Aurora Organic Dairy, a leading U.S. provider of high-quality, private-label organic milk and butter, today announced a major initiative with the University of Michigan to measure and reduce its carbon footprint across the entire product lifecycle, from cattle feed to cartons in retail dairy cases. This research is believed to be the most comprehensive carbon emissions reduction initiative undertaken in the organic dairy industry, and will be funded by the newly established Aurora Organic Dairy Foundation.
BOULDER, Colo. (Business Wire EON) January 8, 2008 --
Aurora Organic Dairy, a leading U.S. provider of high-quality,
private-label organic milk and butter, today announced a major
initiative with the University of Michigan to measure and reduce its
carbon footprint across the entire product lifecycle, from cattle feed
to cartons in retail dairy cases. This research is believed to be the
most comprehensive carbon emissions reduction initiative undertaken in
the organic dairy industry, and will be funded by the newly established
Aurora Organic Dairy Foundation.
Also announced today, the Aurora Organic Dairy Foundation is a
Colorado-based not-for-profit organization that will fund research,
market-development initiatives and community-building activities
benefitting organic agriculture, including farmers, processors,
consumers, animals and the environment.
The Foundation’s first grant of more than
$320,000 will fund a long-term research partnership with the Center for
Sustainable Systems at the University of Michigan’s
School of Natural Resources and Environment. With the proceeds of the
grant, the center will conduct lifecycle and sustainability research at
Aurora Organic Dairy’s facilities, including
its state-of-the-art High Plains organic dairy farm in Colorado and its
Coldwater organic dairy farms in Texas.
Led by associate professor Gregory Keoleian, Ph.D., and Martin Heller,
Ph.D., the research initially will focus on developing an energy and
carbon footprint model, creating a baseline against which Aurora Organic
can make improvements in its sustainability performance.
The center will examine the entire product lifecycle from “seed
to shelf,” including important measures such
as growing pasture and cattle feed, manufacturing, and product
distribution to retail customers. The study will identify those
processes that contribute the greatest environmental impacts, focused
primarily on total energy consumption and carbon emissions. In Phase II,
the center will make recommendations for improving Aurora Organic’s
sustainability performance, including energy supply and demand options,
non fuel-related carbon emissions, and energy and greenhouse gasses from
material resources such as packaging.
“Aurora Organic Dairy is providing the Center
for Sustainable Systems with an excellent opportunity to apply our
research expertise and address real challenges faced by organic
agriculture producers,” said Dr. Keoleian, CSS
co-director and research team leader. “We’re
grateful for this opportunity and look forward to sharing our findings
and recommendations with the organic agriculture community to help drive
meaningful change in energy consumption and carbon emissions patterns
resulting from organic farming.”
“This grant from the Aurora Organic Dairy
Foundation to the University of Michigan is the first of many that will
help fund continued research into development of organic best practices,
with a strong emphasis on sustainability,”
said Mark Retzloff, President and Chief Organic Officer of Aurora
Organic Dairy. “Our goal is to evaluate what
we do on our farms and throughout our supply chain, and to develop tools
for guiding our company and enhancing our sustainability performance. We
intend to learn as much as we can about how to make organic agriculture
even more sustainable. Our goal is to share what we learn with our
network of more than 120 family farmers and the organic agriculture
community as a whole.”
About Aurora Organic Dairy
Aurora Organic Dairy’s mission is making
high-quality organic milk and butter more affordable and available for
American families. The company is a leading producer of private-label
and store-brand organic milk and butter. The organic production company
includes headquarters offices in Boulder, Colo., five organic dairy
farms in Colorado and Texas and an on-farm organic dairy processing
plant near Platteville, Colo. For more information, visit www.auroraorganic.com.
About the Center for Sustainable Systems
The Center for Sustainable Systems at the University of Michigan’s
School of Natural Resources and Environment advances concepts of
sustainability through interdisciplinary research and education. CSS
collaborates with diverse stakeholders to develop and apply life cycle
based models and sustainability metrics for systems that meet societal
needs. CSS promotes tools and knowledge that support the design,
evaluation, and improvement of complex systems. For more information,
visit www.css.snre.umich.edu.
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