Nike Appoints Cimarron Nix Chief Sustainability Officer To Lead Global ESG Strategy
- Nike appoints Cimarron Nix as Chief Sustainability Officer, filling a leadership gap left since September 2025.
- The role will oversee enterprise sustainability strategy across Nike’s global value chain, a critical lever for emissions reduction and supply chain governance.
- Leadership continuity in sustainability comes as apparel companies face increasing regulatory scrutiny and investor pressure on climate and labor standards.
Nike has appointed Cimarron Nix as its new Chief Sustainability Officer, placing a longtime supply chain and labor standards executive at the center of the company’s global ESG strategy.
The appointment, confirmed in an internal email from Chief Operating Officer Venkatesh Alagirisamy, fills a leadership vacancy that has persisted since September 2025 when former CSO Jaycee Pribulsky departed to become Chief Sustainability Officer at alternative investment manager Apollo.
Nix will formally assume the role on March 15 and report directly to Alagirisamy.
Her appointment comes at a time when global apparel companies face mounting pressure from regulators, investors and civil society to demonstrate credible progress on climate targets, supply chain transparency and labor protections.
Deep Supply Chain Experience
Nix brings more than a decade of experience spanning sustainability governance and global manufacturing operations.
She joined Nike in 2017 as Director of Labor, Sustainable Manufacturing and Sourcing. In that role she focused on labor standards and responsible production across the company’s global supplier network.
Most recently she served as Vice President of Global Apparel and Accessories Manufacturing, overseeing operational strategy across a complex network of contract manufacturers.
Prior to Nike, Nix held sustainability and supply chain responsibility roles at Hewlett Packard Enterprise and HP, where she worked on human rights programs and labor, health and safety initiatives across international supply chains. Earlier in her career she served as Social Responsibility Manager at J.Crew.
The background positions her at the intersection of manufacturing oversight and ESG governance, a combination increasingly valued by companies navigating tightening disclosure requirements and heightened scrutiny around labor conditions in global supply chains.
Steering Enterprise Sustainability Strategy
In her new role, Nix will lead Nike’s global sustainability team and oversee the company’s enterprise sustainability strategy.
According to the internal announcement, she will be responsible for ensuring the company delivers measurable progress against its sustainability commitments while aligning initiatives across the business.
Nike has set a range of environmental and social targets tied to its Move to Zero strategy, which focuses on reducing carbon emissions, minimizing waste and improving circularity across product design and manufacturing.
Meeting those targets requires coordination across product development, sourcing, logistics and supplier engagement, areas where Nix has built much of her career.
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Innovation And Value Chain Transformation
In the announcement, Alagirisamy framed sustainability as central to Nike’s broader operational strategy and competitive positioning.
“At Nike, sustainability is integral to how we serve athletes and grow our business. One of our greatest advantages is our ability to innovate at scale — driving a responsive, resilient, responsible and efficient value chain. With that in mind, I’m excited to share that Cimarron Nix will become our new NIKE, Inc., Chief Sustainability Officer (CSO), leading the Global Sustainability team.”

The focus on value chain innovation reflects a broader shift within the apparel sector, where emissions reductions and social compliance depend heavily on supplier networks rather than internal operations alone.
Manufacturing and materials sourcing account for the majority of fashion industry emissions, making supplier engagement and process innovation central to corporate climate strategies.
What It Means For Investors And ESG Governance
For investors and corporate stakeholders, Nike’s decision to elevate a manufacturing leader to the CSO role highlights how sustainability governance is increasingly embedded in operational leadership rather than confined to reporting functions.
Supply chain resilience, ethical labor practices and low carbon production are now closely tied to regulatory compliance and brand risk.
In the European Union and other major markets, companies face tightening requirements around supply chain due diligence, environmental disclosures and product sustainability standards.
Against that backdrop, Nike’s leadership choice signals a pragmatic approach. By placing an executive with deep operational expertise at the helm of sustainability, the company is positioning ESG strategy closer to the manufacturing decisions that ultimately determine climate performance and labor outcomes.
For global brands operating across complex supplier networks, the move reflects a wider industry reality. Sustainability commitments now hinge less on public pledges and more on the operational systems capable of delivering measurable change at scale.
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