General Mills CEO Harmening: ‘We don’t sell Cheerios in the morning and then think about sustainability in the afternoon’

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General Mills CEO Harmening: ‘We don’t sell Cheerios in the morning and then think about sustainability in the afternoon’

Diane Brady

2 min read

In This Article:

  • In today’s CEO Daily: Diane Brady talks to General Mills CEO Jeff Harmening.

  • The big story: Israel-Iran conflict enters fourth day.

  • The markets: Oil is up and so are stocks.

  • Analyst notes from UBS on the conflict in the Middle East, Goldman Sachs on the Fed, Convera on international interest rates, and JPMorgan on the effect of tariffs.

  • Plus: All the news and watercooler chat from Fortune.

Good morning. When General Mills CEO Jeff Harmening thinks about sustainability, he looks at the millions of acres of farmland where his company sources wheat, oat, dairy, and other crops. “If we don’t do something different, in about 2050, 90% of topsoil will be in danger,” Harmening told me at a dinner that Fortune held with sponsor Deloitte for sustainability leaders in Minneapolis. The good news is that General Mills is more than 60% of the way to achieving its goal of advancing regenerative agriculture—farming practices that regenerate degraded soil—on a million acres of land by 2030. “We’re, frankly, ahead of where we thought we’d be.”

That’s cause for hope in otherwise challenging times for leaders who care about sustainability. At a global level, we’re on track to achieve only 17% of the UN’s sustainable development goals by 2030. Nationally, we’ve seen a rollback with the U.S. withdrawal from the Paris Climate Agreement, dismantling of key agencies, and the EPA decision to repeal limits on greenhouse gas emissions.

But the private sector is stepping up, with many of the leaders at our dinner giving examples of how sustainability initiatives not only protect but grow their businesses. As one attendee said: “Regulations move the laggards, not the leaders.” (The table conversation was under Chatham House rules.)

For Harmening, the key is focus: He reduced the number of company-wide initiatives from 70 to 10 when he became CEO, doubling down on three that are core to the business: regenerative agriculture, reducing greenhouse gas emissions, and recycling. “This is part of our strategy for how we win,” he said. “We don’t sell Cheerios in the morning and then think about sustainability in the afternoon.”

This story was originally featured on Fortune.com

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