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How Unilever Transforms Its Business with Unilever Sustainable Living Plan

Doing business with a purpose and addressing the wicked problems in the company and beyond is not only good for people and the planet, but also for the business itself.
by Mutia Khairunisa and Nazalea Kusuma July 9, 2021
Windmill illustrating sustainable living

Photo by Max Bohme from Unsplash

As aspirations towards sustainable living rise, people’s desire for sustainable products does, too. This is a good sign of awareness and willingness to turn towards sustainable development, and businesses need to meet this demand. Unilever Sustainable Living Plan (USLP) is one example of how a company works to comply with sustainability.

Unilever is one of the world’s biggest multinational consumer goods companies in the beauty & personal care, foods & refreshment, and home care sectors. The company has been around for over a century and faced challenges to comply with sustainability in its operations. Driven by responsibility and accountability to solve problems that it created, the past decade has brought immense growth to Unilever as a leader in initiating corporate sustainability.

Unilever Sustainable Living Plan (USLP) was launched in 2010. USLP serves as the company’s blueprint for sustainable growth in an uncertain world by helping to drive profitable growth for its brands, save costs, and fuel innovation. The Plan is distinctive for the way it spans Unilever’s entire portfolio and market, its socio-economic dimension, and its work across the whole value chain from raw material suppliers to consumers.

USLP sets out three big goals with varying levels of success as of 2020:

  1. Improving Health and Well-being: Health & Hygiene and Nutrition.
  2. Reducing Environmental Impact: Greenhouse Gases, Water, Waste & Packaging, Sustainable Sourcing.
  3. Enhancing Livelihoods: Fairness in the Workplace, Opportunities for Women, Inclusive Business

Though not all goals have been achieved—specifically in the environmental aspects—Unilever has stated that the USLP has only made them stronger. Here are the impacts of the USLP:

Brand Growth and Innovation

In 2014, Unilever started to define and measure its ‘sustainable living brands’. Those brands have continuously and consistently outperformed the average growth rate of Unilever.

Risks & Cost Reduction

Unilever has avoided €1 billion in costs since 2008 by improving water and energy efficiency in their factories and by using less material and producing less waste.

Talent Acquirement

The USLP has helped Unilever attract and retain the best people who want to contribute to sustainable development and are proud to be working for the company.

Partnerships and Promotion for Transformational Change

Unilever acknowledges the importance of working together to execute the USLP. They have worked with suppliers, NGOs, social enterprises, and government organizations to enhance livelihoods, create opportunities for women, and drive fairness in the workplace. At the same time, these entities helped them build trust in their business and their brands.

“The Unilever Compass builds on the past ten years of the USLP: the successes, the failures, and the lessons learned. It lays the pathway for us to lead the movement of sustainable business globally—and to prove once and for all that sustainable business drives superior business performance,” said Rebecca Marmot, Unilever’s Chief Sustainability Officer.

Global challenges such as the climate crisis and the COVID-19 pandemic that we are facing today require efforts and cooperation from all sectors, including businesses. Doing business with a purpose and addressing the wicked problems in the company and beyond is not only good for people and the planet, but also for the business itself.

Editor: Marlis Afridah

Mutia Khairunisa
Reporter at Green Network Asia | Website |  + posts Bio

Mutia is a Contributing Author at Green Network Asia. She graduated from Universitas Indonesia with a bachelor's degree in Politics.

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Nazalea Kusuma
Managing Editor at Green Network Asia | Website |  + posts Bio

Naz is the Manager of International Digital Publications at Green Network Asia. She is an experienced and passionate writer, editor, proofreader, translator, and creative designer with over a decade of portfolio. Her history of living in multiple areas across Southeast Asia and studying Urban and Regional Planning exposed her to diverse peoples and cultures, enriching her perspectives and sharpening her intersectionality mindset in her storytelling and advocacy on sustainability-related issues and sustainable development.

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