Secretary Rice host Annual Secretary of State's Award for Corporate Excellence (ACE) Ceremony and Reception, in the Benjamin Franklin Room. |
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Washington -- Three U.S. companies have
received the U.S. Department of State’s 2006 Award for
Corporate Excellence (ACE) for advancing ethical practices
and democratic values through their operations in Latin America.
"Through their efforts, the companies
we honor today are nurturing democratic institutions and
strengthening the foundations of freedom, the ability to
earn a living, to support a family, to educate a new generation
and to build a robust economy," Rice said in presenting
the awards at the State Department on November 6.
SAMBAZON
California-based Sambazon, a fruit-drink
company in operation since 2000, is the small- or medium-sized
enterprise winner of the award. The company was recognized
for its sustainable development work in the Brazilian Amazon
rainforest.
Sambazon was the first company to export
açaí products from Brazil. Açaí
is a berry rich in antioxidants that grows wild in the Amazon
River area. In addition to providing jobs to local people
who harvest the berries, Sambazon -- which stands for sustainable
management of the Amazon -- is supporting environmental
sustainability of the river basin, the company's founder
and chief executive officer, Ryan Black, said in accepting
the award.
GOLDMAN SACHS
Goldman Sachs received an ACE in the multinational
category for giving more than 680,000 acres (270,000 hectares)
of Patagonian wilderness on the island of Tierra del Fuego,
in southern Chile, to the New York-based Wildlife Conservation
Society (WCS) for a nature preserve.
WCS is a nongovernmental organization that
works to save wildlife and wilderness areas through research,
conservation and education.
Goldman Sachs, a leading global financial
firm, acquired the land in 2002 from a land-development
company. The donation represents one of the most significant
gifts of private land in the world because of its size and
the ecosystems its contains, Goldman Sachs said.
Tierra del Fuego is home to the world's
southernmost stands of old-growth forests as well as grasslands,
rivers and wetlands. The alliance of WCS with Goldman Sachs
will ensure the long-term conservation of the region, according
to a WCS statement.
GENERAL MOTORS
Michigan-based automotive company General
Motors (GM), which has operations in Colombia, was presented
an ACE in the multinational category for providing skills
training and jobs to former paramilitary members so they
can reintegrate into society. GM also provides economic
support and social services for former militants' families
and works with the Colombian government to help create a
sustainable peace in the country.
Goldman Sachs Chief Executive Officer Lloyd
Blankfein and GM Vice Chairman Robert Lutz accepted their
companies’ awards from Rice.
"These awards signal the influential
role that American business can play in ensuring the continuing
evolution of peaceful and democratic and open societies,"
the secretary said.
"In each of these companies, there
are leaders who have the vision to look beyond the bottom
line, build lasting bridges to their host countries, and
improve the lives of countless men, women and children around
the world," said Josette Sheeran, under secretary of
state for economic, business and agricultural affairs.
OTHER FINALISTS
Other finalists for the ACE that are working
in Latin America are these companies:
• Soft drink company Coca-Cola, selected
for building schools and shelters and providing micro-enterprise
training in Mexico; and
• Restaurant company McDonald’s,
chosen for funding a "Ronald McDonald House" center,
which provides support for seriously ill children and their
families, and for helping to fund a biomedical laboratory
in Guatemala.
The award's 2006 finalists working in other
parts of the world are:
• APCO, a global consulting firm,
recognized for promoting best business practices and donating
services to fight against HIV/AIDS in China;
• Energy firm Chevron, for providing
earthquake and tsunami relief and vocational training, and
for promoting anti-bribery practices in Indonesia;
• Delta Construction, highlighted
for supporting vocational training centers and maintaining
zero tolerance for corruption practices in Vietnam;
• Energy industry's Kerr McGee, honored
for sponsoring humanitarian and development projects and
for financing construction of schools in Benin;
• Computer software maker Microsoft
recognized for providing Internet learning centers in orphanages
and for training unemployed youth in information-technology
usage in Egypt;
• Communications firm Motorola, for
contributing to security and safety, and for successful
deployment under challenging conditions in Iraq; and
• Pharmaceutical developer Pfizer,
for its response to earthquake victims, for teaching computer
skills to high-school students and for health care clinics
for women and children in Pakistan.
The secretary of state has awarded the ACE
since 1999 in recognition of the role of U.S. businesses
in advancing corporate citizenship, innovation and democratic
principles. Winners have included both multinational and
small-to-medium-sized companies.
Companies are nominated by U.S. ambassadors.
Nominations are based on companies' achievements in good
corporate citizenship, in providing safe and healthy workplaces,
in exemplary employment practices, and in responsible environmental
stewardship, Sheeran said.
A transcript
of Rice's remarks and the press
release announcing the award ceremony are available
on State's Web site.
Kathryn McConnell
Washington File Staff Writer
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