McDonald's Sustainable Beef Pilot
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Manitoba Cooperator - ‘Sustainable’ beef pilot a success — but the job isn’t done yet

6/14/2016

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By Alexis Kienlen

McDonald’s
pilot is complete but now the Canadian beef industry 
has to create and implement its own standards

After being the first to source and track “verified sustainable” beef for McDonald’s, the Canadian cattle industry has a new challenge — create its own standards that all of its buyers can use.

The wrap-up event drew more than 300 ranchers and industry players to celebrate the accomplishment — a sharp contrast to the quiet, behind-the-scenes start to the project, which only became public knowledge in May 2014, when Farm Business Communications broke the story.

Attendees praised the fast-food giant, the largest buyer of Canadian beef, for choosing Canada for its global pilot.

Read the full story here.

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Manitoba Cooperator - Industry enthusiastic about McDonalds’ approach

6/14/2016

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By Alexis Kienlen

Producers who participated in McDonald’s “verified sustainable” pilot are enthusiastic about the project and the lessons learned.

"It felt like they (McDonald’s) were going to the grassroots where the other competitors were not,” said Les Wall, feedlot operator and owner of KCL Cattle Company near Coaldale, Alta. “I felt like the other competitors were doing marketing campaigns to drive sales.

“I’ve never had any feedback from them, and they’ve never asked me what I do. But from McDonald’s, I did. The communication was excellent.” 

Stephen Hughes, of Chinook Ranch near Longview, Alta., also noted the verification process was informative.The beef industry needs to continue working in a collaborative way, said Hughes, part of a producer panel at the wrap-up event.

“What I took away from our verification was that where we didn’t score as well, it was because of paperwork or a plan,” he said. “I hope the beef industry as a whole learns to swim together and get on board with this kind of talk. Then I think we’re going to win.

"The Earls thing that you don’t mention by name is a great example of why we have to have these things in place.”


Anne Wasko, an industry analyst who raises cattle at Eastend, Sask., spoke about the importance of Canadian beef industry initiative.

​Read the full story here.

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Troy Media- Serving up sustainable beef at McDonald's

6/11/2016

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Deborah Wilson | Battlefords News-Optimist

EDMONTON, Alta. / Troy Media/ - When the largest purchaser of Canadian beef says it's going to begin obtaining a portion of its supply from sustainable sources, the whole industry takes notice.

Sustainability is important not only to McDonald's Restaurants but to all food retailers, who are moving fast to respond to changing public values around health, the environment and animal welfare. But McDonald's has led the pack with its Verified Sustainable Beef (VSB) Canadian pilot program, which actually gets into the nuts and bolts of beef production.

Since early 2014, McDonald's has worked with producers, stock growers, feedlots, packers and all of us at the Beef InfoXchange System (BIXS) to find a consistent way to track "sustainability indicators"  like animal health and welfare, efficient feeding and management practices, innovation, and land management.

​Read the full article here.

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Western Producer - Ranchers give pilot program thumbs up

6/9/2016

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Posted Jun. 9th, 2016 by Barbara Duckworth
The work to feed sustainably raised beef to the world is just beginning.
​
A pilot project to see if a major burger company such as McDonald’s Corp. could deliver sustainably raised beef is complete, and the results show it can be done.

Results and recommendations were presented in Calgary June 2 and have been forwarded to the Canadian Roundtable on Sustainable Beef, which is developing a full fledged program to verify beef production.

Canadian cow-calf ranches, feedlots and processors participated in the two-year project, in which operations volunteered to allow private
verifiers to assess how they treat their cattle, the environment, workers and the community.

High marks went to the ranchers for animal care, community outreach and environmental stewardship, but many fell short on record keeping. More work also needs to be done on the use of antibiotics.

Many feedlots are not using the verified beef program, but they have other programs to monitor pharmaceuticals and manage food safety.

​Read the full article here.

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Rural Roots- McDonald’s Sustainable Beef Pilot Project Hailed a Success

6/7/2016

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John and Tracy Buckley, who raise cattle on a ranch near Cochrane, Alberta, are celebrating the completion of the McDonald’s Verified Sustainable Beef Pilot Project and their involvement with it.

The project has been hailed a complete success after the restaurant chain announced last week it had succeeded in demonstrating sustainable practices and outcomes can be verified through the entire Canada beef supply chain.  In doing so, the program became the first to make the Global Roundtable for Sustainable Beef principles and criteria across the entire beef value chain.

The Buckley’s are one of 121 ranches from across the country who took part in the project.  There were also 34 backgrounding operations, 24 feedlots, two beef processors and a patty plant that were verified as sustainable through the project. The project tracked 9,000 head of cattle from ‘birth to burger’ (the equivalent of 2.4 million patties).
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Click here for the full coverage.

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Calgary Herald - Editorial: An ally for Canada's beef industry

6/4/2016

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Published on: June 4, 2016

The beef industry is tremendously important to our economy, so it’s encouraging to see McDonald’s Canada work with producers to ensure they’ll always have a hungry market for their product.

The company, which buys all the beef for its Canadian restaurants within the country, committed in 2014 to start buying some of its beef from verifiable sustainable sources in 2016. To its credit, McDonald’s took a co-operative approach, declining to set a target on the amount of sustainable beef it would insist upon, or even define what would qualify for the increasingly important designation.

The result was a two-year pilot project involving 182 participants, including ranchers, feedlots, processors and a hamburger patty plant. Each of them was required to submit to third-party verification to prove their beef is produced in accordance with principles such as environmental responsibility, animal health, food safety, worker safety, community responsibility and innovation.

​Read the full article here.

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Real Agriculture- Canadian Roundtable for Sustainable Beef Expects Finalized Verification Framework for Late 2017

6/3/2016

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On Wednesday, McDonald’s announced the completion of its Verified Sustainable Beef (VSB) Pilot, and handed the results — and recommendations — to the Canadian Roundtable for Sustainable Beef (CRSB).

“It’s a really exciting day to talk about the accomplishment over the last year and a half that McDonald’s has been doing the pilot project here in Canada,” said Fawn Jackson, executive director for the CRSB.

The CRSB is currently in its own process of developing a verified sustainable beef indicators. The indicators have seen their first public consultation, and are now in the revision stage. A second public consultation is expected within the next couple of months.

​Read the full story here.

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Real Agriculture - McDonald’s Celebrates the Completion of Verified Sustainable Beef Pilot Project

6/2/2016

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“We did it! We did it,” exclaimed Francesca Debiase, chief supply chain and sustainability officer for McDonald’s, pumping her hands through the air, at yesterday’s celebration of the conclusion of McDonald’s Verified Sustainable Beef (VSB) Pilot in Calgary.

“Several years ago, McDonald’s supply chain made a really interesting discovery,” Debiase explained, “and that discovery was that ‘big’ does not have to equal ‘bad’. ‘Big’ can be good.”

Wanting to use their size and scale to “make a positive difference in the world,” the company committed to a goal of sourcing all of their food and packaging sustainably. Purchasing over 2% of the global beef supply, responsible for 30% of McDonald’s total carbon footprint, they thought focusing in on beef was a clear first step.

For the full story, click here.

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Meristem - McDonald's Verified Sustainable Beef Pilot final report available

6/2/2016

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Now the industry needs to decide the pathway forward
Posted: June 2, 2016

​It had the feel of a warm family gathering with a slight undercurrent of anxiousness. Beef producers involved in McDonald's Verified Sustainable Beef Pilot gathered in Calgary, Alta. at the invitation of the program sponsor to hear firsthand the details of the project final report. And to be thanked by the sponsor for their efforts in an industry first, a clear sense they were being feted as pioneers of a new era of production.

​Read the full article here.

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WWF - An Important Step for Sustainability

6/1/2016

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By Tim Hardman

Canadian ranchers have taken an important step to strengthen their country’s beef supply chain and to protect grasslands. They joined with beef producers and processors to participate in McDonald’s first-of-its-kind program to promote production practices that are more environmentally, socially, and economically sustainable.

This is critical because beef production has both positive and negative environmental impacts. On the one hand, it takes more land, water, and energy to produce one pound of beef than a pound of poultry, pork, or even soy. On the other hand, unlike chickens and pigs, cattle can turn inedible grass into edible protein and help maintain grasslands in the process.
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Read the full article here.
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