Responsible Sourcing Approach
At Restaurant Brands International, our sourcing approach is simple: integrity, honesty and compliance with the law are not optional.
As a consumer-facing business, many of our products’ biggest environmental impacts are located beyond our own operations. We embrace our responsibility to work with suppliers, franchisees, and other stakeholders to try and minimize these
impacts.
Protecting Forests
In our supply chain, we aim to help advance sustainable forest management practices and eliminate deforestation by 2030 or sooner for several key commodities, including coffee, palm oil, fibre-based packaging, soy in poultry feed and beef.
Specifically, our deforestation policy outlines our goals to help ensure priority commodities do not directly or indirectly contribute to deforestation, promote responsible land use that prevents ecosystem degradation, and protect humane working
conditions and legitimate land use rights.
Learn more:
Protecting Forests →
Coffee Sourcing
There is a coffee farming community behind every cup of Tims coffee that we serve. Through the Tims Coffee for Communities program we are helping empower coffee farmers to improve their livelihoods through training in partnership with local
coffee exporters, not-for-profits and producer organizations.
We are also proud to partner with Enveritas, which assesses 100% of Tim Hortons coffee purchases each year under a set of social, economic and environmental standards.
Learn more: Coffee
Sourcing →
Ethics & Human Rights
RBI is committed to protecting human rights and supporting safe, fair working conditions throughout our supply chain. Our Code
of Business Ethics and Conduct for Vendors states the basic requirements that must be met by all vendors, including
their employees, officers, agents and subcontractors, who are approved to do business with us. Please refer to our policies
and reports webpage to access our Modern Slavery Act Report (Canada) which outlines many of the key measures the
business has taken to prevent and reduce modern slavery risks across our supply chain.
In 2024, RBI became a member of Sedex, one of the world’s leading organizations that partners with companies to create more socially and environmentally sustainable supply chains. Sedex assessments evaluate supplier site risk in four key areas:
labour standards, health and safety, environment and business ethics..