How Guerlain, Angelina Jolie and UNESCO are working to protect the bees
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- Published on Tuesday, 24 August 2021 05:29
- Written by The CEO magazine
Without the busy little creatures, the world simply wouldn’t be able to function. They may only be a mere two centimetres in size, but a lack of stature doesn’t stop precious bees from carrying the hefty weight of the world. Quite literally, our planet simply wouldn’t function without the existence of the busy creatures – and Guerlain is rolling out its mission to ensure they never die out.As the damaging effects of climate change continue to rip across Earth, bees are in the firing zone with numbers across Europe and the US dropping. Dedicated to protecting this most precious of wonders, the luxury beauty brand’s enchantment with the petite insects transpires centuries.The maison’s adoration with bees began in 1853 when Founder Pierre-François-Pascal Guerlain dedicated a citrus cologne to Empress Eugénie in celebration of her marriage to Napoleon III, creating a majestic totem that would flourish for 168 years and counting.From the sweet nectar blossoming in olfactory creations and skincare products to borrowing the uniquely shaped, historic Bee Bottle to inspire artisans, the bee has become more than the essence of the LVMH-owned brand. In turn it has inspired the company to act as a beacon of sustainability, shielding the vulnerable species for the benefit of future generations.“Pollinators like the bee – wild and domestic – are the victims of our way of life,” Cécile Lochard, Guerlain’s Chief Sustainability Officer, shares with The CEO Magazine. “The bee actually suffers from the virtue that we usually grant to this change: permanence.“We believe it to be eternal because it pollinates our collective memory, our infantile imagination – a dangerous error.”It is estimated bees pollinate 80 per cent of the world’s flowering plants, equating to around US$180 billion globally each year, according to the National Institute of Agronomic Research.However, over the past 15 years up to 90 per cent of bees have disappeared in some regions.“It is crucial to protect the bee as it sits at the heart of biodiversity,” Lochard says. “By pollinating flowering plants, foragers guarantee the reproduction of numerous plant species and no less than a third of the world’s food supply.“Indispensable for the pollination of flowers, bees constitute an essential link in the chain that helps to maintain the balance of ecosystems.”The bee has been at the heart of the French brand’s sustainability mission for almost 15 years. While some big businesses toss around terms that include green, clean and eco-friendly, leading to a rise in greenwashing – especially in the beauty industry – Guerlain truly endeavours towards a renewable future. “For close to 170 years, bees have buzzed between our creations with the same endless passion for exceptional raw materials. And we owe them much. To do our part – and then some – to protect bees is obvious.” – Cécile Lochard .Sustainable, transparent and natural formulas with eco packaging; a vision to be carbon neutral by 2030; Women for Bees (in partnership with UNESCO and in collaboration with the French Observatory of Apidology); the Guerlain for Bees conservation program; and an external sustainable board of 13 experts are among the major pillars of the maison’s dedication to sustainability.Not only is Guerlain responsible for beauty of the superficial visage, but it also encompasses the beauty of our natural world.“Nature has never ceased to inspire our creations as well as our commitment in the broad sense and more recently our raison d’etre, which has placed the bee at the heart of our actions,” Lochard says. “Guerlain commits and acts for a more beautiful and sustainable world, by elevating nature to an art to pass on its wonders to future generations, with the bee as sentinel.”
The force of women and bees .One of the oldest brands in the world has turned into the protector of the bees – and it has UNESCO and Angelina Jolie on side to bring its bold legacy to fruition.Partnering with UNESCO on its Women for Bees initiative, Guerlain’s new societal program is dedicated to preserving bees while simultaneously creating an international network of women beekeepers.“Over the past 20 years, bee populations have suffered dramatic losses never seen before,” Lochard says. “There’s been a dazzling decline in bee populations all over the developed world.“It’s a worrying phenomenon dubbed the colony collapse disorder or colony collapse syndrome.”Aiming to promote diversity, protect biodiversity and inspire younger generations, the five-year program began in June 2021. France, Italy, Bulgaria, Slovenia, Russia, Cambodia, Ethiopia, Rwanda and China are among the regions being targeted in the first two years of the initiative in which beekeepers in training will be taught the theoretical and practical skills required for beekeeping.By 2025, 50 women will have graduated from the Guerlain x UNESCO Women for Bees program having built 2500 hives across 25 UNESCO biosphere reserves – restocking an incredible 125 million bees. As UNESCO’s 2021 Godmother of Women for Bees, Angelina Jolie will meet with female beekeepers to follow their inspiring progress.“When women gain skills and knowledge their instinct is to help raise others,” Jolie shares. “I’m excited to meet the women taking part in this program from all over the world. I look forward to getting to know them and learning about their culture and environment and the role bees play in that. I hope the training will strengthen their independence, their livelihoods and their communities.”Not only is the program a commitment to the environment, but it helps empower women through education, giving them the tools to create their own beekeeping operations and generate income, consequently creating more equality within communities.“All over the world, there are more women in hobby beekeeping than in professional beekeeping,” Lochard explains. “But things are changing fast. More and more women are taking formal training.“Because of the multiple roles of beekeeping and the crucial place of honey in the food chain, beekeeping should be an integral part of rural development strategies and policies for the direct benefit it brings to human wellbeing.”
How Guerlain is creating a sustainable future.There is something quite regal about the bee. From the ancient Greeks adopting the motif for gold coins and jewellery to Napoleon Bonaparte choosing the unique emblem to represent his status as Emperor in the 19th century, the humble insect has been culturally significant for millennia.Signifying wealth, good luck and prosperity in ancient times, bees are a fitting symbol of what’s to come if the world protects them.While they are at times an overlooked pillar of biodiversity, bees are crucial in creating a successfully sustainable future. And the 193-year-old brand is positioning itself as the queen bee of the global hive.“We’re a key player in the natural and clean beauty domain and have become the benchmark luxury house in terms of naturalness,” Lochard explains to The CEO Magazine.By 2021, 100 per cent of Guerlain’s new skincare products will be composed of at least 90 per cent of ingredients with natural origins.“It represents a real challenge, especially when it comes to the make-up category and the ability to maintain the levels of performance that meet our high standards, but it enables us to open a new chapter of its quest towards natural beauty by launching three essential products of a make-up routine formulated with more than 95 per cent of natural-origin ingredients,” she says. “We are by essence the nature-driven brand.”The French-founded brand launched its Bee Respect platform in 2019 – a digital tool to help consumers understand the whole cycle of its products. Providing details of more than 500 formula ingredients, packaging elements, some 40 suppliers, manufacturing location and carbon footprint, people can see what it takes to manufacture a product from start to finish.“It requires full transparency with no fear,” Lochard says. “I do believe that in any company and organisation, when you work on sustainability you have to keep in mind you work for the present but above all for the youngest generation.“For younger generations, there is no luxury without commitment to protect the planet, because the habitability of their future world depends on it.”Toxic chemicals flushing into oceans, plastic waste and deforestation caused by harvesting ingredients including palm oil are some of the adverse effects of the popular sector.However, preserving biodiversity, using innovative eco-designs, innovating clean beauty products that don’t sacrifice efficacy, promoting a circular economy, reducing C02 emissions and regenerating nature are some of the ways Guerlain is leaving a light green footprint on Earth.The brand even reduced its Orchidée Impériale day cream jar weight by 60 per cent in 2017. And the jar is also produced with partly recycled materials.“It was an audacious bet on our ultra-premium line, but it has paid off,” Lochard shares. “It also meets the essential values and principles in luxury: to create precious objects that can be personalised, kept and treasured or handed down.”And it’s bold moves like this that will truly make an impact on the natural world and within the environmentally damaging industry, which is expected to be worth US$716.6 billion in 2025.“This is the luxury revolution underway,” Lochard says. “This new era of transparency, which is in demand, also makes it possible to magnify artisanal excellence and high standards.“For close to 170 years, bees have buzzed between our creations with the same endless passion for exceptional raw materials. And we owe them much. To do our part – and then some – to protect bees is obvious.”
source : The CEO magazine
Angelina Jolie breaks a record: The star, 46, becomes fastest Instagram user to gain 1M followers... and she already has 7.6M followers after just THREE DAYS
- Details
- Published on Tuesday, 24 August 2021 05:26
- Written by Daily mail
Angelina Jolie has become the fastest Instagram user to gain one million followers.The 46-year-old actress joined the photo-sharing platform over the weekend, and she has quickly amassed more than seven million followers on Instagram.The Eternals actress surpassed Rupert Grint and Sir David Attenborough to claim the record, as she amassed 2.1million new followers in under three hours.She is being followed by Drew Barrymore, Bella Hadid, Bella Thorne, Gretchen Rossi, Chrishell Stause, Jamie Lee Curtis, and Helena Christiansen, to name a few. The Hollywood star joined the platform to share a photograph of a heart-breaking letter from a teenage girl in Afghanistan, where the Taliban recently gained control of the country.Angelina's post read: 'This is a letter I was sent from a teenage girl in Afghanistan. Right now, the people of Afghanistan are losing their ability to communicate on social media and to express themselves freely. So I've come on Instagram to share their stories and the voices of those across the globe who are fighting for their basic human rights.' She added, 'I was on the border of Afghanistan two weeks before 9/11, where I met Afghan refugees who had fled the Taliban. This was twenty years ago.'It is sickening to watch Afghans being displaced yet again out of the fear and uncertainty that has gripped their country.'To spend so much time and money, to have blood shed and lives lost only to come to this, is a failure almost impossible to understand.' Angelina pledged to continue to support the Afghan people.Her post continued: 'Watching for decades how Afghan refugees - some of the most capable people in the world - are treated like a burden is also sickening. Knowing that if they had the tools and respect, how much they would do for themselves. And meeting so many women and girls who not only wanted an education, but fought for it.'Like others who are committed, I will not turn away. I will continue to look for ways to help. And I hope you'll join me.' The 46-year-old actress and activist joined the social networking site on Friday.A source told People that Jolie joined Instagram to help spread awareness about the potential oppression of women in Afghanistan as their own abilities to communicate are being cut off.'Angie felt compelled to join in a moment when women and young people in Afghanistan are losing the ability to communicate on social media and express themselves freely,' the source said. 'From her point of view, if she's able to be a part of the effort to amplify their voices, then she felt it was reason enough to join and use her platform.'
The girl also wrote about how it was harder to go to school with the Taliban patrolling, and how much safer she felt before they were back in power.She also worried that her school would be closed down on their order.The teenager feared Afghanistan would go back to the 'past 20 years,' to a time when women had 'no rights,' when she said they were expected to work at home and had lost their 'freedom.' Jolie included a photo of Afghan women who were clothed head-to-toe in burqas. American troops in Afghanistan are now confined to running Hamid Karzai International Airport in Kabul, where American citizens and Afghans have been rushing to exit the country amid a full-scale Taliban takeover in recent days.The date for the US military to leave Afghanistan was originally set for May 1 by former President Donald Trump in a deal he signed with the Taliban, though President Joe Biden announced in April that he was pushing the final date to September.The president's military advisors informed him that there would be 'weeks or months' left to get Afghans who had helped the US out of the country following the September withdrawal, but they appear not to have counted on the weakness of the Afghan military, which almost immediately crumbled and failed to put up a fight against Taliban forces that quickly seized most of the country's cities.In a speech last week, President Biden reiterated that the timetable for exiting Afghanistan had largely been set by his predecessor.He admitted the US was taken off guard by the swiftness of the Taliban takeover and described scenes of mass panic at the Kabul airport as 'gut-wrenching.' Still, he said he was confident that the move to leave Afghanistan was the best possible option for the United States and that it was always going to be a difficult process.'The developments of the past week reinforced that ending US military involvement in Afghanistan was the right decision. ... I stand squarely behind my decision. After 20 years, I've learned the hard way that there was never a good time to withdraw U.S. forces.' The Taliban has claimed in recent days that it is a more moderate force than the one that ruled Afghanistan in the 1990s.It claims that women will still be able to attend school, though they will have to be covered in clothing from head to toe.However, the Taliban has previously required women to be separated from men who aren't part of their family, so it seems unlikely that they'll be able to return to school or work if they can't be in the same room as male students and coworkers.
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source : Daily Mail
Alex Jones reveals she DUMPED an ex-boyfriend live on TV after he STOLE the chance to interview Angelina Jolie from her... leading her into 'a very dark time' in her life
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- Published on Tuesday, 24 August 2021 05:23
- Written by Daily mail
Alex Jones has opened up about a break-up she experienced that seemed lighthearted but actually devastated her.The One Show host, 44, features on the latest episode of podcast Thanks A Million with Angela Scanlon. Speaking on the podcast, Alex reveals that her ex-boyfriend betrayed her, and lost her the chance to interview Angelina Jolie, leading to a dark period in her life that eventually helped her get herself together. Alex Jones has opened up about a break-up she experienced that seemed lighthearted but actually devastated her.The One Show host, 44, features on the latest episode of podcast Thanks A Million with Angela Scanlon. Speaking on the podcast, Alex reveals that her ex-boyfriend betrayed her, and lost her the chance to interview Angelina Jolie, leading to a dark period in her life that eventually helped her get herself together. 'I did all these junkets with film stars. So every Thursday I would come to London and then I would do Thursday and Friday with them and stay for the weekend. I must have been about 25 by this point...'One day I was in Topshop on Oxford Street and the production company who made the show called the flat were we lived essentially and said we need to speak to Alex. Angelina Jolie is available for an interview and we need her to come and do it now.'And he said, 'oh Alex is ill and she actually in Wales, but I could come'. So off he went, I'm still in Topshop, unbeknown to me, buying cheap jeans and shoes.'And so I got back to the flat and was like, where is he? Hours went past, nobody answering their phones and in the end thought, right I'm going to drive back to Cardiff, because I don't know where you are, you've probably gone to the pub.'And then the production company called, and they were like, we've got bit of a situation. Tomorrow morning your boyfriend is going to the premiere with Angelina Jolie and it it would be really funny if you came on the line, live on the show and surprise him and said that you know exactly what he's been up to.'So again, I said yes, so on live telly I'm like, you lied to me, where have you been? So yeah, not surprisingly, we split up live on telly!' Despite the humorous anecdote, Alex admits that it wasn't a happy time for her. She adds: 'It was a really dark time for about six months and even though I was still very happily working in Wales, I just wasn't myself, my mum was really worried, my fiends were really worried and at that point I thought, nobody is going to me like that again...'I've had really nice boyfriends and a really nice husband, but I'm grateful because I needed that experience and I thought when I got myself together, I'm going to have a successful career, I'm going to work really hard and I think it was a real turning point for me.'I stopped messing about and i focused and from that point forward, was a real turning point forward when real good stuff started happening.'It was mad and I can honestly can laugh about it now and I mean there's a lot to laugh about, but at the same time, I'm super grateful to him because that experience taught me so much. It taught me about how fickle our industry is, how tough you needed to be.'Because I was just a little Welshy, who was like, nobody would do a bad thing on purpose, then was like oh, they actually do. But it taught me a lot about being in love with the wrong person and about how it can really damage you and damage your confidence.'And I built myself back up and I thought, I'm going to be a grown up from now on, I'm going to do things properly, I'm going to work at my career and from then on, it started feeling a lot more stable...' Alex also discusses her excitement over having a baby girl, and how hating her temp job helped her get the career she has now.
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source : Daily Mail
Angelina Jolie blasts the US' 'chaotic' withdrawal from Afghanistan after nearly 20 years: 'As an American I am ashamed'
- Details
- Published on Monday, 23 August 2021 06:09
- Written by Daily mail
Angelina Jolie had sharp words for the United States' ongoing withdrawal from Afghanistan in an op-ed published by Time on Friday.The 46-year-old Eternals star and activist wrote that the US military was 'appearing to cut and run' amid the Middle Eastern country's turmoil as the Taliban regains control.She worried that the ongoing chaos could strip away any social progress that had been made for women and young girls in Afghanistan.Whatever your views on the war in Afghanistan, we probably agree on one thing: it should not have ended this way,' Jolie presumed.She called it a 'betrayal and a failure impossible to fully understand' that the US had given up trying to facilitate a peace agreement between the Taliban and the Afghan government.Adding to the chaos among the government was the departure of Afghan President Ashraf Ghani, who fled to exile in the United Arab Emirates.The country's ambassador to Tajikistan has accused Ghani of stealing $169 million on his way out of the country, though Ghani insisted that he 'left with just a waistcoat and some clothes' in a video he filmed after his whereabouts became known.Jolie recounted meeting injured servicemen and women at Ramstein Air Base in Germany and noted 'how proud they felt to be a part of helping the Afghan people gain basic rights and freedoms.'She also noted how tenuous the situation is for young girls, who are have been targeted for attacks at school, and for women in government, who have seen assassinations triple in 2020, according to the United Nations.The actress wrote that journalists and activists were 'in hiding' in Afghanistan and were 'deleting their social media profiles and burning documents in a bid to keep themselves and their families safe.''After all the bloodshed and effort and sacrifice and time, America seems to have lacked the will to plan this transition in a managed way,' she continued. 'It was never going to be easy or perfect but could have been better, more decent and safer.'Jolie wrote that she believed 'that we were doing the right thing' and 'that we were fighting in a noble cause,' but it was difficult to continue to believe that as the US left Afghanistan after two decades.'As an American I am ashamed by the manner of our leaving,' Jolie continued. 'It diminishes us.'She warned of the ways the Taliban might punish women, including 'banning girls from school, confining women to the home, and inflicting brutal physical punishments, including public lashing, on any woman perceived to have stepped out of line,' and she bemoaned what she said was the US' failure to monitor the conditions for women.
The star also wrote that there would be a 'new refugee crisis' due to the US' withdrawal.She added that the current strategy to get Americans and Afghans out of the country wasn't enough.'It is only the beginning of what we need to do if all the years of effort and sacrifice in Afghanistan aren’t going to be wasted.' Jolie concluded by prioritizing an Afghan government focused on 'human rights.''Any future Afghan government should be judged not only on their attitude to terrorism, but on their behavior on human rights and — in particular — whether Afghan women and girls maintain the rights they have gained.Also on Friday, Jolie joined Instagram and made her first post a photo of a letter sent to her by an Afghan girl.'This is a letter I was sent from a teenage girl in Afghanistan,' she wrote alongside an image of the letter. 'Right now, the people of Afghanistan are losing their ability to communicate on social media and to express themselves freely,' she continued. 'So I've come on Instagram to share their stories and the voices of those across the globe who are fighting for their basic human rights.'The teenage girl expressed a desire to continue her education in the heartbreaking letter, even as she feared that the Taliban would curtail those opportunities. A source told People that Jolie joined Instagram to help spread awareness about the potential oppression of women in Afghanistan as their own abilities to communicate are being cut off.'Angie felt compelled to join in a moment when women and young people in Afghanistan are losing the ability to communicate on social media and express themselves freely,' the source said. 'From her point of view, if she's able to be a part of the effort to amplify their voices, then she felt it was reason enough to join and use her platform.'
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source : Daily Mail
Angelina Jolie joins Instagram: The star shares a moving 'letter sent from a teenage girl in Afghanistan' and slams Biden's handling of Kabul crisis
- Details
- Published on Saturday, 21 August 2021 10:29
- Written by Daily mail
Angelina Jolie has finally joined Instagram, and she used the moment to raise awareness about the plight of women and girls in Afghanistan.The 46-year-old actress and activist joined the social networking site on Friday and made her first post a photo of a letter sent to her by an Afghan girl.'This is a letter I was sent from a teenage girl in Afghanistan,' she wrote alongside an image of the letter. 'Right now, the people of Afghanistan are losing their ability to communicate on social media and to express themselves freely,' she continued. 'So I've come on Instagram to share their stories and the voices of those across the globe who are fighting for their basic human rights.'The teenage girl expressed a desire to continue her education in the heartbreaking letter, even as she feared that the Taliban would curtail those opportunities. 'Some people say they talibans change [sic],' she wrote, 'but I do not think so Because they have a very bad past.'A source told People that Jolie joined Instagram to help spread awareness about the potential oppression of women in Afghanistan as their own abilities to communicate are being cut off.'Angie felt compelled to join in a moment when women and young people in Afghanistan are losing the ability to communicate on social media and express themselves freely,' the source said. 'From her point of view, if she's able to be a part of the effort to amplify their voices, then she felt it was reason enough to join and use her platform.'The girl also wrote about how it was harder to go to school with the Taliban patrolling, and how much safer she felt before they were back in power.She also worried that her school would be closed down on their order.The teenager feared Afghanistan would go back to the 'past 20 years,' to a time when women had 'no rights,' when she said they were expected to work at home and had lost their 'freedom.' Jolie included a photo of Afghan women who were clothed head-to-toe in burqas.In addition to sharing the young woman's story, she also recounted her brief experiences in the Middle Eastern country. 'I was on the border of Afghanistan two weeks before 9/11, where I met Afghan refugees who had fled the Taliban. This was twenty years ago,' she began.'It is sickening to watch Afghans being displaced yet again out of the fear and uncertainty that has gripped their country.'To spend so much time and money, to have blood shed and lives lost only to come to this, is a failure almost impossible to understand,' she continued.She described the way Afghan refugees were treated 'like a burden' as 'sickening' and said they could do so much more 'for themselves' with the proper 'tools and respect.'Jolie was also inspired by 'meeting so many women and girls who not only wanted an education, but fought for it.''Like others who are committed, I will not turn away. I will continue to look for ways to help. And I hope you’ll join me,' she concluded.American troops in Afghanistan are now confined to running Hamid Karzai International Airport in Kabul, where American citizens and Afghans have been rushing to exit the country amid a full-scale Taliban takeover in recent days.
The date for the US military to leave Afghanistan was originally set for May 1 by former President Donald Trump in a deal he signed with the Taliban, though President Joe Biden announced in April that he was pushing the final date to September.The president's military advisors informed him that there would be 'weeks or months' left to get Afghans who had helped the US out of the country following the September withdrawal, but they appear not to have counted on the weakness of the Afghan military, which almost immediately crumbled and failed to put up a fight against Taliban forces that quickly seized most of the country's cities.In a speech over the weekend, President Biden reiterated that the timetable for exiting Afghanistan had largely been set by his predecessor.He admitted the US was taken off guard by the swiftness of the Taliban takeover and described scenes of mass panic at the Kabul airport as 'gut-wrenching.' Still, he said he was confident that the move to leave Afghanistan was the best possible option for the United States and that it was always going to be a difficult process.'The developments of the past week reinforced that ending US military involvement in Afghanistan was the right decision. ... I stand squarely behind my decision. After 20 years, I've learned the hard way that there was never a good time to withdraw U.S. forces.' The Taliban has claimed in recent days that it is a more moderate force than the one that ruled Afghanistan in the 1990s.It claims that women will still be able to attend school, though they will have to be covered in clothing from head to toe.However, the Taliban has previously required women to be separated from men who aren't part of their family, so it seems unlikely that they'll be able to return to school or work if they can't be in the same room as male students and coworkers.
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source : Daily Mail