Slavery and Human Trafficking Statement
Addressing the California Transparency in Supply Chains Act, the United Kingdom Modern Slavery Act, the Australian Modern Slavery Act of 2018 and the Canadian Fighting Against Forced Labour and Child Labour in Supply Chains Act of 2023.
About this Statement
This is a statement of the steps General Mills has taken in an effort to ensure slavery and human trafficking are not taking place in our supply chain or business and covers General Mills’ fiscal 2025, the period of 12 months ending on May 25, 2025. The following document serves as a statement complying with the Australian Modern Slavery Act of 2018, the UK Modern Slavery Act of 2015, the California Transparency in Supply Chains Act, and the Canadian Fighting Against Forced Labour and Child Labour in Supply Chains Act.
The process of preparing this statement involved the participation of a wide range of internal stakeholders across many functions of General Mills. For the purposes of the Australian Modern Slavery Act, this is a joint statement for the reporting entity, General Mills Holding (Australia) Pty Ltd, and the entity submitting the statement, General Mills, Inc. For the purposes of the Canadian Fighting Against Forced Labour and Child Labour in Supply Chains Act, this is a joint statement for General Mills Canada Corporation together with its parent companies, affiliates, and subsidiary entities, and through January 27, 2025, Yoplait Canada Holding Co. and Yoplait Liberte Canada Co.
Our Company, Structure, and Supply Chain
General Mills is a leading publicly traded, global manufacturer and marketer of branded consumer foods and wholesome natural pet food sold through retail stores. We are also a leading supplier to the North American foodservice and commercial baking industries. In addition to our consolidated operations, we have 50% interests in two strategic joint ventures that manufacture, and market food products sold in approximately 130 countries worldwide: our Cereal Partners Worldwide joint venture with Nestlé S.A. competes in the ready-to-eat cereal category in markets outside North America, and our Häagen-Dazs Japan, Inc. joint venture competes in the super-premium ice cream category in Japan. General Mills generated fiscal 2025 net sales of U.S. $19.5 billion, and General Mills’ share of non-consolidated joint-venture net sales totalled U.S. $985 million. As of May 25, 2025, General Mills had approximately 33,000 employees.
Headquartered in Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA, General Mills owns our principal executive offices and main research facilities. We operate numerous manufacturing facilities and maintain many sales and administrative offices, warehouses, and distribution centers around the world. We manufacture our products in 10 countries and market them in more than 100 countries. As of May 25, 2025, we operated 42 food production facilities. Of these facilities, 28 are located in the United States, 4 in the Greater China region, 1 in the Asia/Middle East/Africa Region, 1 leased in Canada, 5 in Europe/Australia, and 3 in Latin America and Mexico. We also operate numerous grain elevators in the United States. We utilize approximately 17 million square feet of warehouse and distribution space that primarily supports our North America Retail and Pet segments. As part of our Häagen-Dazs business in our Europe & Australia and Asia & Latin America segments, we operate 332 (all leased) and franchise 387 branded ice cream parlours in various countries around the world.
Our Supply Chain
We work within a large, diverse value chain of business partners and stakeholders. Our supplier base is large, complex, and global, with thousands of suppliers in more than 25 countries. The principal raw materials we use are grains (wheat, oats, and corn), dairy products, sugar, fruits, vegetable oils, meats, nuts, vegetables, and other agricultural products. We also use substantial quantities of carton board, corrugated, plastic, and metal packaging materials, operating supplies, and energy. Most of these inputs for our domestic and Canadian operations are purchased from suppliers in the United States. In our other international operations, inputs that are not locally available in adequate supply may be imported from other countries.
Australia
In Australia, General Mills brands include 25° South™, Old El Paso™, Latina™ Fresh, Betty Crocker™, Nature Valley™, Häagen-Dazs™, Fibre One™, and Pecks™. As of May 25, 2025, we employed 243 people across our headquarters in Melbourne and at our manufacturing site in Rooty Hill, NSW. Our primary manufacturing sites relevant to our products imported for sale and made and sold in Australia are located in Australia, Spain, Portugal, France, and Greece. Additionally, we partner with third-party manufacturing and distribution centers in Australia, New Zealand, and France.
General Mills Holding (Australia) Pty Ltd is the reporting entity for the purposes of the Australian Modern Slavery Act. This statement also covers its wholly owned subsidiaries General Mills Manufacturing Australia Pty Ltd and General Mills Australia Pty Ltd.
Canada
In Canada, General Mills brands include Annie’s™, Betty Crocker™, Bisquick™, Blue Buffalo™, Cheerios™, Chex Cereal™, Cinnamon Toast Crunch™, Dunkaroos™, Fibre One™, Häagen-Dazs™, Lucky Charms™, LäraBar™, Muir Glen™, Nature Valley™, Old El Paso™, Pillsbury™, and Trix™. As of May 25, 2025, we employed 327 people and our main office is in Mississauga, Ontario with a regional office in Anjou, Quebec in addition to the manufacturing site located in Winnipeg, Manitoba. Most of the inputs for our Canadian operations are purchased from suppliers in the United States.
United Kingdom
In the United Kingdom, General Mills brands include Häagen-Dazs™, Old El Paso™, Nature Valley™, Fibre One™, Betty Crocker™, Green Giant™, and Pillsbury™. As of May 25, 2025, we employed 270 people in the UK, all of whom are based in our Uxbridge office. Our primary manufacturing sites relevant to our products imported for sale in the UK are located in France, Spain, Greece, the U.S., and India. Additionally, we partner with third-party manufacturing and distribution centers in the UK, France, Spain, Portugal, Holland, Mexico, Peru, and Ecuador.
Our Approach to Human Rights
General Mills is committed to respecting human rights and strives to positively impact all the people we depend upon across our full value chain. To better understand our human rights risks and guide our work, we are following a strategic framework (see below) to strengthen our ability to assess, address, and prevent potential impacts across our value chain and are taking a thoughtful approach in each step of our journey. We aim to know and show our human rights risks and take them into account in business decisions. We are focused on developing human rights due diligence capabilities to proactively identify where the risks for potential impacts on people in our value chain are most severe, prioritize actions, track progress, and communicate. Our strategy is modeled on the United Nations Guiding Principles for Business and Human Rights.

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*Significant incidents require the supplier to go through a root cause analysis and submit a Corrective Action Plan (CAP). In addition, a documented review by the audit company validating that the finding has been closed properly is required.



