Cargill
See every discussion that mentions Cargill
Brand Details
Type: Brand
Description: Cargill is a large, privately held American multinational corporation headquartered in Minnetonka, Minnesota. Founded in 1865, it's the largest privately held company in the United States by revenue. Cargill operates globally and is involved in a vast array of agricultural and related businesses, including agricultural services (trading, purchasing, and distributing grains, oilseeds, sugar, cotton, and other agricultural commodities; offering risk management solutions for farmers), food production and ingredients (producing and processing a wide range of food ingredients such as starch, glucose syrup, vegetable oils, and fats; involved in the meat industry, raising livestock and producing feed; providing ingredients used in many prepared and fast food items; processing eggs used in McDonald's restaurants in the United States), financial services (managing financial risks in commodity markets; offering data asset solutions and marketing services), and industrial products (producing bio-industrial products and providing technical support and logistics services).
Website: https://www.cargill.com
Mention Analytics
Total Mentions: 8
Subreddit Mentions:
Positive Mentions: 2
Negative Mentions: 4
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Apr 19, 2025
First Portfolio and moral principles
💬 6 comments
⬆︎ 2 upvotes
Mentioned in comment, avoiding the company.
Found in /r/eupersonalfinance/💬 212 comments
⬆︎ 956 upvotes
The comment suggests it is a negative thing that this US company is co-owned by an Australian meat company.
Found in /r/australia/💬 4 comments
⬆︎ 0 upvotes
Mentioned as a client of AI Palette.
Found in /r/startups/Jan 21, 2022
Nearly 60 per cent of Canadians find it difficult to feed their families, poll finds
💬 1948 comments
⬆︎ 12654 upvotes
Mentioned in a negative context regarding record profits during a time of economic hardship.
Found in /r/canada/Dec 8, 2020
A typical family’s food bill will jump by almost $700 next year — the biggest leap in more than a decade
💬 1447 comments
⬆︎ 10037 upvotes
Mentioned in relation to regulations.
Found in /r/canada/Oct 12, 2018
The world’s five largest meat and dairy companies combined, including Tyson, Cargill and Dairy Farmers of America, are responsible for more greenhouse gas emissions every year than any of the world’s biggest oil and gas companies.
💬 2779 comments
⬆︎ 44779 upvotes
Cargill is mentioned in the context of its grain processing activities and its contribution to greenhouse gas emissions. The comments highlight concerns about the company's impact.
Found in /r/Futurology/Mar 23, 2018
Bill Gates and Richard Branson are betting lab-grown meat may be the food of the future
💬 2480 comments
⬆︎ 32823 upvotes
Cargill is mentioned as an investor in lab-grown meat, indicating their interest in the technology.
Found in /r/Futurology/Sep 27, 2017
Richard Branson: "I believe that in 30 years or so we will no longer need to kill any animals and that all meat will either be clean or plant-based, taste the same and also be much healthier for everyone."
💬 5575 comments
⬆︎ 47510 upvotes
Cargill is mentioned, but the overall discussion focuses on the potential of clean meat to replace traditional meat production, which could negatively impact Cargill's business.
Found in /r/Futurology/Subscribe to our newsletter!
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