Businessman assemble ESG wording on wooden cube block for sustainable organization development and corporation of Environment Social Governance concept.

For food manufacturers, environmental, social, and governance (ESG) initiatives are no longer just nice-to-haves — pressures from regulatory requirements, consumer demands for sustainable products, and competing companies are making a solid ESG strategy absolutely essential. But while most food companies (64%) recognize the importance of ESG compliance, 41% say they’re falling short of achieving full compliance.

The challenge lies in determining how to build a more sustainable business while maintaining profitability and growth. If your company is in the midst of this struggle, here are 10 steps that can help create a winning ESG strategy and bring sustainability goals to life.

1. Assess your current status and identify gaps

Before starting any initiatives, it’s important to have a thorough understanding of current performance.

  • Begin with a comprehensive assessment identifying the ESG factors most relevant to your business, investors, and regulatory requirements. Include scope 1, 2, and 3 emissions, water usage, waste management, labor practices, and governance structures.
  • Evaluate current processing technologies against industry sustainability benchmarks. Identify areas where existing equipment or processes create environmental inefficiencies or compliance risks.
  • Conduct detailed audits of resource consumption and waste streams across production lines. Establish baseline metrics for each sustainability factor to enable accurate progress tracking.

Implementation tip: Deploy digital tools to streamline data collection across facilities, creating visibility into performance variances and improvement opportunities.

2. Align stakeholders and set clear goals

Organizational alignment and clear metrics will go a long way in setting up ESG initiatives for success. 

  • Secure executive buy-in by connecting ESG performance to business outcomes. Present evidence showing how strong ESG programs can reduce operational costs, improve capital access, and enhance brand value.
  • Establish cross-functional teams with clear sustainability mandates. Include representatives from R&D, operations, and marketing to ensure a comprehensive approach to ESG innovation.
  • Translate corporate ESG objectives into practical targets for line managers. Develop resource efficiency goals that production teams can influence through daily actions.

Implementation tip: It’s difficult to achieve success without a strong strategy, and roughly a quarter of food and beverage leaders struggle with creating clear action plans to guide their path toward sustainability. Before moving forward, be sure to develop a tiered goal structure with both long-term targets and short-term milestones that will help maintain momentum and demonstrate progress.

3. Plan technology investments and resource allocation

Effective ESG strategies require thoughtful technology investments and resource allocation.

  • Develop an investment framework for evaluating ESG technologies with clear ROI expectations. Consider establishing a dedicated sustainability capital expenditure category with defined annual allocation.
  • Create an evaluation matrix for green technologies that assesses environmental impact alongside scalability, integration requirements, and operational resilience.
  • Prioritize equipment modifications and procedural changes based on implementation complexity and potential impact. Focus initial efforts on high-impact, low-disruption initiatives to build momentum.

Implementation tip: Explore alternative financing models such as energy service agreements or equipment-as-a-service options that can reduce upfront capital requirements for sustainability technologies.

4. Build your measurement infrastructure

Robust data systems are the foundation that strengthens ESG management.

  • Invest in ESG data architecture that integrates with existing business systems. Ensure compatibility with major reporting frameworks to streamline disclosure processes.
  • Design metrics tracking systems for new processes and technologies that capture both environmental performance and operational impacts. Implement life cycle assessment capabilities.
  • Deploy real-time monitoring for key sustainability indicators at the production level. Provide operators with dashboards that visualize resource consumption during their shifts.

Implementation tip: Begin with targeted measurement of high-impact areas rather than attempting comprehensive tracking immediately. Expand data collection as your ESG program matures.

5. Develop a phased implementation roadmap

Careful phasing and clear accountability drive successful implementation.

  • Create a multi-year implementation plan with defined milestones, resource requirements, and accountability. Consider establishing an ESG steering committee with cross-functional representation.
  • Develop a methodology for scaling successful sustainability pilots to enterprise-wide adoption. Create stage-gate processes designed specifically for ESG initiatives.
  • Establish standardized procedures and training modules for sustainability initiatives. Integrate these into existing production and quality management systems.

Implementation tip: Use a phased approach to balance immediate compliance requirements, medium-term operational improvements, and long-term transformational changes.

6. Integrate ESG throughout your supply chain

For food manufacturers, supplier practices often represent the largest ESG impacts and risks, so it’s critical to find ESG-compliant partners who can support your strategy.

  • Develop a supplier ESG qualification framework with appropriate incentives and requirements. Consider creating preferred supplier status for sustainability leaders.
  • Establish collaborative innovation programs with key suppliers focused on packaging reduction, renewable ingredients, or transportation optimization. Share technology and expertise to accelerate progress.
  • Implement verification systems at receiving points to ensure supplier compliance with sustainability specifications. Develop documentation systems that support traceability claims.

Implementation tip: Only 16% of food companies use software solutions to validate supplier ESG compliance and sustainability claims. Consider investing in technology that supports compliance verification and traceability initiatives.

7. Engage and train your workforce

Like any other large-scale initiative, sustainable transformation requires workforce commitment at all levels.

  • Integrate sustainability KPIs into performance evaluation systems. Create visibility for ESG metrics in executive reporting alongside financial performance.
  • Establish innovation channels that provide resources and recognition for employee-led sustainability initiatives. Create formal processes for evaluating and implementing staff suggestions.
  • Develop role-specific training on resource efficiency and waste reduction techniques. Empower line workers to identify and implement sustainability improvements in their areas.

Implementation tip: Create a network of plant-level leaders across facilities to champion change, accelerate knowledge sharing, and ensure successful implementation of best practices.

8. Create transparent reporting systems

Transparent communication of ESG progress builds trust with stakeholders and creates accountability.

  • Design executive dashboards aligned with major reporting standards. Develop both compliance-focused reports and stakeholder-oriented sustainability communications.
  • Create innovation impact reporting templates that quantify the environmental benefits of new technologies or processes. Document initiatives to build institutional knowledge.
  • Make ESG performance visible on the production floor. Implement visual management boards that display sustainability metrics alongside productivity and quality indicators. 

Implementation tip: Begin external reporting with a focused sustainability report covering your most material issues before expanding to comprehensive ESG disclosure.

9. Establish continuous improvement mechanisms

A good ESG strategy is never complete — it evolves with changing regulations, technologies, and stakeholder expectations.

  • Establish regular ESG performance reviews with corrective action protocols. Create accountability for progress at the executive level.
  • Develop approaches for evaluating emerging green technologies and methodologies. Allocate resources for sustainability-focused R&D.
  • Gather sustainability-focused feedback from the frontline, welcoming suggestions and ideas for further improvement. Recognize and reward incremental improvements.

Implementation tip: Integrate ESG considerations into existing continuous improvement methodologies rather than creating parallel processes.

10. Validate your progress through external certification

Third-party verification enhances credibility and provides structured frameworks for improvement.

  • Align your ESG strategy with recognized certification frameworks such as B Corp, EcoVadis, or industry-specific programs. Use these frameworks to identify improvement opportunities.
  • Pursue third-party validation of environmental claims and innovations. Develop relationships with certification bodies to stay ahead of evolving standards.
  • Prepare documentation systems and evidence collection processes for compliance audits and certifications. Train facility teams on audit preparation and response.

Implementation tip: Begin with single-issue certifications most relevant to your priority areas before pursuing comprehensive ESG certifications.

ESG success depends on creating alignment between executive vision, technological innovation, and operational execution. Each stakeholder must understand both the business case for sustainability and their specific role in achieving ESG goals.

The most effective ESG strategies become integrated into business operations, capital planning, innovation processes, and performance measurement. Through this comprehensive approach, food manufacturers can create sustainable value that helps them stay competitive and meet consumer demands.

Supplier Catalog - Nilfisk