Ethical Consumer

Ethical Consumer

Buyer's guide to the biscuits

   

This is a free buyer's guide from Ethical Consumer, the UK's leading alternative consumer organisation. We research the social and environmental records of companies.

 

More detailed versions of this guide are available. See the links at the bottom of the page.

   

Best Buys as of September 2009

Best Buys logo


As our ratings are constantly updated, it is possible that brand ratings on the ethiscore website may have changed since this report was written or brands may no longer appear.


Our Best Buys for biscuits are Against the Grain (01688 302223), Biona (0208 547 2775 ), Doves Farm (01488 684880) and Island Bakery (01688 302223) as they are all organic and use sustainable palm oil.

Traidcraft (0845 330 8900) are also a Best Buy because their products are fair trade and they campaign on these issues.

Best of the most widely available brands are Nairn's (via Mood Food Co 01698 723347), because their biscuits are all vegan and Duchy Originals (available at independent shops and all major supermarkets) because they're all organic. Both use sustainable palm oil.


Brand
Rating
Against the Grain biscuits [A,O]17
Doves Farm Lemon Zest Cookies [O,A,F]17
Doves Farm sweet biscuits [O, A]16.5
Island Bakery biscuits [O]16
Biona biscuits [O]14.5
Traidcraft biscuits [F]14.5
Artisan organic biscuits [O]14
Artisan biscuits13
Orgran biscuits [A]13
Nairns' biscuits12
Bahlsen biscuits11.5
Duchy Originals biscuits [O]11.5
Mrs. Crimbles biscuits11
Elkes biscuits6.5
Fox's biscuits6.5
The Edinburgh Bakery biscuits [O]6
Green & Black's biscuits [O]5
Jammie Dodgers biscuits5
Lyons biscuits5
Maryland Cookies5
Crawford's biscuits4
Jacob's biscuits4
McVitie's biscuits4
Sainsbury's biscuits [F]4
Cadbury's Digestives3
Sainsbury's biscuits3
Morrisons biscuits2.5
Asda biscuits0.5
Tesco biscuits0.5
Tesco biscuits [F]0.5
Tesco biscuits [O]0.5

The higher the rating the more ethical the brand. This whole scorecard was last updated from our database on 14 October 2009 but some individual company ratings may have changed since then. Up to the minute information can be seen by subscribers using Ethiscore.
Learn more about our ratings.

Crumby business practices – or sustainable snacks?

Jo Southall and Bryony Moore ask which biscuit makers deserve a good dunking.


Party like it’s 1999...

Back in 1999, genetically modified (GM) food was the dominant issue, with the first GM food product (tomato paste) having hit UK supermarket shelves a few years earlier. That was also the year that the EU approved the importation and use of Monsanto’s Roundup Ready soya beans in foods for people and feed for animals. Consumers in Europe were unimpressed and soon food companies began to show their support for keeping food GM-free by adopting anti-GM policies.(1)

Today, the issue persists, having been brought to the fore once again when the recent food crisis was used as a vehicle by those financially involved in the industry to ram home the madcap suggestion that GM technology could be the answer to world hunger.

As far as biscuit manufacturers go the major ones we covered in 1999 are very similar to those we’re looking at now, aside from a few ownership changes. Groupe Danone owned the brand Jacob’s but by 2009 it’s been gobbled up by gigantic United Biscuits. The Burton’s brand (Jammie Dodgers, Maryland Cookies) has also changed ownership from Wittington Investments ten years ago, to private equity firm Duke Street Capital now.

What is different is the much bigger range of smaller specialist and organic manufacturers, reflecting the trend towards rapid growth in ethical markets which we have discussed elsewhere in this issue.


2009, the year of the orang-utan

Ten years later there’s a new environmental monster kicking up a stink – palm oil. Deforestation to make way for oil palm plantations is common, destroying the habitats of already threatened orang-utans and increasing the release of greenhouse gases into the atmosphere.(5)

When we covered biscuits ten years ago this ingredient wasn’t even mentioned in Ethical Consumer, but the rapid increase in its use since then has made it a major issue in the processed foods’ industry. As well as biscuits, palm oil is found in many other products including soap, chocolate, toothpaste, cosmetics and muesli.(3) The dramatic expansion of the biofuels industry has added to demand, which is predicted to more than double by 2030 and to triple by 2050.(4)

Indonesia already has 6 million hectares of oil palm plantations, but has plans for another 4 million by 2015, dedicated to biofuel production alone.

Companies do not legally have to specifically label palm oil as an ingredient, and therefore many just refer to it as ‘vegetable oil’. This makes it very difficult for consumers to avoid the stuff and for companies to be held accountable for their sourcing policies. However, Sainsbury’s(6) and Stiletto Foods(7) have made a commitment to transparency by naming palm oil on ingredients lists.

Industry efforts to convince consumers that they have brought palm plantation deforestation under control have come through the Roundtable on Sustainable Palm Oil (RSPO). It was set up in 2001 to establish clear ethical and ecological standards for producing palm oil, and its members include high-street names like Unilever, Cadbury’s, Nestlé and Tesco, as well as palm oil traders such as Cargill and ADM. Together these companies represent 40% of global palm oil trade.(8)

But according to Greenpeace, forest destruction has continued. Many RSPO members are taking no steps to avoid the worst practices associated with the industry, such as large-scale forest clearance and taking land from local people without their consent. This happens because membership of the RSPO does not require companies to commit to buy sustainably sourced palm oil, and those that have made a commitment don’t always stick to it. On top of this, the RSPO actually risks creating the illusion of sustainable palm oil, justifying the expansion of the palm oil industry.(8) Greenpeace adds that some RSPO members are actually directly involved in deforestation.(8)

According to Rodney Taylor, Director of WWF International’s Forests Programme, figures released in May this year showed that, so far, around 1.3 million tonnes of certified sustainable palm oil has been produced by RSPO member plantation companies. Unfortunately, less than 1% of that has been bought, having instead been sold at standard rates with the unsustainable variety.

At the time of going to press, WWF were planning to publish a Palm Oil Buyer’s Scorecard to expose those who have not fulfilled their commitments to buy CSPO (Certified Sustainable Palm Oil). Our table below shows which companies are members of the RSPO and which have made commitments to using CSPO in the future.




* Data from ‘Big brands: Palm oil policy’, which appeared on www.independent.co.uk on 2nd May 2009. All other data from RSPO website and directly from the companies.
** For some products it is not currently possible to purchase CSPO due to technical reasons. Ethical Consumer has accepted the purchase of Greenpalm certificates as an alternative.


Health issues

In January 2007 Ofcom banned adverts for very fatty, salty or sugary foods during TV programmes which had an above average audience of children and young people aged under 16. However, this fell short of the blanket ban on all junk food advertising before the 9pm watershed, which campaigners were hoping for.(9) Two years later, however, campaigners are still predicting a growth in obesity with figures for the under 20s showing an increase of 10% by 2015 and 14% by 2025.(10)
We’re constantly being bombarded by health warnings about various processed food ingredients, to the extent that it all becomes a bit confusing. But basically, saturated and trans fats should be avoided because they raise LDL (or ‘bad’) cholesterol levels in the blood, thereby increasing the risk of heart disease. Both are commonly found in processed food such as biscuits and cakes. Dietary cholesterol also contributes to heart disease. Unsaturated fats, such as monounsaturated and polyunsaturated, do not raise LDL cholesterol and are beneficial when consumed in moderation.(11)


GM Food in 2009

Some campaigners argue that the persistence of GM in our food supply can be put down to the Codex Alimentarius (Latin for ‘food code’) Commission. This body, run by the World Health Organisation and Food and Agriculture Organization under the auspices of the UN since the 60s, is responsible for establishing a system of standards and recommendations that guide the direction of the global food supply. It aims to tell us what is safe, but in the process often uses criteria that are manipulated to support the interests of the world’s largest corporations. This, say campaigners, means that Codex is working towards a slackening of organic food regulations, a widespread adoption of GM into the food chain, and continuing to allow a high levels of toxic pesticides in our foods. See the links section for places to go for more information.(2)


Price Comparison

We've compared prices of choc chip cookies (or the next best thing) taking each brand's cheapest available product, except in the case of the supermarkets, where we've used their mid-range product.




Company Profiles

SUPERMARKETS – All the supermarkets have recently been accused of driving rapid destruction in the Amazon rainforest by using meat from farms responsible for illegal deforestation, according to a three-year investigation of the global trade in Brazilian cattle products by Greenpeace.(13) Much of the trade was in processed beef, used for pies, canned meat and frozen ready meals.(13)

In order for workers in supply chains to assert their rights, they need to have access to the codes of conduct of the companies they supply. In order for Ethical Consumer to assess the quality of these codes for our Supply Chain Policy column on the table, we need to see them. The supermarkets’ supply chain scores have all been downgraded recently due to them not making their supply chain codes of conduct publicly available, or letting Ethical Consumer see a copy of them. Sainsbury’s, Tesco and Asda are all members of the ETI, but it has become apparent that it is not a prerequisite of ETI membership that members fully integrate the ETI code into their code of conduct at the outset.

Doves Farm Foods has a policy of not using nanotechnologies. Currently, engineered nanoparticles in food are not allowed in the UK but the Doves’ stance is relevant as engineered nanoparticles have started to be used in food packaging.

The Fine Cheese Company (Artisan) is a supporter of the independent retailer and has a policy of never selling any of its product range to supermarkets.
Traidcraft has provided research for the implementation of a Fairtrade certification scheme for palm oil.(13) It has picked up marks in the Animal Rights column for the sale of leather and silk.

Cadbury, which bought Green & Black’s in 2005, pick up a mark in the Anti-Social Finance category, partly because at least four of the company’s directors were being paid over £1m a year in 2008.(12) Its Dairy Milk bars have just gone Fairtrade in Britian and Ireland.

United Biscuits is jointly owned by two private equity firms. It is criticisms of companies that these two equity firms own that account for the bulk of the marks for United Biscuits’ brands.
The Blackstone Group owns stakes in more than 40 companies and has some $90 billion in assets under management. Key portfolio companies include Cineworld cinemas, Hilton Hotels, visitor attractions including Madame Tussauds, the London Eye and Sea Life centres, Center Parcs, Orangina, and the restaurants Cafe Rouge, Strada and Bella Italia. It also has a substantial investment in oil sands extraction company Osum Oil Sands (see the Petrol report for more details on oil sands).(16)
PAI Partners owns stakes in 16 companies with assets valued at $14 billion including dairy company Yoplait and Kwik Fit.

Northern Foods owns Solway Foods, who win the prize for the most bizarre pollution incident: in 2005 the company was fined for not one, but two incidents of coleslaw pollution. Skips of coleslaw waste were allowed to leak into water courses, causing high levels of ammonia.(14) Northern Foods also owns Green Isle Foods who are mentioned in the Greenpeace deforestation report mentioned above.

Duke Street Capital owns Deloro Stellite, who provide components to the nuclear industry, including: castings, fabricated components, ferrous, hardfacing alloys, special metals and alloys.(15) Despite Burton’s membership of the RSPO, one of Duke Street Capital’s other companies, Accantia Health and Beauty, is not. Accantia make the Simple brand of soap and other toiletries.


Links

Borneo Orangutan Survival UK
WWF
Friends of the Earth
Greenpeace
Palm Oil campaign
Codex Alimentarius campaign


References

1 www.news.bbc.co.uk, viewed 14/07/09
2 www.anhcampaign.org/campaigns/codex, viewed 14/07/09
3 www.foe.co.uk, viewed 14/07/09
4 www.greenpeace.org.uk, viewed 14/07/09
5 www.greenpeace.org.uk, viewed 14/07/09
6 The Guardian, The slipery business of palm oil, 06/11/08
7 Phone conversation with Stiletto Foods representative 13/07/09
8 www.greenpeace.org, viewed 14/07/09
9 www.guardian.co.uk/society/2006/nov/17/health.food, viewed 14/07/09
10 The NHS Information Centre, Statistics on obesity, physical activity and diet:England, February 2009
11 www.fda.gov/Food/LabelingNutrition/ConsumerInformation/ucm109832.htm, viewed 14/07/09
12 Cadbury plc annual report 2008, p 73
13 ‘Slaughtering the Amazon’ report, Greenpeace, June 2009
14 Hazards, July 2005
15 World Nuclear Industry Handbook, 2007
16 ‘Osum Oil Sands announces $275 million refinancing’, August 27 2008, Osum Oil Sands.



   

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