slack”, resisting the temptation to pile in on the backsliding, and generously to acknowledge “an extraordinary debt of gratitude” for all the leadership shown by Unilever over the last two decades. Schumacher indicated at the May event that the position revealed then was just a “holding position”, and that everything would be revisited by October. From what I hear, there’s not been a lot of revisiting going on so far, and it’s not looking good. I’ve just checked out the Unilever website before finishing off this blog to make sure that I’m still up to date – and from what I see (and what I hear) there’s not been a lot of revisiting since then.
UNILEVER HAS NO SUSTAINABILITY STRATEGY
Perhaps most extraordinary of all, Unilever now has no sustainability strategy. It has 15 Sustainability Goals, but no Strategy. Any trace of the erstwhile Unilever Sustainable Living Plan (brought in by Paul Pollman in 2010), which then evolved into the Unilever Compass under Alan Jope, has gone. The 15 Sustainability Goals are subsumed within – you guessed it! – a brand new Growth Action Plan.
And there we have it: sustainability in Unilever in service to the usual wholly unsustainable kind of economic growth that continues to exploit people and trash the planet. This being Unilever, of course, the unavoidable cost externalisation this entails will be done more caringly than competitors will do it. But it will still be done.
Schumacher’s “intentionally and unashamedly realistic approach” puts shareholders first with literally every other stakeholder duly subordinated. Sustainability is there to be “leveraged” and appropriately “commercialised”. And that’s why so many targets have been diluted, downgraded or in the new Unilever corporate doublespeak, “refocused”.
A bit of me thinks that we should welcome Schumacher’s realism. It is at least more honest than so much of the platitudinous win-win rhetoric that dogs the world of ESG – has done for a long time. The truth is that doing things more sustainably can lead to significant cost savings, but it can also cost a lot more money. And that’s where we have to start talking about plastics.
UNILEVER’S PLASTICS FAILURE
Plastic packaging has been an ongoing horror story for Unilever for many, many years. And it has done a huge amount of work seeking to reduce the impact of that horror story. But part of the current retrenchment is an outright acknowledgement of failure.
Back in 2019, the Compass targets were bold but achievable:
- “Halve the use of virgin plastics by 2025, including an absolute reduction of 100,000 tonnes”. That’s now become a one-third reduction by 2026, with no mention of an absolute reduction.
- “100% reusable, recyclable or compostable plastic packaging by 2025”.
That’s now become: “100% of plastic packaging to be reusable, recyclable or compostable by 2030 (for rigids) and 2035 (for flexibles)”.
In case the difference between “rigids” and “flexibles” is not clear, that slippage on flexibles is Unilever giving itself a further decade to continue using the dreadful little sachets that cause massive pollution and litter problems in dozens of countries. Particularly in Southeast Asia.
Schumacher’s rationalisation here – as quoted by Bloomberg News – is this: “on plastics, you need governments, you need retailers, you need partners in the petrochemical industry. You need recycling systems that match.”
You do indeed. But you also have to be prepared to pay more to avoid the use of virgin plastics. And to pay a lot more to get rid of those ever so cheap and cheerful little sachets.
And that additional cost erodes margins. It impacts profits. It affects dividends. It irritates the likes of Nelson Peltz and his army of profit-maximising Visigoths. Its uncountenanceable to them that so much value should be prioritised to reduce this particular environmental impact. Ten more years of unfettered sachet abuse sounds so much better from that perspective.
That’s what this kind of trade-off is all about: a blank refusal “to share financial value” in order to protect the environment.
(By the way, Unilever’s 2019 targets were not unrealistic/unrealisable, as is now claimed. And the idea that the Leadership Team didn’t understand how stretching the targets were at the time, is simply untrue – having sat in on several of those often feisty debates myself).
It’s important to point out here that Unilever is not alone in this profit-maximisation obsession – none of its competitors is doing any better on plastics. And there have been many times where Unilever in the past has been prepared to pay more than its competitors to achieve important sustainability goals.
It continues to do so. For instance, because of its sustained investment in its supply chains, Unilever is the first (and still, I think, the only) big company to be able to demonstrate that those supply chains are now 100% “deforestation free” (or as good as at 98.5%).
So, it can be done. And Unilever was under very significant pressure from Greenpeace and others to get that sorted. But it didn’t just happen. It took a massive amount of work over many years, at considerable cost. Its competitors, who quite happily lie through their teeth that they’re doing the same, have not been prepared to pay those costs. That is clearly disadvantageous for Unilever shareholders.
BACKTRACKING ON LIVING WAGES
But these are now “more realistic times”. And Schumacher’s realism extends even to Unilever’s crucially important commitment to living wages.
Back in 2019, the Compass target on living wages was this:
“Ensure that everyone who directly provides goods and services to Unilever will earn at least a living wage or income by 2030”.
That target has now gone. It has been replaced with a “Long-Term Ambition” (of ensuring “a decent livelihood for people in our value chain, including by earning a living wage”), and that woefully inadequate ambition is underpinned by a new Goal: “suppliers representing 50% of our procurement spend to sign the Living Wage Promise by 2026”.
Let me explain. The 2030 target was indeed hugely ambitious. Alan Jope and all his Leadership Team understood that. As did the Board, who accepted at the time (back in 2019) that it wasn’t acceptable for Unilever consumers to be benefiting from the exploitation of tens of thousands of people being paid either the equivalent of a minimum wage or, all too often, much less than minimum wage.
That 2030 target was universally commended by NGOs, by Trade Unions, by the International Labour Organisation, by social justice campaigners and so on – recognised as a massive step in the right direction in terms of eliminating the chronic and morally abhorrent exploitation that can be found in so many supply chains today.
However, it was also acknowledged at the time that to deliver on this target would inevitably cost Unilever billions of Euros over the intervening years though to 2030. There’s always been some debate about just how many billions, with various inflated figures being used politically to make the case against fair living wages and incomes. Whatever the truth of that, there would, indisputably, have been a financial hit as a consequence of meeting that target.
And that’s unthinkable in the new Unilever. Those billions that would have made it possible to achieve that target would therefore not have been available to Unilever’s shareholders as dividends. Lets have no illusions: this is how the system works.
Which explains why Unilever has defaulted to a staggeringly weak commitment, entailing a sign-up process for 50% of Unilever’s suppliers, which might or might not translate into real improvements in real people’s wages at some point in the future
You’ll notice that the 2030 date has been “disappeared” altogether from the Long-Term Ambition. At the event on May 8th, I asked Hein Schumacher in person what had happened to that 2030 date, and was told at the time that it is still “an important internal aspiration”. So that’s reassuring.
You may find this detail wearisome. I’ve obviously become a bit of a geek in this regard, having tracked this stuff for 28 years, and most commentators (including most of the NGOs critical of Unilever) have no real idea what’s going on here. So it’s important to dig into the downgrading between the old Compass targets (all 34 of them!) and the 15 new Sustainability Goals, all designed to contribute to the Growth Action Plan.
FAILING ON FOOD WASTE
Indeed, many of these changes will go completely unnoticed. Take Food Waste – one of the worst sources of institutionalised wastefulness across the entire global economy. Unilever was very much aware of this, with a 2019 Compass Target to “halve food waste in our operations (per tonne of food handled) by 2025”.
That target has now been dropped and replaced (on the website) by an “Ultimate Aim”: “no food waste to landfill, and ensure no good food is destroyed”. Sounds good, but if you then dig a bit deeper, you’ll discover that overall food waste reduction inside Unilever by the end of 2022 was just 17% – one third of the way to the original 2019 target. No data is yet available for 2023.
To be honest, this is classic Unilever. Some of its brands have brilliant food waste stories to tell, showing real purpose, real intent, and achieving real impact. This is particularly true of Hellman’s, with its various campaigns (“Make Taste Not Waste”, “Cook Clever, Waste Less”), its exemplary research into consumer habits, and such a clear sense of purpose as to why it was doing all of this. This has all served the brand very well in terms of its financial performance.
Which made it all the more amusing that one of Unilever’s most demanding shareholder activists – a tub-thumping, profit-maximising Brit called Terry Smith – attacked Hellman’s as an example of Unilever’s “wokery” and its overall “obsession with sustainability”! I was astonished to see just how seriously Unilever’s Board took this kind of idiocy.
However, beyond those hero brands, Unilever’s overall corporate performance is all over the shop on an issue like food waste.
CLIMATE TARGETS SURVIVE
But not, thankfully, on climate change. Unilever was the first company to prepare a Climate Transition Action Plan. It was pretty good, with a target date of 2039 for achieving Net Zero, and some ambitious targets agreed through SBTi). An updated Action Plan (still pretty good!) was approved unanimously by Unilever’s shareholders earlier this year. And because this has now been signed off by shareholders, it’s beyond the reach of the Visigoths’ slashing swords.
The Plan is a consummate exercise in “managing expectations”. It doesn’t actually tell shareholders in so many words just how screwed they are, how more and more frequent and intense climate disasters will disrupt Unilever supply chains, will drive inflationary pressures, will impact margins and returns to shareholders – that would be going too far in a world where shareholders still need to be protected from the truth. It just hints at all that ever so eloquently.
CORPORATE SUSTAINABILITY: A BUSTED FLUSH
In the round, therefore, with so many good things still going on alongside Schumacher’s new growth-obsessed retrenchment (“commercialising sustainability” – God I hate that phrase!), where does that leave Unilever as a leader in the narrowing world of corporate sustainability?
Down, I would say, but not out. Badly wounded, with the Barbarians laying waste to whatever they can easily get their hands on, but still in there as a leader. However, there’s now no prospect of Unilever ever being the leader.
That’s not good – particularly for those who subscribe, in varying degrees of good faith, to the notion that corporate sustainability could still be the primary driver of more sustainable wealth creation – given the all too visible inadequacies of governments.
Paradoxically, however, Schumacher’s right about one thing. Some of these shifts are indeed cyclical. The current anti-ESG resurgence of profit-maximising shareholder primacy will soon start to wane as societal expectations begin to ask more of today’s corporate leaders, and as governments find themselves forced to regulate more effectively to ensure a faster pace of change in the face of mounting climate disasters. One has to hope that’s the case.
For the time being, however, Unilever’s fall from grace reveals the deep flaws in that whole concept of corporate sustainability as a primary driver of more sustainable ways of creating and distributing wealth. The truth of it is that the super-rich (with hundreds of short-sighted greedy billionaires calling the shots on the Boards of most big companies, especially those headquartered in the USA) will ensure that this particular model of suicidal, neoliberal capitalism holds sway for a little bit longer.
As I’ve written before, it’s governments that write the rules of this game – not companies – however inadequately those governments carry out that responsibility. Companies have to operate within those rules, and all too often get punished when they try and overcome those constraints by accepting the need for more urgent and comprehensive environmental and social measures.
The fact that even Unilever has fallen foul of this crude, callous and ultimately cretinous misunderstanding of what long-term wealth creation is all about, is, to say the least, unfortunate.
Personally, 28 years, on it’s also very sad.