Kimberly-Clark Ranked Among the Top 100 Greenest U.S. Companies
The manufacturer of industrial wipers, safety apparel, gloves, respiratory, eye and hearing protection, and welding and work zone safety equipment earned an overall Green Score of 80.65 out of 100 in the rankings.
Posted: November 12, 2010
The Kimberly-Clark Corporation (Neenah, WI) made the most environmental progress within the consumer products/car category among the top 100 companies over the past year, according to Newsweek‘s 2010 Green Rankings of the largest 500 companies.
KCC is the parent firm of Kimberly-Clark Professional, the manufacturer of WypAll and Kimtech wipers used on manufacturing shop floors, labs, cleanrooms and other controlled environments. KCP also supplies manufacturers with Kleenguard apparel, gloves, respiratory, eye and hearing protection. With the recent acquisition of Jackson Safety, Kimberly-Clark Professional broadened its safety portfolio to include a wide range of welding and work zone safety products.
Newsweek ranked Kimberly-Clark No. 76, up from No. 120 in 2009 among the largest 500 companies, and No. 8, up from No. 10 in 2009 among the consumer products/car category companies this year. The second annual study by the leading weekly news magazine measures the environmental performance of the 500 largest publicly traded companies based on each company’s resource use and emission levels, environmental policies and strategies, and peer reputation.
“Kimberly-Clark is honored to be ranked among the top 100 greenest companies in the U.S., as measured by Newsweek’s comprehensive research,” said Suhas Apte, Vice President of Global Sustainability at Kimberly-Clark. “This ranking reflects our ongoing commitment to sustainability and to continuously improving our environmental performance.” Kimberly-Clark earned an overall Green Score of 80.65 out of 100 in Newsweek’s 2010 Green Rankings. The score is based on the ranking of a company’s global environmental impact, based on more than 700 metrics; an extensive assessment of environmental initiatives; and a reputation survey of CEOs, environmental officers and other experts.
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www.newsweek.com/feature/2010/green-rankings.html