Ford Motor Co 2001 SR

The report outlines Ford Motor Company's social, economic, and environmental performance for the 2001 calendar year. Key highlights include the development of a comprehensive climate change strategy, a commitment to human rights throughout the value chain, and the testing of new business principles. Despite a difficult financial year, Ford achieved its first year since 1918 with no traumatic employee fatalities and reached an all-time high in charitable giving of $139 million. The company also progressed in sustainable manufacturing with the revitalization of the Rouge Center and the opening of a new eco-efficient plant in Brazil.

Company: Ford Motor Co

Sector: Consumer Discretionary

Country: United States

Year: 2001

Type: SR

Pages: 102

Back to company

Ford Motor Co

Ford Motor Co 2001 Corporate Citizenship Report

Corporate Citizenship Report

The report outlines Ford Motor Company's social, economic, and environmental performance for the 2001 calendar year. Key highlights include the development of a comprehensive climate change strategy, a commitment to human rights throughout the value chain, and the testing of new business principles. Despite a difficult financial year, Ford achieved its first year since 1918 with no traumatic employee fatalities and reached an all-time high in charitable giving of $139 million. The company also progressed in sustainable manufacturing with the revitalization of the Rouge Center and the opening of a new eco-efficient plant in Brazil.

Sign in for free to access detailed sustainability data, reporting standards, and ESG metrics.

Document Details

Report Year

2001

Reporting Period

Jan 1, 2001 - Dec 31, 2001

Fiscal Year

2001

Type

Sustainability Report

Language

English

Pages

 

File Size

 

Standards & Assurance

Reporting Standards

Materiality Assessment

Other Standards

ESG Data?Experimental — AI-extracted data, may contain inaccuracies

Energy Consumption

Renewable Energy

Water Consumption

Total Waste

Women in Management

Workplace Fatalities

Employees