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New Echelon Insights Survey Commissioned by Rockefeller Foundation: Most Americans Back Foreign Aid a Year After USAID's End

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New Echelon Insights Survey Commissioned by Rockefeller Foundation: Most Americans Back Foreign Aid a Year After USAID's End
Business

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New Echelon Insights Survey Commissioned by Rockefeller Foundation: Most Americans Back Foreign Aid a Year After USAID's End

2026-06-30 13:01 Last Updated At:13:25

  • A majority (54%) across the political spectrum remains favorable toward foreign aid a year after USAID's dismantlement, and 8 in 10 say the path forward is to reform and strengthen foreign aid — not eliminate it.
  • Seven in ten Americans — including half of those who primarily support Trump over the Republican Party — would support spending 2% of the federal budget (double previous levels), while overall favorability climbs from 54% to 70% once people learn what aid costs and accomplishes.
  • NEW YORK, June 30, 2026 /PRNewswire/ -- Echelon Insights and The Rockefeller Foundation today released findings from a new public opinion survey evaluating Americans' opinions on global aid as the nation marks one year since the official closure of the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) and looks ahead to America's 250th birthday. Coming on the heels of the dismantling of traditional U.S. humanitarian and development structures and historic declines in Official Development Assistance (ODA) by the world's main donors, An American Perspective on Foreign Aid shows that Americans of all ages, education levels, and political and religious affiliations support a broad range of global development programs and believe these programs are in the best interest of the United States.

    The survey found that a majority of Americans (54%) have a favorable view of U.S. foreign aid, and despite differing levels of support across the political spectrum, overwhelming majorities support specific types of foreign aid work when described more specifically like humanitarian relief (90%), preventing disease outbreaks (90%), and peacekeeping and conflict resolution (78%). A significant majority of Americans (81%) favor strengthening U.S. foreign aid programs with stricter safeguards over eliminating them entirely.

    "Our country's global leadership was built on the American people's conviction that building a safer, healthier, and more stable world is an investment in our own security and prosperity," said  Dr. Rajiv J. Shah, President of The Rockefeller Foundation. "Despite recent decisions by leaders around the world, Americans of all political persuasions have remained consistent in supporting effective, results-driven work to prevent diseases, end conflicts, and provide lifesaving food and medicine to the suffering. This data should encourage all of us to commit to a modern, accountable approach to foreign aid that can deliver real results for the world's vulnerable in the face of 21st century challenges."

    Key Findings:
    The Rockefeller Foundation, in association with its affiliated public charity, RF Catalytic Capital, commissioned U.S.-based Echelon Insights to conduct the survey to establish a baseline of public attitudes toward specific foreign aid programs, identify areas of shared alignment, and measure how Americans weigh the practical outcomes of U.S. engagement abroad. The comprehensive sample comprised 2,000 adults surveyed from June 12-16, 2026 across all 50 states, balanced across party, region, age, gender, and race/ethnicity.

    "Americans who are most aligned with President Trump support aid that is accountable, rooted in U.S. interests, and focused on concrete humanitarian outcomes, from preventing disease to responding to disasters to saving lives in moments of crisis," said Patrick Ruffini, founding partner at Echelon Insights. "The data show a path forward for rebuilding foreign aid programs with strong support across party lines."

    Beyond the clear humanitarian mandate, the survey underscores that while there are differences in perspectives across the political spectrum, Americans view international assistance as a tangible driver of domestic security, economic growth, and global stability, and key themes emerged:

    1. Broad Support That Has Held — and the "What" Matters Most. A full year after USAID was officially dismantled, a majority of Americans remain favorable toward foreign aid, and most want it strengthened and reformed rather than ended. Support climbs higher still when aid is described not as an umbrella term but as the specific work it funds. Across every program area tested — and across party lines — Americans favor the work, often overwhelmingly. Additional findings include, but are not limited to:

      1. 54% remain favorable toward foreign aid a year after the cuts — a net rating of +19 points. By the end of the survey once respondents had been presented with greater information on the details and impact of foreign aid programs, that number went up by +16 points to 70%.
      2. 8 in 10 say the right path is to reform and strengthen foreign aid with better safeguards, not eliminate it — including 83% of Republican and Republican-leaning respondents.
      3. 41% said the world is worse off while 20% said it is  better off when asked to assess the impact of 2025's foreign aid reductions
      4. Humanitarian and disaster relief: 90% support (86% Republican and Republican-leaning, 95% Democrat and Democrat-leaning)
      5. Preventing disease outbreaks: 90% support (85% Republican and Republican leaning / 94% Democrat and Democrat leaning)
      6. Global health: 84% support (74% Republican and Republican leaning / 93% Democrat and Democrat leaning)
      7. Economic development: 81% support (71% Republican and Republican leaning / 91% Democrat and Democrat leaning)
      8. Peacekeeping and conflict resolution: 78% support (73% Republican and Republican leaning / 84% Democrat and Democrat leaning)
      9. Democracy promotion: 72% support (64% Republican and Republican leaning / 82% Democrat and Democrat leaning)
    2. Americans Would Spend Double. Foreign aid made up roughly 1% of the federal budget before the 2025 cuts — far less than most Americans polled believe. Yet a strong majority would fund it well above its historical level. Seven in ten support setting foreign aid at 2% of the annual budget, which would double its pre-2025 level, and that willingness extends across party lines. When respondents were finally shown the real figure, more than three-quarters said it was about right or too low — a point of consensus among Republicans, Independents, and Democrats alike. Additional findings include, but are not limited to:
      1. 70% support setting foreign aid at 2% of the federal budget — double its historical level — including 49% of those who say they primarily support President Trump (vs. 36% opposed).
      2. 78% said the actual ~1% cost was either "about right" (41%) or "too low" (37%) once it was revealed to them — meaning fewer than 1 in 10 (9%) called it too high.
      3. Consensus across the spectrum: 71% of Republicans, 80% of Independents, and 86% of Democrats agreed the ~1% allocation was "about right" or "too low," as did 64% of those who say they primarily support President Trump.
      4. 31% of Americans correctly guessed foreign aid was under 5% of the budget, while 35% thought it was 20% or more, and 8% believed it exceeded half the federal budget.
    3. Every Argument Lands Across the Aisle. When the case for foreign aid is spelled out, no single rationale stands alone — Americans find the full range of arguments persuasive, from principled to practical, and majorities of both parties agree on each. Key findings include, but are not limited to:

      1. Foreign policy: 79% agree foreign aid can be a good and effective part of U.S. foreign policy (71% Republican and Republican-leaning, 89% Democrat and Democrat-leaning).
      2. National security: 72% say it keeps the U.S. safer and more secure from threats (63% Republican and Republican leaning, 81% Democrat and Democrat leaning).
      3. Saving money: 68% found convincing the argument that aid saves the U.S. money by preventing conflicts and crises before they require costlier intervention (54% Republican and Republican leaning / 81% Democrat and Democrat leaning).
      4. Global competition: 68% found convincing the case that aid is an important tool in U.S. competition with Russia and China for global influence (62% Republican and Republican leaning / 75% Democrat and Democrat leaning).
    4. Spotlight: The 2026 Ebola Outbreak. The survey was fielded against the backdrop of an active Ebola outbreak in the Democratic Republic of the Congo — a real-time test of how a current threat shapes views on aid. A majority of Americans (54%) say they are very or somewhat concerned about its potential spread to the United States. That concern translates into policy preference: 72% say the outbreak has led them to support restoring some or all U.S. global health aid worldwide — a result that holds across party lines and links the immediate crisis to broader aid policy. When shown expert estimates that foreign aid cuts could lead to more than 9 million deaths by 2030, 70% said they would support restoring aid funding.

    "This data is a direct rebuttal to anyone who claims Americans have lost their appetite for the world. Americans never stopped being generous; Washington just stopped delivering on it," said Dr. John A. Gans, former Chief Speechwriter at the Pentagon, author of White House Warriors, and current Senior Vice President and project lead at The Rockefeller Foundation. "250 years after America's revolution and 1 year after USAID's razing, a majority of Americans don't just want to ensure federal funding to feed the hungry, cure the sick, and respond to crisis around the world—they see good reason to increase it. The lesson for Washington is clear: don't doubt the generosity of Americans; deliver on it."

    An American Perspective on Foreign Aid is the latest research to be commissioned by The Rockefeller Foundation's Build the Shared Future Initiative, through which the 113-year-old philanthropic organization aims to inspire and inform global cooperation and international development work that matches the challenges of the 21st century, including efforts to align with governments around the world to identify country-led solutions to maximize every dollar of remaining aid and to stimulate new investments.

    About The Rockefeller Foundation
    Investing $30 billion over the last 113 years to promote the well-being of humanity, The Rockefeller Foundation is a pioneering philanthropy built on unlikely partnerships and innovative solutions that deliver measurable results for people in the United States and around the world. We leverage scientific breakthroughs, artificial intelligence, and new technologies to make big bets across energy, food, health, and finance with our partners and our affiliated public charity, RFCC. For more information, follow us on LinkedIn @the-rockefeller-foundation, X @RockefellerFdn, Instagram @rockefellerfdn, and YouTube @RockefellerFdn, and sign up for our newsletter at www.rockefellerfoundation.org/subscribe.

    Video - https://mmx.prnewswire.com/media/MS1874881/7-in-10.mp4?id=OA2743925&token=eyJhbGciOiJkaXIiLCJlbmMiOiJBMjU2R0NNIn0..GW3zTOISXj4gjz0M.dN_K8mj_xf9ViCLrP3nYDjGqe_k1BRKNuQt-oTWA8uoeKSPch3t0WH6BWFDQdUB3b2RYNfV2Rv-TZoMU8mctDbsqmGn5GD_3yiGNHa04xmIMqz8IeK3b7AgzYVf9p4g_Q5M.XolgMXE1MsG1TqISIqnVPw

     

NEW YORK, June 30, 2026 /PRNewswire/ -- Echelon Insights and The Rockefeller Foundation today released findings from a new public opinion survey evaluating Americans' opinions on global aid as the nation marks one year since the official closure of the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) and looks ahead to America's 250th birthday. Coming on the heels of the dismantling of traditional U.S. humanitarian and development structures and historic declines in Official Development Assistance (ODA) by the world's main donors, An American Perspective on Foreign Aid shows that Americans of all ages, education levels, and political and religious affiliations support a broad range of global development programs and believe these programs are in the best interest of the United States.

The survey found that a majority of Americans (54%) have a favorable view of U.S. foreign aid, and despite differing levels of support across the political spectrum, overwhelming majorities support specific types of foreign aid work when described more specifically like humanitarian relief (90%), preventing disease outbreaks (90%), and peacekeeping and conflict resolution (78%). A significant majority of Americans (81%) favor strengthening U.S. foreign aid programs with stricter safeguards over eliminating them entirely.

"Our country's global leadership was built on the American people's conviction that building a safer, healthier, and more stable world is an investment in our own security and prosperity," said  Dr. Rajiv J. Shah, President of The Rockefeller Foundation. "Despite recent decisions by leaders around the world, Americans of all political persuasions have remained consistent in supporting effective, results-driven work to prevent diseases, end conflicts, and provide lifesaving food and medicine to the suffering. This data should encourage all of us to commit to a modern, accountable approach to foreign aid that can deliver real results for the world's vulnerable in the face of 21st century challenges."

Key Findings:
The Rockefeller Foundation, in association with its affiliated public charity, RF Catalytic Capital, commissioned U.S.-based Echelon Insights to conduct the survey to establish a baseline of public attitudes toward specific foreign aid programs, identify areas of shared alignment, and measure how Americans weigh the practical outcomes of U.S. engagement abroad. The comprehensive sample comprised 2,000 adults surveyed from June 12-16, 2026 across all 50 states, balanced across party, region, age, gender, and race/ethnicity.

"Americans who are most aligned with President Trump support aid that is accountable, rooted in U.S. interests, and focused on concrete humanitarian outcomes, from preventing disease to responding to disasters to saving lives in moments of crisis," said Patrick Ruffini, founding partner at Echelon Insights. "The data show a path forward for rebuilding foreign aid programs with strong support across party lines."

Beyond the clear humanitarian mandate, the survey underscores that while there are differences in perspectives across the political spectrum, Americans view international assistance as a tangible driver of domestic security, economic growth, and global stability, and key themes emerged:

  1. Broad Support That Has Held — and the "What" Matters Most. A full year after USAID was officially dismantled, a majority of Americans remain favorable toward foreign aid, and most want it strengthened and reformed rather than ended. Support climbs higher still when aid is described not as an umbrella term but as the specific work it funds. Across every program area tested — and across party lines — Americans favor the work, often overwhelmingly. Additional findings include, but are not limited to:

    1. 54% remain favorable toward foreign aid a year after the cuts — a net rating of +19 points. By the end of the survey once respondents had been presented with greater information on the details and impact of foreign aid programs, that number went up by +16 points to 70%.
    2. 8 in 10 say the right path is to reform and strengthen foreign aid with better safeguards, not eliminate it — including 83% of Republican and Republican-leaning respondents.
    3. 41% said the world is worse off while 20% said it is  better off when asked to assess the impact of 2025's foreign aid reductions
    4. Humanitarian and disaster relief: 90% support (86% Republican and Republican-leaning, 95% Democrat and Democrat-leaning)
    5. Preventing disease outbreaks: 90% support (85% Republican and Republican leaning / 94% Democrat and Democrat leaning)
    6. Global health: 84% support (74% Republican and Republican leaning / 93% Democrat and Democrat leaning)
    7. Economic development: 81% support (71% Republican and Republican leaning / 91% Democrat and Democrat leaning)
    8. Peacekeeping and conflict resolution: 78% support (73% Republican and Republican leaning / 84% Democrat and Democrat leaning)
    9. Democracy promotion: 72% support (64% Republican and Republican leaning / 82% Democrat and Democrat leaning)
  2. Americans Would Spend Double. Foreign aid made up roughly 1% of the federal budget before the 2025 cuts — far less than most Americans polled believe. Yet a strong majority would fund it well above its historical level. Seven in ten support setting foreign aid at 2% of the annual budget, which would double its pre-2025 level, and that willingness extends across party lines. When respondents were finally shown the real figure, more than three-quarters said it was about right or too low — a point of consensus among Republicans, Independents, and Democrats alike. Additional findings include, but are not limited to:
    1. 70% support setting foreign aid at 2% of the federal budget — double its historical level — including 49% of those who say they primarily support President Trump (vs. 36% opposed).
    2. 78% said the actual ~1% cost was either "about right" (41%) or "too low" (37%) once it was revealed to them — meaning fewer than 1 in 10 (9%) called it too high.
    3. Consensus across the spectrum: 71% of Republicans, 80% of Independents, and 86% of Democrats agreed the ~1% allocation was "about right" or "too low," as did 64% of those who say they primarily support President Trump.
    4. 31% of Americans correctly guessed foreign aid was under 5% of the budget, while 35% thought it was 20% or more, and 8% believed it exceeded half the federal budget.
  3. Every Argument Lands Across the Aisle. When the case for foreign aid is spelled out, no single rationale stands alone — Americans find the full range of arguments persuasive, from principled to practical, and majorities of both parties agree on each. Key findings include, but are not limited to:

    1. Foreign policy: 79% agree foreign aid can be a good and effective part of U.S. foreign policy (71% Republican and Republican-leaning, 89% Democrat and Democrat-leaning).
    2. National security: 72% say it keeps the U.S. safer and more secure from threats (63% Republican and Republican leaning, 81% Democrat and Democrat leaning).
    3. Saving money: 68% found convincing the argument that aid saves the U.S. money by preventing conflicts and crises before they require costlier intervention (54% Republican and Republican leaning / 81% Democrat and Democrat leaning).
    4. Global competition: 68% found convincing the case that aid is an important tool in U.S. competition with Russia and China for global influence (62% Republican and Republican leaning / 75% Democrat and Democrat leaning).
  4. Spotlight: The 2026 Ebola Outbreak. The survey was fielded against the backdrop of an active Ebola outbreak in the Democratic Republic of the Congo — a real-time test of how a current threat shapes views on aid. A majority of Americans (54%) say they are very or somewhat concerned about its potential spread to the United States. That concern translates into policy preference: 72% say the outbreak has led them to support restoring some or all U.S. global health aid worldwide — a result that holds across party lines and links the immediate crisis to broader aid policy. When shown expert estimates that foreign aid cuts could lead to more than 9 million deaths by 2030, 70% said they would support restoring aid funding.

  1. 54% remain favorable toward foreign aid a year after the cuts — a net rating of +19 points. By the end of the survey once respondents had been presented with greater information on the details and impact of foreign aid programs, that number went up by +16 points to 70%.
  2. 8 in 10 say the right path is to reform and strengthen foreign aid with better safeguards, not eliminate it — including 83% of Republican and Republican-leaning respondents.
  3. 41% said the world is worse off while 20% said it is  better off when asked to assess the impact of 2025's foreign aid reductions
  4. Humanitarian and disaster relief: 90% support (86% Republican and Republican-leaning, 95% Democrat and Democrat-leaning)
  5. Preventing disease outbreaks: 90% support (85% Republican and Republican leaning / 94% Democrat and Democrat leaning)
  6. Global health: 84% support (74% Republican and Republican leaning / 93% Democrat and Democrat leaning)
  7. Economic development: 81% support (71% Republican and Republican leaning / 91% Democrat and Democrat leaning)
  8. Peacekeeping and conflict resolution: 78% support (73% Republican and Republican leaning / 84% Democrat and Democrat leaning)
  9. Democracy promotion: 72% support (64% Republican and Republican leaning / 82% Democrat and Democrat leaning)

  1. 70% support setting foreign aid at 2% of the federal budget — double its historical level — including 49% of those who say they primarily support President Trump (vs. 36% opposed).
  2. 78% said the actual ~1% cost was either "about right" (41%) or "too low" (37%) once it was revealed to them — meaning fewer than 1 in 10 (9%) called it too high.
  3. Consensus across the spectrum: 71% of Republicans, 80% of Independents, and 86% of Democrats agreed the ~1% allocation was "about right" or "too low," as did 64% of those who say they primarily support President Trump.
  4. 31% of Americans correctly guessed foreign aid was under 5% of the budget, while 35% thought it was 20% or more, and 8% believed it exceeded half the federal budget.

  1. Foreign policy: 79% agree foreign aid can be a good and effective part of U.S. foreign policy (71% Republican and Republican-leaning, 89% Democrat and Democrat-leaning).
  2. National security: 72% say it keeps the U.S. safer and more secure from threats (63% Republican and Republican leaning, 81% Democrat and Democrat leaning).
  3. Saving money: 68% found convincing the argument that aid saves the U.S. money by preventing conflicts and crises before they require costlier intervention (54% Republican and Republican leaning / 81% Democrat and Democrat leaning).
  4. Global competition: 68% found convincing the case that aid is an important tool in U.S. competition with Russia and China for global influence (62% Republican and Republican leaning / 75% Democrat and Democrat leaning).

"This data is a direct rebuttal to anyone who claims Americans have lost their appetite for the world. Americans never stopped being generous; Washington just stopped delivering on it," said Dr. John A. Gans, former Chief Speechwriter at the Pentagon, author of White House Warriors, and current Senior Vice President and project lead at The Rockefeller Foundation. "250 years after America's revolution and 1 year after USAID's razing, a majority of Americans don't just want to ensure federal funding to feed the hungry, cure the sick, and respond to crisis around the world—they see good reason to increase it. The lesson for Washington is clear: don't doubt the generosity of Americans; deliver on it."

An American Perspective on Foreign Aid is the latest research to be commissioned by The Rockefeller Foundation's Build the Shared Future Initiative, through which the 113-year-old philanthropic organization aims to inspire and inform global cooperation and international development work that matches the challenges of the 21st century, including efforts to align with governments around the world to identify country-led solutions to maximize every dollar of remaining aid and to stimulate new investments.

About The Rockefeller Foundation
Investing $30 billion over the last 113 years to promote the well-being of humanity, The Rockefeller Foundation is a pioneering philanthropy built on unlikely partnerships and innovative solutions that deliver measurable results for people in the United States and around the world. We leverage scientific breakthroughs, artificial intelligence, and new technologies to make big bets across energy, food, health, and finance with our partners and our affiliated public charity, RFCC. For more information, follow us on LinkedIn @the-rockefeller-foundation, X @RockefellerFdn, Instagram @rockefellerfdn, and YouTube @RockefellerFdn, and sign up for our newsletter at www.rockefellerfoundation.org/subscribe.

Video - https://mmx.prnewswire.com/media/MS1874881/7-in-10.mp4?id=OA2743925&token=eyJhbGciOiJkaXIiLCJlbmMiOiJBMjU2R0NNIn0..GW3zTOISXj4gjz0M.dN_K8mj_xf9ViCLrP3nYDjGqe_k1BRKNuQt-oTWA8uoeKSPch3t0WH6BWFDQdUB3b2RYNfV2Rv-TZoMU8mctDbsqmGn5GD_3yiGNHa04xmIMqz8IeK3b7AgzYVf9p4g_Q5M.XolgMXE1MsG1TqISIqnVPw

 

** This press release is distributed by PR Newswire through automated distribution system, for which the client assumes full responsibility. **

New Echelon Insights Survey Commissioned by Rockefeller Foundation: Most Americans Back Foreign Aid a Year After USAID's End

New Echelon Insights Survey Commissioned by Rockefeller Foundation: Most Americans Back Foreign Aid a Year After USAID's End

  • Tetra Pak has launched its 27th Sustainability Report, detailing progress on GHG emissions reductions across its value chain and its own operations
  • The company developed and launched an integrated climate and nature risk and opportunity assessment in 2025 to guide its actions in strengthening food system resilience
  • SINGAPORE, June 30, 2026 /PRNewswire/ -- Tetra Pak has launched its full-year 2025 (FY25) Sustainability Report, outlining how its continued emissions reductions are supporting greater resilience across the global food system.

    In 2025, the company achieved a 34% reduction in greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions across its value chain since 2019,[1] representing an improvement of almost 12 percentage points compared with the previous year,[2] while also reducing emissions across its own operations by 56%[3] and reaching 97% renewable energy consumption.

    This progress reflects Tetra Pak's growing focus on translating emissions reductions into long-term food system resilience. By directing efforts and investment towards areas where it can deliver the greatest long-term value, the company aims to support more efficient, robust food production while continuing to reduce its environmental impact.

    Adolfo Orive, President & CEO at Tetra Pak, comments: "Feeding a growing global population is becoming ever more complex as environmental risks intensify. This is why we remain firmly committed to strengthening the resilience of the world's food systems. With clear, measurable targets in place, 2025 marked a year of tangible progress, including passing the milestone of a onethird reduction in greenhouse gas emissions across our value chain. Achieving lasting change depends on collaboration, and we look forward to continuing to work closely with our customers and partners to turn shared ambition into enduring progress."

    To guide its actions and investment decisions, and to support more efficient, resilient food systems, Tetra Pak developed and launched an integrated climate and nature risk and opportunity assessment in 2025. The assessment identified priority risks and opportunities to build resilience across the company's operations and value chain, supported by plans to address each priority area. Tetra Pak also revised its Approach to Nature framework, reflecting learnings to ensure it remains relevant in a rapidly evolving industry landscape. As part of this, the company introduced new or updated targets in response to developments in specific action areas.

    Several initiatives and innovations were introduced or developed in 2025 to help customers significantly reduce utility, material and energy use by embedding a total cost of ownership (TCO) mindset that assesses the overall lifecycle cost of equipment. This was reinforced by the launch of Tetra Pak® Factory OS™, a next-generation automation and digital ecosystem that combines modular, scalable and smart technologies with deep industry and equipment expertise to help customers better understand and mitigate losses in their operations.

    Overall, 2025's progress sees Tetra Pak on track to meet its long-term climate targets. These include achieving a 46% reduction in value chain GHG emissions by 2030, increasing renewable electricity consumption across operations to 100% by 2030, and reaching net-zero emissions by 2050.

    Other notable achievements shared in the FY25 Sustainability Report include:

    • Investing approximately €100 million in packaging research and development to address the sustainability of Tetra Pak packages. This investment led to a world-first paper barrier for juice packages, delivering a 43% lower carbon footprint than an aseptic package with an aluminium foil layer and a fossil-based polymer.
    • Renewing its focus on decarbonising food systems by signing a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) with the United Nations Industrial Development Organization (UNIDO) at COP30, to scale innovation in this area.
    • Providing 68 million children across 52 countries with milk or other beverages in its packages through school feeding programmes, an increase of two million children and three additional countries from 2024.
    • Conducting an in-depth review of priority human rights impacts along the full value chain.
    • Expanding restoration efforts through the Araucaria Conservation Project, with over 1,600 hectares added in 2025 alone, more than doubling the total area of land under restoration in a single year.

    The FY25 Sustainability Report is available online now.

    Download pdf

    ABOUT TETRA PAK  

    We're here to make food safe and available. It's why we provide advanced food production systems. In collaboration with our customers and suppliers, driven by more than 24,000 dedicated employees worldwide, we protect food sustainably every day for hundreds of millions of people in more than 160 countries. Because we're here to fulfil a purpose: 

    We commit to making food safe and available, everywhere, and we promise to protect what's good: food, people and the planet. 

    More information about Tetra Pak is available at tetrapak.com

    youtube.com/user/tetrapak 

    https://x.com/tetrapak 

    https://www.linkedin.com/company/tetra-pak/ 

    [1] Scope 1, 2 and 3 GHG emissions, compared to a 2019 baseline.

    [2] Full year 2024.

    [3] Scope 1, 2 and business travel GHG emissions, compared to a 2019 baseline.

     

SINGAPORE, June 30, 2026 /PRNewswire/ -- Tetra Pak has launched its full-year 2025 (FY25) Sustainability Report, outlining how its continued emissions reductions are supporting greater resilience across the global food system.

In 2025, the company achieved a 34% reduction in greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions across its value chain since 2019,[1] representing an improvement of almost 12 percentage points compared with the previous year,[2] while also reducing emissions across its own operations by 56%[3] and reaching 97% renewable energy consumption.

This progress reflects Tetra Pak's growing focus on translating emissions reductions into long-term food system resilience. By directing efforts and investment towards areas where it can deliver the greatest long-term value, the company aims to support more efficient, robust food production while continuing to reduce its environmental impact.

Adolfo Orive, President & CEO at Tetra Pak, comments: "Feeding a growing global population is becoming ever more complex as environmental risks intensify. This is why we remain firmly committed to strengthening the resilience of the world's food systems. With clear, measurable targets in place, 2025 marked a year of tangible progress, including passing the milestone of a onethird reduction in greenhouse gas emissions across our value chain. Achieving lasting change depends on collaboration, and we look forward to continuing to work closely with our customers and partners to turn shared ambition into enduring progress."

To guide its actions and investment decisions, and to support more efficient, resilient food systems, Tetra Pak developed and launched an integrated climate and nature risk and opportunity assessment in 2025. The assessment identified priority risks and opportunities to build resilience across the company's operations and value chain, supported by plans to address each priority area. Tetra Pak also revised its Approach to Nature framework, reflecting learnings to ensure it remains relevant in a rapidly evolving industry landscape. As part of this, the company introduced new or updated targets in response to developments in specific action areas.

Several initiatives and innovations were introduced or developed in 2025 to help customers significantly reduce utility, material and energy use by embedding a total cost of ownership (TCO) mindset that assesses the overall lifecycle cost of equipment. This was reinforced by the launch of Tetra Pak® Factory OS™, a next-generation automation and digital ecosystem that combines modular, scalable and smart technologies with deep industry and equipment expertise to help customers better understand and mitigate losses in their operations.

Overall, 2025's progress sees Tetra Pak on track to meet its long-term climate targets. These include achieving a 46% reduction in value chain GHG emissions by 2030, increasing renewable electricity consumption across operations to 100% by 2030, and reaching net-zero emissions by 2050.

Other notable achievements shared in the FY25 Sustainability Report include:

  • Investing approximately €100 million in packaging research and development to address the sustainability of Tetra Pak packages. This investment led to a world-first paper barrier for juice packages, delivering a 43% lower carbon footprint than an aseptic package with an aluminium foil layer and a fossil-based polymer.
  • Renewing its focus on decarbonising food systems by signing a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) with the United Nations Industrial Development Organization (UNIDO) at COP30, to scale innovation in this area.
  • Providing 68 million children across 52 countries with milk or other beverages in its packages through school feeding programmes, an increase of two million children and three additional countries from 2024.
  • Conducting an in-depth review of priority human rights impacts along the full value chain.
  • Expanding restoration efforts through the Araucaria Conservation Project, with over 1,600 hectares added in 2025 alone, more than doubling the total area of land under restoration in a single year.

The FY25 Sustainability Report is available online now.

Download pdf

ABOUT TETRA PAK  

We're here to make food safe and available. It's why we provide advanced food production systems. In collaboration with our customers and suppliers, driven by more than 24,000 dedicated employees worldwide, we protect food sustainably every day for hundreds of millions of people in more than 160 countries. Because we're here to fulfil a purpose: 

We commit to making food safe and available, everywhere, and we promise to protect what's good: food, people and the planet. 

More information about Tetra Pak is available at tetrapak.com

youtube.com/user/tetrapak 

https://x.com/tetrapak 

https://www.linkedin.com/company/tetra-pak/ 

[1] Scope 1, 2 and 3 GHG emissions, compared to a 2019 baseline.

[2] Full year 2024.

[3] Scope 1, 2 and business travel GHG emissions, compared to a 2019 baseline.

[1] Scope 1, 2 and 3 GHG emissions, compared to a 2019 baseline.

[2] Full year 2024.

[3] Scope 1, 2 and business travel GHG emissions, compared to a 2019 baseline.

 

** This press release is distributed by PR Newswire through automated distribution system, for which the client assumes full responsibility. **

Tetra Pak Advances Food System Resilience as It Cuts GHG Emissions Across the Value Chain by Over a Third

Tetra Pak Advances Food System Resilience as It Cuts GHG Emissions Across the Value Chain by Over a Third

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