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Pepsi 'Broke Recycling Promise'
GrassRoots Recycling Network 27apr01
Shareholder Resolution Focuses Attention on Pepsi's Bottle and
Can Waste
ATLANTA, GA - PepsiCo Inc. (Ticker: PEP) broke its 1990 promise
to make soda bottles with 25 percent recycled plastic and the
company has spent millions of dollars lobbying against recycling
legislation, environmental leaders said today.
"More than 1.6 million Pepsi soda bottles and cans are thrown
away every hour in the United States. In one day, more than 40
million Pepsi soft drink containers become litter or get sent
to landfills and incinerators," said Bill Sheehan, national
network coordinator for the Athens, Georgia-based GrassRoots Recycling
Network.
"It's time for Pepsi to take responsibility for wasting billions
of beverage containers each year. We urge Pepsi shareholders to
vote for the recycling proposal, proxy item Number 6, at the annual
shareholder meeting in Dallas, Texas on May 2," Sheehan said.
PepsiCo is the nation's second largest beverage maker. PepsiCo
shareholders can vote via the Internet for the recycling proposal
by going to the GrassRoots Recycling Network web site, at www.grrn.org
.
"We have targeted Pepsi for several reasons. First, because
Pepsi broke its 1990 promise to use recycled plastic in making
new soda bottles. Second, because the company increasingly relies
on throwaway plastic bottles, and three out of four end up in
landfills or incinerators. Third, because Pepsi has spent millions
of dollars to defeat the most effective beverage container recycling
laws in the nation - bottle bills," said Lance King, a spokesman
for environmental groups supporting the shareholder resolution.
Walden Asset Management of Boston, and Domini Social Investments
of New York, which together own $20 million worth of PepsiCo stock,
submitted the shareholder resolution. The non- binding resolution
calls for PepsiCo to meet two specific recycling goals by January
1, 2005:
* Make Pepsi plastic bottles with 25 percent recycled plastic;
and * Achieve an 80 percent national recycling rate for bottles
and cans.
The PepsiCo recycling resolution is similar to one introduced
at the April 18 Coke shareholder meeting. That proposal received
5.2% 'Yes" votes, representing 88.9 million shares worth
more than $4 billion.
PepsiCo and Coca-Cola both promised in 1990 to use 25% recycled
plastic in their plastic bottles. Coke recently started using
a small amount of recycled plastic in the United States, and CEO
Doug Daft announced at the April 18 meeting that Coke has set
a 10% recycled content goal by 2005 for their plastic bottles.
Environmental groups led by the GrassRoots Recycling Network have
waged a four
-year campaign targeting Coca-Cola to take responsibility for
rising beverage container waste and declining recycling rates.
"Coke has been the focus of our campaign because they are
the market leader, with 44% of the U.S. soft drink market. Pepsi,
with 31% market share, has done nothing. Pepsi has gotten a free
ride. But that is about to change," said Sheehan.
"Plastics are now the largest portion of beverage container
waste in the United States.," Pat Franklin, executive director
of the Arlington, Virginia-based Container Recycling Institute
said. "Beverage container waste increased more than 50 percent
from 1992 to 1999. Pepsi is a big part of the problem."
"Pepsi needs to take responsibility for its bottle and can
waste. Throwing away billions of bottles and cans every year burdens
local government and taxpayers with clean-up costs, pollutes the
environment, and squanders valuable energy needed to make new
containers from virgin resources," Franklin said.
"The shareholder resolutions set realistic goals, based on
actual experience. Plastic soda bottles are made with 25 percent
recycled plastic in several countries, including Australia, Switzerland
and Sweden. Coke has started using recycled plastic again in the
United States, while Pepsi shirks its responsibility," Bob
Woodall, executive director of Atlanta, Georgia-based Waste Not
Georgia, said.
"Ten states across America already achieve an 80 percent
recycling rate for bottles and cans by requiring a refundable
deposit on beverage containers. The key to increase recycling
on a national basis is providing appropriate financial incentives,"
Woodall said.
PepsiCo's recent acquisition of Gatorade brand, the sports drink
leader, is both good news and bad news from a recycling perspective.
"Gatorade reportedly uses some recycled plastic in making
its bottles. However, more than 80 percent of Gatorade plastic
bottles get thrown away, because only 2 states require a refundable
deposit on this type of beverage," Sheehan said. "Non-
carbonated drinks, like teas, sports drinks and water, are the
fastest growing portion of the beverage market, and the fastest
growing contributor to beverage container waste."
* More information is at www.grrn.org/media
* Contact: Lance King (703) 536-7282 Bill Sheehan (706) 613-7121
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