• Goodman Fielder’s new sustainability strategy includes targets of 100 per cent recyclable packaging by 2025 and to halve its food waste by 2030. “Better Together” outlines nine sustainability goals aligned to the UN 2030 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)
    Goodman Fielder’s new sustainability strategy includes targets of 100 per cent recyclable packaging by 2025 and to halve its food waste by 2030. “Better Together” outlines nine sustainability goals aligned to the UN 2030 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)
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The foreign takeover of Goodman Fielder has received the blessing of the federal government's Foreign Investment Review Board.

The company's takeover by Singapore agribusiness Wilmar and Hong-Kong investment firm First Pacific also recently received approval from the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission.

However, to get the go ahead the takeover requires regulatory approval from China as well as from New Zealand regulatory authorities.

Goodman Fielder says that Wilmar and First Pacific are continuing to progress the other regulatory approvals that are required.

“As previously announced to the market, a shareholder meeting to approve the Scheme is anticipated to be held in the first quarter of calendar 2015,” the company says.

Goodman Fielder shareholders were originally expected to approve the scheme at a meeting to be held in late November, however Goodman Fielder said last month that the meeting would be pushed back to March 2015 because obtaining regulatory approval from China was taking longer than expected.

Packaging News

Under pressure from shareholders to cut costs, Unilever has released a revised sustainability strategy that CEO Hein Schumacher describes as “unashamedly realistic”, while critics call it shameful.

Warwick Armstrong is the new managing director IPE Pack Oceania, joining the company with a wealth of experience in the Australian packaging industry, and deep knowledge of equipment and materials.

The ACCC has instituted court proceedings against Clorox Australia, owner of GLAD-branded kitchen and garbage bags, over alleged false claims that bags were partly made of recycled 'ocean plastic'.