Campbell Soup Co. has reached an agreement to sell Bolthouse Farms for $510 million, the California carrot and refrigerated beverage producer that it bought in 2012 for $1.55 billion.

The sale completes the plan announced in August to unwind the Campbell Fresh division as part of the companyโ€™s plan to narrow its focus and reduce debt. The plan, announced under pressure from activist investor Dan Loeb, also calls for the sale of international operations, including Arnottโ€™s biscuits in Australia.

Bolthouse was the cornerstone of then-chief executive Denise Morrisonโ€™s bid to steer the Camden company into a future of fresher foods, which were supposed to offer faster growth than Campbellโ€™s soups and other products sold in the ever-shrinking center aisles of supermarkets.

But Bolthouse faltered under Campbell stewardship, which included a decision in 2016 to harvest smaller-than-normal carrots, causing dissatisfied customers to bolt for other suppliers.

Other components of the so-called Campbell Fresh unit also failed to deliver. Last month, Campbell disclosed that it had received a total of $60 million for a Michigan salsa company it bought for $232 million in 2015 and a refrigerated soup plant it opened at a cost of $80 million in 2007.

Campbell had already written off more than $1.4 billion from the value of businesses it had acquired for $2.4 billion from 2012 through 2015 under Morrison.

The bulk of those write-offs were on Bolthouse.

In the fiscal year ended last summer, the Campbell Fresh operations had $970 million in revenue. Proceeds from the sales will allow Campbell to trim $570 million from its $9.46 billion in short- and long-term debt. Two-thirds of that debt came from the acquisition last year of Snyderโ€™s-Lance Inc. for $6 billion.

Bolthouseโ€™s buyer is Butterfly Equity, a Los Angeles private equity firm making investments in agriculture, aquaculture, food and beverage products, food distribution, and food service.

The deal gives Jeff Dunn, who is sometimes credited with playing a key role in popularizing baby carrots as a snack food, a second chance at the Bolthouse helm. Dunn was the companyโ€™s chief executive from 2008 through 2012, when Campbell bought it. He remained at Campbell for four years.

โ€œBolthouse Farms holds a special place in the produce industry, and my team and I are deeply committed to strengthening and broadening Bolthouse Farmsโ€™ unique legacy,โ€ Dunn said in a news release from Butterfly. โ€œWe canโ€™t wait to get started.โ€

Bolthouse has 2,200 employees. Campbell had 23,000 employees last summer, according to its annual report.

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