Workers at a malting house in Ethiopia Yet while HEINEKEN is the third largest brewer in the world, it buys less than 0.2% of the global grain production. By working with other companies affiliated with SAI, HEINEKEN is leveraging scale to effect positive change. "Together with SAI, we have developed a standard list of questions for our farming communities to ensure consistency and transparency in our sustainability requirements," says Edwin. With retail organisations set to join SAI in the future, the supply chain will soon be aligned from end to end. "We finalised the HEINEKEN Sustainability Principles and Practices last year. With those in place, we are now engaging with suppliers. Next year, we have set milestones we need to hit in order to meet our 2020 targets: 20% of our barley, 40% of our hops and 60% of our bittersweet apples have to come from sustainable sources. At the moment we're on track to reach the intermediate targets set for 2015. Our progress so far has been driven by the engagement of strategic suppliers. One of our hop suppliers has joined SAI and is leading the further development of SAI Principles and Practices for Hops. The German hop industry has also taken these Principles and Practices and will embed them in the national standards. We are slowly seeing momentum in the end-to-end supply chain for the beer industry." 16 World of HEINEKEN Edition 2 2014

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World of Heineken | 2014 | | pagina 16