Peter Brabeck-Letmathe, chairman of Nestlé, has repeatedly warned that water is becoming a scarce resource. Water tables are falling particularly fast in regions where agricultural output is increasing, such as in India. “The water crisis that seems possible within the next 10 to 20 years will therefore quite probably trigger significant shortfalls in cereal production and, as a result, a massive global food crisis,” he says.
A member of the European Roundtable of Industrialists and of the World Economic Forum’s foundation board, Brabeck-Letmathe has not been shy about using his public platforms to speak out on water issues. But what is Nestlé itself doing to conserve water? McKinsey Quarterly asked Peter Brabeck-Letmathe in October.
Read the full story, with free registration, here.
Latest from Lawn & Landscape
- Bartlett Tree Experts acquire Oregon's Bartlett Tree Service
- Sunseeker launches S4 robotic lawn mower
- Massey Services promotes Mumme to divisional VP, commercial services regio
- Asplundh Infrastructure Group promotes MacAleese to COO
- Caterpillar's Umpleby III to retire as executive chairman of board
- Breaking down the HighGrove Partners sale to Agellus Capital
- Registration open for the Lawn & Landscape Technology Conference
- OTR Engineered Solutions names Oscar Torres president, CEO