| Mom Blog| Login | Working Mother Media | e-News | Subscriptions |








JOHNSON & JOHNSON  print     e-mail 
 
New Brunswick, NJ
 
CLAIM TO FAME
Environmental educator
 
CHAIRMAN & CEO
William C. Weldon
 
WE LOVE
It bans ozone-depleting substances from its products.
 
 
Imagine your boss asking you to learn more about how to preserve the planet—and then paying you to do so. Well, that's the case at Johnson & Johnson, where each company division must launch a five-year environmental literacy plan for its employees, with the introduction of at least one new educational program each year.

As one of the world's largest health-care companies, J&J knows that safeguarding the environment is both a moral and a business imperative. A major supporter of
environmental organizations, including the World Wildlife Fund and the Nature Conservancy, it runs 70 of its own conservation projects and subjects all of its products to ecological risk assessments. Occasionally, doing due diligence means cleaning up old messes, as the company did in December when it agreed to remove hazardous waste from two Sayreville, NJ, sites it uses.

What J&J learns from such experiences clearly helps to inform its environmental management at home: Its scientists pursue green chemistry methods (allowing them to double drug output and halve waste); ozone-depleting substances have been banned from
all products; and polyvinyl chloride (PVC), which creates toxins in processing, is being phased out of consumer items.

J&J has won a Green Power Award from the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) a record five times. All of its U.S. locations meet strict environmental standards, and 40% of their power comes from renewable energy sources. Especially notable is J&J's La Jolla, CA, laboratory, which is entirely cooled, heated and powered by natural gas, further saving energy and lowering its carbon dioxide output.
 
Prev Item Next Item
 Search:
  
     DELL

  When a company's CEO is the one chairing its sustainability committee, you know it's serious about making a difference. This year, Dell introduced its brand-new Plant a Tree for Me program, which allows PC buyers to donate money and have trees planted on their behalf, thus offsetting their computers' ...
Read More >> 

     IBM

  One simple change can make a world of difference when you have the power of Big Blue behind you. By allowing more than 32,000 employees to work from home last year, IBM saved eight million gallons of gasoline and kept 68,000 tons of carbon dioxide emissions from entering ...
Read More >> 

 

Green Cos sidebar

 
 
CATEGORIES
Apparel
Beauty
Design
Entertainment
Family Products
Fashion
Finance
Food
Retail
Technology
Transportation

TOP SEARCHES
Sort by Company A-Z
Sort by State
View Complete List
Complete With Descriptions
Site Map | Privacy Policy | Terms of Service | Media Kit | Subscribe | Subscriber Services | Contact Us

Copyright © 2009 Working Mother. All rights reserved. Reproduction in whole or in part without permission is prohibited.

workingmother.com is part of The Parenting.com Network, a division of Bonnier Corporation.