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Why Sustainability Matters to a CFO

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JBS leverages strong real to grow internationally

JBS, the meatpacker, is one of Brazil’s big success stories. Through an aggressive campaign of acquisitions, the Brazilian company has become the world’s largest beef processor and among the largest poultry and pork processors.
The company, originally called Friboi, began modestly in 1953 with slaughterhouse capacity of just 5 heads per day. It only began to expand about 30 years later through acquisitions and investments to increase production. By 2002, its slaughter capacity was around 5,800 animals per day.

Brazil’s agribusiness companies

The profile of agribusiness companies in Brazil has changed dramatically over the past five to ten years. Previously, the so-called “A,B,C,D” multinational trading companies—Archer Daniel Midlands (ADM), Bunge, Cargill and Louis Dreyfus—dominated the market, riding the wave of rapid expansion in soybean and grain production in frontier regions such as Mato Grosso.

SLC Agrícola: reaping the benefits of corporate farming

SLC Agrícola demonstrates how professional management and good use of technology and capital markets can lead to rapid growth. The company made history in 2007, when it became the world’s first grain and cotton producer to list shares on a stock exchange, raising more than R309m (US$181m) to help with its ambitious expansion plans. Since then, it has more than doubled planted area to 220,000 hectares, and plans to reach 450,000 hectares by 2015. Its net operating revenue grew from R269m (US$138.7m) in 2007 to R597m (US$303.4m) in 2009.

Recycling IT

UPS, a parcel delivery specialist, is using its advanced online logistics technology to help the organisation and its customers manage the recycling of their waste. “It’s about making the most of the work the company does,” says Graham Nugent, the company’s regions applications manager. “We want to provide recycling to our customers and provide an effective returns policy that grows out of the popularity of the web.”

The ever-elusive paperless office

The paperless office as a concept has been around since the mid-1980s but is arguably even further away from being realised today than when it first appeared. “There are two phases in its development. Firstly when computers started becoming useful, people started talking about the paperless office but it was not actually viable.Then in the more recent second phase with the advent of the internet it really looked as if the concept could happen.

Shell

Although the government has provided a clear outline of how Australia’s carbon-reduction policies will develop through to 2020, companies should not underestimate the organisational change required to respond, according to David Hone, the London-based global climate change adviser at Shell, an oil and gas firm.

Wesfarmers

Wesfarmers, owner of Coles, Australia’s largest supermarket chain, as well as major coal and chemicals operations, will be among the companies most heavily affected by the new carbon price scheme.

BASF: Deepening its presence in Asia

At BASF, the world’s largest chemical producer by turnover, Asia revenues reached €12.5bn (US$16.3bn) in 2010, or about 21% of the company’s global sales. Albert Heuser, the firm’s president of market and business development in Asia Pacific, says that in the first three quarters of 2011, BASF’s sales increased across all segments of its business in Asia Pacific. China alone accounted for sales of €5.8bn (US$7.5bn) in 2010, making it the third largest market for BASF globally, after Germany and the US.

Tata Chemicals: Competing to secure raw materials and energy

Tata Chemicals, one of India’s largest chemical companies, saw its annual revenues quadruple from US$674m in 2004 to US$2.9bn in 2008, before falling slightly to US$2.1bn in 2009, during the global economic downturn.

The obliquity concept

One way to explore the question of purpose, according to Julian Birkinshaw, Professor of Strategy and Entrepreneurship at London Business School, is through the idea of "obliquity," as discussed by the economist Dr John Kay in his 2010 book of the same name. The basic concept is simply that if you want to get to point A, you should aim at point B. As paradoxical as this sounds, it basically suggests that more goals are likely to be achieved if they are pursued indirectly.

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