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Thursday, 31 May 2018
Meat and fish multinationals 'jeopardising Paris climate goals'
The companies examined by the report include Australian cattle giants and a Norwegian seafood company.
Photograph: Tracey Nearmy/AAP
Meat and fish companies may be “putting the implementation of the
Paris agreement in jeopardy” by failing to properly report their climate
emissions, according to a groundbreaking index launched today.
Three out of four (72%) of the world’s biggest meat and fish
companies provided little or no evidence to show that they were
measuring or reporting their emissions, despite the fact that, as the
report points out, livestock production represents 14.5% of all
greenhouse gas emissions.
“It is clear that the meat and dairy industries have remained out of
public scrutiny in terms of their significant climate impact. For this
to change, these companies must be held accountable for the emissions
and they must have credible, independently verifiable emissions
reductions strategy,” said Shefali Sharma, director of the Institute for
Agriculture and Trade Policy European office.
The new Coller FAIRR Protein Producers Index has examined the
environmental and social commitments of 60 of the world’s largest meat
and fish producers and found that more than half are failing to properly
document their impact, despite their central role in our lives and
societies.
Many of the names in the index will be unfamiliar, but their
consolidated revenues of $300bn cover around one-fifth of the global
livestock and aquaculture market – roughly one in every five burgers,
steaks or fish.
The companies looked at by the index include giants like the
Australian Agricultural Company, which has the biggest cattle herd in
the world; the Chinese WH Group, the largest global pork company; or the
US’s Sandersons, which processes more than 10 million chickens a week.
More than half the companies looked at by the Coller Index were flagged as ‘high-risk’.
Many of them run vertically integrated systems, sourcing meat from
contracted farmers around the world, processing it themselves through
their own slaughter and packing houses and then selling on to frontline,
more familiar companies such as McDonalds, Walmart, Nestle and Danone.
But
a close examination by the Farm Animal Investment Risk and Return
(FAIRR) group has shown that, despite their critical part in our food
system, these companies appear to be neglecting some of their social
responsibilities.
The food system, according to FAIRR, is “very sensitive to changing
public sentiment”, and really large sums of investor money in the sector
are often at risk due to little-understood risks. The organisation, founded by financier Jeremy Coller in 2015, aims to shed greater light on these risks.
Animal welfare, water scarcity, deforestation and working conditions
were some of the areas in which the 60 largest protein-producing
companies around the world were assessed. The index looked at
self-declared information from each company, and set a wide range of key
performance indicators such as targets for deforestation reduction, a
policy on antibiotic reduction, or water exposer of supply chains.
Overall 60% were found to be “either not managing critical risks or are
failing to disclose basic information”.
“The findings from this first index create cause for
concern,” said the report’s introduction. “There is still a worrying
lack of ESG [environmental, social and governance] data availability and
disclosure … despite the sector’s myriad sustainability impacts.” Climate change
emerged as a particular concern. Despite the fact that, according to
the report, livestock production represents 14.5% of all greenhouse gas
emissions, almost 72% of companies provided little or no evidence to
show that they were measuring or reporting their emissions. Some 19
companies received the lowest possible mark in this section, including
Australia Agricultural Company, Cal-Maine (a US company which reportedly
produced 1bn eggs in 2017), Russian Cherkizovo and Indian Venky’s.
This, the report argues, may be “putting the implementation of the Paris
agreement in jeopardy”. The Guardian approached these companies for
comment but received no response.
Studies over the last decade have repeatedly shown that the
production of red meat is energy and water-intensive compared to the
production of most grains and vegetables. But many government officialsappear to be reluctant to suggest that consumers should reduce their meat consumption.
Antibiotic
use also stood out. Antibiotic resistance has soared in recent decades
and is now considered one of the biggest public health threats facing
the world. The role of farming and food production in spreading
resistant bacteria has come under increasing scrutiny in recent years as
growing evidence points to a direct threat to human health from
veterinary overuse of antibiotics on farms.
Despite this, there has been a “widespread failure to respond” to the
crisis, the report says. The report says that 77% of the sector - 46
companies worth an estimated $239bn - rank “high risk” on antibiotic
stewardship, with “little or no measures in place to reduce excessive
use of antibiotics”.
Abigail Herron, global head of responsible investment, Aviva
Investors, said: “Our research shows that three in four of these
companies are ignoring the calls from regulators, health professionals
and the financial community to manage and reduce their use of
antibiotics. That failure puts both global public health and their
business models at risk.”
Indian poultry giant Venky’s is among the companies ranked as “high
risk” on antibiotics. Sanderson Farms, one of the US’s largest poultry
producers, is also given bottom-tier ranking.
Venky’s was recently found by an investigation by the
Bureau of Investigative Journalism to be advertising colistin, a
so-called “last resort” antibiotic, for sale as a growth promoter in
India, one of five pharma companies found to be doing the same.
Deforestation is another area in which many companies are falling short. A recent analysis by Forest 500
found that despite cattle production being the biggest driver of
tropical production globally, only 17% of assessed cattle companies had a
policy addressing forest production. And the Coller Index finds that of
the 24 companies processing beef and dairy (where deforestation is a
particular risk), only one is assessed as “low risk”.
“From an investment point of view, it is not only this $300bn group
of companies at risk but the wider multi-trillion dollar global food
supply chain ... Investors sit at the top of the chain as ultimate
owners of these listed businesses. They need to use their influence as
responsible stewards of these assets to start a dialogue on best
practice and encourage a race to the top to build a more sustainable
food system,” said Aarti Ramachandran, head of research and corporate
engagement at FAIRR.
“A major, systemic change is needed in the way we source protein if
we are to reduce greenhouse gas emissions, deforestation, habitat loss
and water stress. This can only be achieved if businesses and
policymakers, working with the latest food technologies and scientific
advice, collaborate to create a sustainable and nutritious food
revolution that meets tomorrow’s demand,” said Emily Farnworth, Head of
Climate Change Initiatives, World Economic Forum.
“It’s always worth remembering that there is no such thing as cheap
meat—these industries have been subsidised for years by the public
because we pay for their environmental pollution, public health costs
that they do not account for in their business model. This is where
governments need to step in,” said Sharma. Additional research by Naomi Larsson
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