Swiss food giant Nestlé has officially withdrawn from the Dairy Methane Action Alliance, a global coalition formed in December 2023 by major food companies to reduce methane emissions from dairy supply chains. The alliance counts members such as Danone, Kraft Heinz, Starbucks, Bel, and General Mills, who have committed to measuring, reporting, and reducing dairy-related methane emissions.
Nestlé did not publicly disclose a detailed rationale behind the exit. In its statement, the company said it “regularly reviews membership of external organizations,” and as part of that review, decided to discontinue participation in the alliance. The company, however, affirmed that it remains committed to reducing greenhouse gas emissions — including methane — and to its broader goal of net-zero emissions by 2050.
Critics and observers have responded with concern. Environmental advocates warn that Nestlé’s move could weaken the alliance’s influence and erode investor or public confidence in voluntary climate action in agriculture. The departure is seen in the context of broader attrition from climate alliances in recent times.
It is noteworthy that even before exiting, Nestlé had reported a reduction in methane emissions: the company says it cut methane by nearly 21% between 2018 and 2024. But the company has not broken out dairy-specific methane figures in much detail, which critics say limits the credibility of its claims in the dairy sector.
Industry Implications & Outlook
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Signal to Peers & Alliances
Nestlé’s withdrawal may prompt other corporations to reconsider their commitments in voluntary climate alliances, especially if cost, transparency demands, or regulatory pressures intensify. The move could weaken collective action in the dairy industry. -
Pressure on Disclosure & Accountability
Without binding oversight, the credibility of emissions reductions claims in the dairy sector may come under increased scrutiny by stakeholders — investors, regulators, NGOs. Companies will be pressured to provide more transparent and verifiable data. -
Regulatory Risk
As voluntary alliances falter, governments or regulators may step in to enforce stricter rules on livestock emissions, reporting, and environmental impact for dairy supply chains. Companies that retreat from self-regulation may find themselves exposed to new mandates. -
Supply Chain & Farmer Impacts
Many dairy farmers, especially in developing regions, may have been expecting technical assistance, incentives, or standards support from alliance members. Nestlé’s exit might slow down or complicate delivery of climate-friendly practices to farm level. -
Reputational Risk & Consumer Sentiment
With climate action increasingly integrated into brand value, Nestlé may face reputational pushback among consumers, investors, or sustainability-minded partners. -
Opportunity for Others
Other dairy or food companies still in the alliance may position themselves more boldly as climate leaders. This could shift competitive positioning in sustainability credentials.
Source : Dairynews7x7 Oct 9th 2025 Bloomberg and Reuters