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Contents
Nestlé in society: Water94
Creating Shared Value 3
Our water strategy 95
A message from our Chairman and our CEO 4 Caring for water 98
Our positive impact on society 6
Building on Creating Shared Value 7
Environmental sustainability 108
Why is CSV important for investors? 9 Our environmental sustainability strategy 109
Our contribution to the global agenda 10 Acting on climate change 112
Driving innovation: The Nestlé Creating Safeguarding the environment 118
Shared Value Prize 11
Accountable and inclusive governance 13 Human rights and compliance 132
Business ethics 15
Our human rights and compliance strategy 133
Public policy and advocacy 16
Human rights 136
Materiality17
Compliance147
Responding to stakeholders 22
Our commitments 24 Our people 152
Our key performance indicators 28
Our people strategy 153
Nutrition, health and wellness 31 Why our people matter 156
Building a safer, healthier workplace 162
Our nutrition, health and wellness strategy 32
Offering tastier and healthier choices 35 Appendix173
Inspiring people to lead healthier lives 48
About this Report 174
Rural development 74 Bureau Veritas’ Independent
Assurance Statement 176
Our rural development strategy 75
Enhancing rural livelihoods 78
Responsible sourcing and traceability 83
A report summary Our Annual Report The CSV section of our corporate website
Our reports are made available online at www.nestle.com/CSV, where you can also find:
• More detailed information on our management approach and governance structure;
• Additional information on human rights due diligence;
• Our performance data;
• Case studies; and
• Additional audio and video content.
Our UNGC Communication on Progress, Human Rights Reporting Framework and GRI Index are available as separate pdfs, and can
be downloaded from the data performance centre.
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Nutrition, health
and wellness
Rural development
• 93% of children’s or teenagers’
breakfast cereals have more • Invested CHF 13.9 million in plant
whole grain in a serving than any science and soil management
other ingredient • Distributed 28.3 million coffee
• 83.7% of all products met or and 2.2 million cocoa plantlets
exceeded Nestlé Nutritional to farmers
Foundation (NF) criteria, • Empowered 1.3 million women
representing an appropriate with technical assistance to date
choice within a balanced diet
Water Environmental
sustainability
• Reduced water withdrawals
per tonne of product by 25% • Reduced our direct greenhouse
since 2010 gas emissions per tonne of product
• Saved 3.2 million m3 of water by 38.9%
through 516 water-saving projects • Invested CHF 299 million in
• Invested CHF 22.5 million in replacing synthetic refrigerants with
new and improved water natural alternatives
treatment facilities • Achieved zero waste for disposal at
• Provided access to safe water and 182 sites (39% of total)
sanitation to 513 345 beneficiaries • Avoided 22 525 tonnes of packaging
in rural communities material through optimisation
Our people
Human rights • Recognised as the most diverse
and inclusive company in the food
and compliance industry, and ranked 13 th overall,
• Completed the roll-out of the in the Thomson Reuters Diversity
Child Labour Monitoring and and Inclusion Index
Remediation System to all • O ffered 6 778 job opportunities
Nestlé Cocoa Plan co-operatives and 4 206 traineeships or
in Côte d’Ivoire, and expanded apprenticeships to people under
into Ghana 30 in Europe
• Trained 36 524 employees in • 79% of facilities certified against
anti-corruption OHSAS 18001:2007
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Through reports such as this, we hope you can see that a mindset of transparency, improvement
and engagement drives all our actions. The Creating Shared Value Council, and many other
stakeholders, guide our work through their insights and constructive criticism.
We encourage investors to look at company performance both in financial and societal terms, and
evaluate how management integrates them both in corporate governance, strategy and operations.
As such, our report this year includes a section for the investment community.
Most importantly, this report demonstrates our fundamental belief in Creating Shared Value as our
way of delivering a long-term positive impact for shareholders and society, through everything that
we do as a company. CSV is unique in that it is a business strategy that allows us to target activities
where we can optimise the creation of value for our shareholders, as well as for society.
We look forward to your feedback on our commitments and on this report.
During the CSV Forum in Côte d’Ivoire, Nestlé Chairman Peter Brabeck- Nestlé CEO Paul Bulcke joins local government representatives,
Letmathe visits the Zambakro experimental farm, an extension of our industry leaders and coffee farmers for the inauguration of the Nescafé
R&D Centre in Abidjan, with Wan Ling Martello, Head of Zone Asia, Coffee Center in Pu’er, Yunnan, China.
Oceania and sub-Saharan Africa.
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Saving water
in our operations
Leading efforts
to promote sustainability Over 50 million children eat
and working together better and exercise more
for the future thanks to Nestlé’s
children’s programmes
Tackling hidden
hunger with
207 billion servings
of fortified products
Preparing hundreds
of thousands of young
people for work through Giving 513 000 people
our youth initiatives access to clean water
Training and and sanitation
supporting
4 million farmers
Helping
2 million women
develop skills
1st 5th
We were the first breast-milk substitute manufacturer to be We were ranked fifth in Fortune’s 2016 Change the World
included in the FTSE4Good Index, and have retained our place list, an annual ranking of 50 companies that are ‘doing well by
for five years. doing good’.
A-
2nd
We were ranked second out of 22 global food and beverage The CDP Water Program promotes sustainable corporate
manufacturers in the 2016 Access to Nutrition Index (ATNI)™. water stewardship. We have participated since its launch and in
November 2016, Nestlé received a ‘Leadership’ score of A-.
1st
With an overall score of 92 out of 100, we received industry- 100A
best scores in all three dimensions (economic, environmental In November 2016, we achieved a score of 100A in the Climate
and social) of the 2016 Dow Jones Sustainability Index (DJSI). Disclosure Leadership Index from environmental
The DJSI is a globally recognised independent benchmark that sustainability ratings agency CDP.
measures the performance of the largest 2500 companies. 2nd
Nestlé ranked second on Oxfam’s Behind the Brands
scorecard in April 2016.
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Nestlé in society: Nutrition, health Rural development Water Environmental Human rights Our people
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Nutrition, water,
rural development,
our focus areas
Creating
Shared Value
We will also continue to prioritise key areas where value creation can be maximised for shareholders
and society, and report transparently on our progress. Our progress can also be tracked by our
rankings in leading indices (see page 6).
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Nestlé
corporate social responsibility
as implemented in Latin America
Creating Shared
Value at Nestlé
About our
reporting
Reporting
performance
Nutrition Water and environmental
sustainability
Rural
development
Our people
2008
Nestlé Creating Shared
Value Report 2009
The Creating Shared Value pyramid, which also
integrated sustainability and compliance in one visual
Visit the Creating Shared Value site at www.nestle.com/CSV
2009
www.nestle.com/CSV Download our summary report
2010
Cover: Farmers Jaswinder Singh Accompanying reports
and Jasveer Kaur deliver milk to
a chilling centre in Nestlé’s milk
district in Rajasthan, India.
Figures highlighted throughout the report The brands in italics are registered
with this symbol are tracked as Key trademarks of the Nestlé Group.
Performance Indicators and summarised in
the Rural Development section of the KPI
table inside the front flap.
2012
Nestlé in
The Nestlé Creating Shared Value Summary Report
society
2011: Meeting the global water challenge was
published. The full online report was delivered in
Creating Shared Value
and meeting
our commitments
2012
2013
Forum was held in India and the CSV Prize was
awarded to Fundación Paraguaya.
Nestlé in Contents
society
forward-looking commitments. The fifth CSV Forum
2 A message from our Chairman and our CEO Accompanying reports
4 Creating Shared Value at Nestlé
6 Summary of our commitments Annual
Report
2013
8 Nutrition
Find out how Nestlé’s focus on nutrition is helping
and meeting
14 Rural development and responsible sourcing
Our Rural Development Framework is being rolled out
2013
16 Water
Read about our new commitment on water stewardship The year
in review
and the objectives we will deliver 2013
19 Environmental sustainability
We are aiming to make our products better for the
environment along the value chain
26 Stakeholder engagement
2014
28 Materiality
30 Full commitments table
Front cover
Mrs Grace Wambui Wanyeki (pictured with her daughter) has been a coffee farmer
for the past 24 years in Kenya. She is a member of a coffee co-operative under the
Nescafé Plan and a promoter farmer for our Women’s Empowerment programme,
participating in training sessions and using her farm as a demonstration plot.
Nestlé is encouraging more female coffee growers in Kenya to take up leadership
roles in farming co-operatives to promote gender equality and education for
women and girls.
2015 and the CSV Prize was awarded to Honey Care Africa.
2016
Three overarching ambitions for 2030 were
introduced, in support of the SDGs. The majority of
our commitments, now totalling 42, were updated
towards 2020. The seventh Creating Shared Value
Forum took place in Abidjan, Côte d’Ivoire, and
Agro-Hub took first place in the CSV Prize.
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Our ambitions
Offering tastier and healthier choices Enhancing rural livelihoods Caring for water
Inspiring people to lead healthier lives Respecting and promoting human Acting on climate change
rights
Building, sharing and applying Safeguarding the environment
nutrition knowledge Promoting decent employment
and diversity
G4-26
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Visit our website for details of our simplified application process, screening and selection criteria, as well as updates on
previous winners and runners-up.
For more information, see the Official Rules and our Frequently Asked Questions.
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Nominations and
Board of Directors Sustainability
Committee
Executive Board
Child Labour
Group WHO Code Human Rights & Women’s
Seafood Operations GMO Task
Compliance Compliance Working Empowerment
Task Force Water Task Force
Committee Committee Group Steering
Chair: M. Batato Force Chair: M. Batato
Group
Chair: D. Frick Chair: P. Vogt Chairs: C. Frutiger,
Org: H. Parsons Chair: C. Galli Org: H. Parsons
Org: E. Rueda Org: C. Frutiger P. Pires Chair: M. Batato
Org: H. Parsons
G4-34, G4-35, G4-36, G4-40, G4-42, G4-49, G4-56, Procurement practices G4-DMA, Anti-competitive behavior G4-DMA
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G4-26, G4-34, G4-35, G4-36, G4-42, G4-43, G4-49, Anti-competitive behavior G4-DMA
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Business ethics
Business ethics remains one of our most material issues. Upholding ethical
principles in our business and throughout our value chain is fundamental to
the way we operate, and underpins consumer trust and our licence to operate.
This includes our zero tolerance of fraud, bribery and corruption, our stringent
efforts to ensure data privacy and our open disclosure of tax payments.
Compliance
We are confident that the structure and processes of our corporate compliance programme are
Please see Human rights and
compliance, our Corporate robust and are being implemented effectively, overseen by a Group-level compliance committee
Governance Report and the GRI and local committees in each market. We encourage all our stakeholders to respect and comply
Index for further information on with our ethical standards and codes, and to report any instances of non-compliance through our
compliance.
internal and external grievance mechanisms.
Anti-corruption
Bribery and corruption, wherever they occur, negatively impact on company performance and
stakeholders’ perceptions. Nestlé does not tolerate deception, bribery, breach of confidence and
abuse of power of any kind, and we have made a public commitment to ensure a culture of integrity
across the organisation.
Read more about anti-corruption. However, we recognise that these activities can and occasionally do arise in some markets. We
therefore aim to ensure that our policies and standards for combating bribery and corruption are
clear, applicable for all employees and suppliers, and widely communicated and understood.
We clearly set out our position on these issues through our Code of Business Conduct. Operations in
28 countries strengthened their anti-corruption policies and procedures in 2016, while a further five
markets identified the need and made substantial progress during the year.
Data privacy
Sustainable Development Goals The data protection regulatory landscape underwent great change in 2016, due to the adoption of
the European General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR), a major reform designed to strengthen
We identified the following goals and unify data protection, and China’s new Cybersecurity Law.
where our work adds value:
To meet the demands of the ever-changing regulatory landscape and new consumer expectations
for data protection, Nestlé commenced a project to undertake a review of its personal data
processing and related procedures. The purpose of the project is twofold:
• To ensure necessary changes are made to Nestlé’s current practices to meet requirements under
the GDPR when it comes into effect in 2018; and
• To have a consistent, simplified and standardised approach to the handling of personal data
across the Nestlé Group.
Two key features of the compliance project are a new Data Privacy Standard, which will reinforce
Nestlé’s data protection principles across the world, and a revised and strengthened data protection
organisation. This comprises data privacy officers and champions to support the implementation of
Nestlé’s data protection strategy.
Taxation
Read more about fair taxation.
We view the tax we pay as a compliance issue as well as an integral part of Creating Shared Value in
the countries where we operate. We pay taxes in accordance with local laws, and believe it is good
Read more about data privacy.
practice to disclose information about our contributions.
Charitable contributions
Creating Shared Value is an integral part of our business strategy, and key achievements from each
CSV focus area described in this report. In addition, in 2016, Nestlé provided a total of CHF 75 million in
charitable contributions and other non-commercial economic support (in monetary or product form),
assisting many communities at the local level; for example, with cultural and academic activities,
during natural disasters, and through the donations of finished goods, etc. This amount includes the
approximately CHF 11 million global spend on the Nestlé Healthy Kids Programme.
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Committed to transparency
Transparency and good faith underpins our engagement process, providing the basis for deeper
dialogue, and, in turn, building knowledge and creating deeper understanding. We outline our
expectations with employees through the Nestlé Policy on transparent interaction with authorities
and organisations. We provide guidance to country-level Nestlé staff and we are preparing a global
guideline for the end of 2017.
In Europe, we are listed in the European Union Transparency Register, which provides information
about who is engaging with decision-makers, and follow its code of conduct; in the United States,
we file quarterly public reports outlining our engagement activities with the US Congress.
We also maintain two websites that enable stakeholders to raise their concerns directly with us:
• ‘Ask Nestlé’, which is open to receive comments, questions or complaints from the general
public; and
• ‘Tell us’, an online external grievance system.
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Materiality
To ensure we prioritise the most important issues for our stakeholders and
our business, we conduct a formal materiality analysis every two years. We
have shared the methodology and findings of our latest assessment below.
Over- and
Human under-nutrition
rights
Climate Water
change Responsible stewardship
marketing
and influence
High
Food and
product safety
Animal Resource efficiency, (food) waste Business ethics
welfare and circular economy
Stakeholder interest
Women’s
empowerment
Low
Impact on Nestlé
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• Affordability
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Animal welfare
• Animal testing
• Antimicrobial resistance
Women’s empowerment1
• Women farmers
Water stewardship
• Bottled water
• Water quality
• Water security
• Water use
Climate change
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• Biodiversity
• Deforestation
• Soil fertility
Business ethics
Human rights
• Child labour
• Labour rights in our operations*
• Forced labour in the upstream supply chain
* Issue is covered in the chapter on Our people
Women’s empowerment1
• Women farmers
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Responding to stakeholders
Engaging stakeholders on Creating Shared Value issues and tackling them
together lies at the heart of how we do business. We seek the advice of
the best experts and advocates to develop and improve our corporate
policies and commitments, strengthen our business and target our
societal investments.
Our approach
Our global stakeholder network ranges from people we engage with regularly through our
Visit our website for more
information about our operations to those in public positions who influence our activities. They range from employees,
stakeholder engagement. consumers, suppliers and communities to governments, NGOs, shareholders, industry and trade
associations, and academia.
Our annual programme of stakeholder convenings and CSV Forum events provides opportunities to
intensify that dialogue, building on our understanding of critical societal issues. The interaction
develops the capability of our people, facilitates collective action, and promotes trust and mutual
respect. Outcomes from such dialogue are fed back to senior management through the Nestlé in
Society Board.
Stakeholder convenings
Nestlé stakeholder convenings are hosted and organised by external experts to ensure we receive
independent opinions and feedback. These events address issues that are specific to our value chain
and highlight where Nestlé can create shared value.
On 30–31 March 2016, representatives of NGOs, academia, government and international
organisations attended our stakeholder convening in Geneva, Switzerland. With 64 stakeholders,
Nestlé CEO Paul Bulcke and 18 other Nestlé staff in attendance, the event invited delegates to share
their perspectives of Nestlé’s CSV commitments and performance, and sought to explore Nestlé’s
role in stimulating collective action to support the UN’s Sustainable Development Goals.
Stakeholder recommendations
Participants at the 2016 convening in Geneva made a number of recommendations; key issues are
outlined below, along with our responses. Feedback is also considered when assessing the material
issues of our business.
Ensure portfolio coherence: The importance of coherence between We have reframed and strengthened our
Nestlé’s portfolio, programmes and the positions it is taking on nutrition nutrition commitments.
and health was emphasised by participants. The consistency of the
nutrition profile of products in different jurisdictions was also identified
as important.
Move beyond breast-milk substitute (BMS) legacy: Participants A strengthened BMS commitment has been
recommended Nestlé move beyond legacy BMS issues by introduced to address the legacy issue.
demonstrating leadership in practices and driving industry-wide
improvements in standards. Taking an industry leadership position is
seen by stakeholders as a prerequisite for a credible and successful
execution of nutrition strategies.
Engage investors to enhance value from CSV: Growing investor Our 2016 reporting aims to actively engage
interest in the long-term value created by CSV was noted. Demonstrating investors in why CSV is important.
the financial value CSV is creating will strengthen Nestlé’s capacity to
act. Participants highlighted opportunities to engage investors to help
raise industry-wide standards.
Describe a long-term vision to guide short-term action: Describing a We rearticulated our corporate purpose with
long-term vision, linked to the SDGs, will inform the scale and focus of strengthened commitments and 2030
current CSV activities of Nestlé and its partners. ambitions.
Explore the linkages and opportunities across the SDGs: Seek Our public commitments were reviewed against
opportunities to act across the SDGs, particularly where there are the SDGs and our ambitions were articulated.
linkages between the SDGs and Nestlé’s commitments (such as the link
between Nestlé’s efforts to support nutrition, health and wellness and
SDG 12 on responsible consumption).
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Connect thinking on nutrition, the environment and social issues: We take a holistic approach to all decisions
Participants recommended Nestlé consider the interconnectedness of concerning our business operations, activities,
nutrition, environmental outcomes and social issues in its portfolio and products and services. In 2016, we piloted the
business decisions. Natural Capital Protocol [link to ES>Preserving
natural capital], to gain a better understanding
of our dependence on nature for key brands
such as Nespresso.
Raise the ambition on water: Participants recommended Nestlé take a We are in the process of developing the Nestlé
more innovative approach to water, focused on opportunities including Water Plan, which strengthens our approach to
setting targets to increase access and responsible sourcing. Participants water.
highlighted challenges around bottled water and recommended
extending the Water Plan to give equal focus to Nestlé Waters, the
agriculture supply chain and operations.
Simplify approach and increase transparency: Participants saw While maintaining the comprehensiveness of
opportunities to simplify the CSV approach, but stressed the value in our reporting and the robustness of the data,
maintaining the high level of transparency and disclosure of data. we have sought to make our full CSV report
more focused on material issues.
Women and equality: Participants highlighted that gender equality, We strengthened our commitment to enhance
within Nestlé’s own operations and across the supply chain, underpins gender balance in our workforce by including
CSV performance as a cross-cutting issue and is critical to nutrition, women across our supply chains.
health and rural development outcomes.
Addressing environmental impacts from agriculture is urgent: In addition to ongoing work with farming
Addressing the GHG emissions from animal agriculture was identified as communities, we are creating a GHG footprint
a particular priority. benchmark to improve the tracking of
improvements with additional metrics.
Products that do no harm: Participants emphasised the growing We have formulated three new long-term
consumer demand and need for products that provide healthy nutrition, ambitions and strengthened our 42
while protecting the environment and avoiding social harm. commitments to individuals and families,
communities, and the planet.
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Our commitments
Four years ago, we published a series of commitments to hold ourselves
publicly accountable for our performance. We continue to report on them
every year, to show both our progress and where we still need to do more.
During 2016, we conducted an extensive internal review of our commitments
and, in line with our 2030 ambitions, we have introduced some new
commitments to go further and deeper than previously. All commitments
are directly aligned with our business.
Nutrition, health and wellness
• Launch more nutritious foods and beverages, especially for mothers-to-be, new mothers
and children
• Further decrease sugars, sodium and saturated fat
• Increase vegetables, fibre-rich grains, pulses, nuts and seeds in our foods and beverages
• Address undernutrition through micronutrient fortification
• Simplify our ingredients list and remove artificial colours
• Support breastfeeding and protect it by continuing to implement an industry-leading policy to
market breast-milk substitutes responsibly
• Empower parents, caregivers and teachers to foster healthy behaviours in children
• Market to children only choices that help them achieve a nutritious diet
• Inspire people to choose water to lead healthier lives
• Leverage our marketing efforts to promote healthy cooking, eating and lifestyles
• Apply and explain nutrition information on packs, at point of sale and online
• Offer guidance on portions for our products
• Partner for promoting healthy food environments
• Build and share nutrition knowledge from the first 1000 days through to healthy ageing
• Build biomedical science leading to health-promoting products, personalised nutrition
and digital solutions
Rural development
• Roll out of rural development baseline assessments to understand the needs of farmers
• Improve farm economics among the farmers who supply us
• Improve food availability and dietary diversity among the farmers who supply us
• Implement responsible sourcing in our supply chain and promote animal welfare
• Roll out the Nestlé Cocoa Plan with cocoa farmers
• Continuously improve our green coffee supply chain
Water
• Work to achieve water efficiency and sustainability across our operations
• Advocate for effective water policies and stewardship
• Treat the water we discharge effectively
• Engage with suppliers, especially those in agriculture
• Raise awareness on water conservation and improve access to water and sanitation across
our value chain
Environmental sustainability
• Provide climate change leadership
• Promote transparency and proactive, long-term engagement in climate policy
• Reduce food loss and waste
• Improve the environmental performance of our packaging
• Assess and optimise the environmental impact of our products
• Provide meaningful and accurate environmental information and dialogue
• Preserve natural capital, including forests
G4-2
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Our people
• Enhance gender balance in our workforce and empower women across the entire value chain
• Roll out the Global Youth Initiative across all our operations
• Provide training on Corporate Business Principles, Nutrition and Environmental Sustainability
• Ensure that all Nestlé employees are covered by a certified safety and health
management system
• Advocate for healthy workplaces and healthier employees
UN Sustainable
Development Goal Nestlé commitment
Roll out of rural development baseline assessments to understand the needs of farmers
Improve workers’ livelihoods and protect children in our agricultural supply chain
Roll out of rural development baseline assessments to understand the needs of farmers
Improve food availability and dietary diversity among the farmers who supply us
Implement responsible sourcing in our supply chain and promote animal welfare
Launch more nutritious foods and beverages, especially for mothers-to-be, new mothers
and children
Increase vegetables, fibre-rich grains, pulses, nuts and seeds in our foods and beverages
Market to children only choices that help them achieve a nutritious diet
Leverage our marketing efforts to promote healthy cooking, eating and lifestyles
Apply and explain nutrition information on packs, at point of sale and online
Build and share nutrition knowledge from the first 1000 days through to healthy ageing
Improve food availability and dietary diversity among the farmers who supply us
G4-2
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UN Sustainable
Development Goal Nestlé commitment
Roll out of rural development baseline assessments to understand the needs of farmers
Enhance gender balance in our workforce and empower women across the entire value chain
Roll out of rural development baseline assessments to understand the needs of farmers
Roll out of rural development baseline assessments to understand the needs of farmers
Raise awareness on water conservation and improve access to water and sanitation across our
value chain
Roll out of rural development baseline assessments to understand the needs of farmers
Improve workers’ livelihoods and protect children in our agricultural supply chain
Roll out the Global Youth Initiative across all our operations
Ensure that all Nestlé employees are covered by a certified safety and health management system
Improve workers’ livelihoods and protect children in our agricultural supply chain
Enhance gender balance in our workforce and empower women across the entire value chain
Roll out the Global Youth Initiative across all our operations
Roll out the Global Youth Initiative across all our operations
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UN Sustainable
Development Goal Nestlé commitment
Roll out of rural development baseline assessments to understand the needs of farmers
Roll out of rural development baseline assessments to understand the needs of farmers
Implement responsible sourcing in our supply chain and promote animal welfare
Roll out of rural development baseline assessments to understand the needs of farmers
Implement responsible sourcing in our supply chain and promote animal welfare
Assess and address human rights impacts across our business activities
Improve workers’ livelihoods and protect children in our agricultural supply chain
Roll out of rural development baseline assessments to understand the needs of farmers
UNGC LEAD
Nestlé is one of more than 50 companies that make up the UNGC’s leadership platform LEAD.
As a member of this group, and the LEAD Steering Committee, we work towards advancing the
Visit our website for more integration of sustainability principles into core business operations and aligning corporate goal-
information on how we support the setting with global development priorities. We also help to establish work plans and assist with
United Nations Global Compact.
coordination, while taking an active part in a number of LEAD task forces and UNGC-led initiatives.
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Nestlé in society: Creating Shared Value key performance indicators GRI 2015 2016 Page
Economic
Total Group sales (CHF million) (a) G4-EC1 88 785 89 469 n/a
Products meeting or exceeding Nestlé Nutritional Foundation profiling criteria (as % of total sales) (c) G4-EC1 81.6 83.7 36, 37, 38, 39
Products with increase in nutritious ingredients or essential nutrients (d) G4-FP7 4 643 4 095 41
Products with reduction of sodium, sugars, trans fats, total fat, calories or artificial colourings (d) G4-FP6 5 471 5 777 37, 38, 39
Products analysed and improved or confirmed via 60/40+ programme (sales, CHF million) (e) G4-PR1 33 657 34 426 37, 38, 39
Products containing Branded Active Benefits (sales, CHF million) G4-FP7 6 193 6 174 41
Products featuring Nestlé Nutritional Compass® labelling (% of sales worldwide) (f) G4-PR3 92.8 96.4 49
Products with Guideline Daily Amounts (GDA) labelling on front of pack (% of sales) (g) G4-PR3 89.2 92.3 50
Products with specific Portion Guidance (sales, CHF million) G4-PR3 35 562 45 333 51
Nestlé television advertising to children under 12 in compliance with policies on responsible marketing (%) G4-PR7 97 98.7 55
Contraventions to the Nestlé Policy and Instructions for Implementation of the WHO International Code of G4-PR7 36 19 53
Marketing of Breast-milk Substitutes (h)
Infant formula marketing staff in higher-risk countries trained on the WHO Code (% of staff) (i) G4-PR6 100 100 53
Rural development
Percentage of purchased volume fully compliant with the Nestlé Supplier Code (n) G4-FP1 82 61 83
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Nestlé in society: Creating Shared Value key performance indicators GRI 2015 2016 Page
Water (j)
Total water withdrawal (m3 per tonne of product) G4-EN8 2.57 2.5 100
Environmental sustainability
Production volume
Materials
Materials for packaging purposes (million tonnes) G4-EN1 5.3 5.0 125
Energy
Total on-site energy consumption (gigajoules per tonne of product) 1.72 1.67 124
Total on-site energy consumption from renewable sources (% total) G4-EN3 15.4 16.9 n/a
Total direct energy consumption from renewable sources (% total direct) G4-EN3 11.8 12.1 n/a
Biodiversity
Total size of manufacturing sites located in protected areas (hectares) G4-EN11 18.8 18.8 130
Direct GHG emissions (million tonnes CO2eq) G4-EN15 3.7 3.6 115
Direct GHG emissions (kg CO2eq per tonne of product) G4-EN15 69 65 115
Indirect GHG emissions (million tonnes CO2eq) G4-EN16 3.7 3.5 115
Indirect GHG emissions (kg CO2eq per tonne of product) G4-EN16 68 62 115
Total water discharge (m3 per tonne of product) G4-EN22 1.47 1.4 103
Waste for disposal (kg per tonne of product) G4-EN23 3 1.9 124
Manufacturing sites certified against ISO 14001 (% of total manufacturing sites) 92 94 n/a
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Nestlé in society: Creating Shared Value key performance indicators GRI 2015 2016 Page
Our people
Total rate of new employee hires (%) (k) G4-LA1 11.1 11.1 n/a
Total rate of employee turnover (%) (k) G4-LA1 12.5 12.4 n/a
Major 0 0 148
Critical 0 0 148
Lost-time injuries and illnesses rate (per million hours worked) (employees, on-site contractors and G4-LA6 2.05 1.93 164
on-site members of public) (j)
Total recordable injuries and illnesses rate (per million hours worked) (employees, on-site contractors G4-LA6 3.42 3.13 164
and on-site members of public) (j)
Total number of fatalities (employees, on-site contractors and on-site members of public) (j) G4-LA6 10 4 167
Average hours of training per year per employee per category (m) G4-LA9 31.6 38.8 169
Leadership positions held by women (%) (k) G4-LA12 34.0 35.4 157
Local Management Committee members native to country in developing countries (%) (k) G4-EC6 63.3 73.3 n/a
(a) Does not include joint ventures. (i) We follow the FTSE4Good breast-milk substitute marketing criteria, which classify
(b) Includes Nestlé’s share in net result of joint ventures. countries as ‘higher-risk’ if they have mortality rates for under-fives of more than 10 per
1000, or more than 2% acute malnutrition among under-fives. All other countries are
(c) Total Nestlé (F&B except CPW, NHSc, Pharma, Nespresso, Businesses not in GLOBE ‘lower-risk’.
reporting). % of products meeting NNPS criteria over total products being assessed.
(j) Includes joint ventures.
(d) Based on reports of 78% of factories. Products can have ‘less of’ one ingredient and ‘more
of’ another at the same time. (k) Covers Nestlé employees registered in HR system (approximately 84% of all employees).
(e) In the 60/40+ programme, Nestlé products tested with consumers must be preferred over (l) CARE, our global external audit programme, is conducted by three audit companies and
the competitor’s. Assessment results are valid for a maximum of three years if all parameters verifies that all employees and sites we own or operate comply with local legislation, our
remain equal. Corporate Business Principles and Code of Business Conduct. The audits take place every
three years.
(f) PetCare, Gerber Life, Nestlé Health Care Nutrition, Wyeth Nutrition, other Nestlé Health
Science businesses and non Nestlé branded products in Nestlé Waters are out of scope. (m) Training hours are based only on information recorded in the Learning Management System
(LMS). The numbers will be higher if manually recorded training hours were considered (as
(g) Includes all F&B + Nestlé Waters except plain water. It excludes joint ventures, Nestlé was the case in 2015 when the LMS was just newly launched). Training hours per employee
Nutrition, Wyeth, Nestlé Health Science, specific category / country exemptions. covers 100% of employees in the system.
(h) Instances attributed to Nestlé based on internal audits conducted by corporate auditors and (n) 2015 scope of tier 1 audits was direct materials only. In 2016, scope extended to include
external audits conducted by Bureau Veritas. Final number of contraventions could change service and indirect materials with target of 50%.
as the findings of some verifications are still being assessed. Our Annual Reports on
compliance can be accessed on our corporate website.
Nestlé in society – Creating Shared Value and meeting our commitments 2016 30
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Because by giving individuals and families the best start in life and supporting
them through all stages of life, we are nurturing a healthy generation.
SDG 12: SDG 13: SDG 14: SDG 15: SDG 17:
Responsible consumption Climate action Life below water Life on land Partnerships for the goals
and production
32 Our nutrition, health and wellness strategy 35 Offering tastier and healthier choices 64 Building, sharing and applying nutrition knowledge
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Food: we need it to survive. But it also presents one of the largest public health challenges ever.
Investor benefits On the one hand, obesity is on the rise in both adults and children; at the same time, hunger and
inadequate nutrition pose a serious threat. We want to help individuals and their families make
Products with a nutrition, health and tastier and healthier choices – to live healthier lives. Driven by our company purpose to enhance
wellness dimension perform better.
This has been demonstrated in a
quality of life and contribute to a healthier future we have defined an overarching ambition that
recent analysis, which compared will guide our work towards achieving our 2020 commitments and supporting the achievement
products that are above average in of the SDGs. Our 2030 ambition is to help 50 million children lead healthier lives.
terms of meeting our 60/40+ taste
preference and Nutritional
Foundation (NF) criteria with those Offering tastier and Inspiring people to lead Building, sharing and
that are below average. Our health healthier choices healthier lives applying nutrition
and wellness work helps us stay
knowledge
ahead of regulations, the non-
compliance of which could result in
major costs. The market for
healthier foods and beverages is
growing. There is a demonstrated
opportunity for increased revenue
through sales of such products.
People want their food to be People want help, support Every year scientists learn more
both healthy and enjoyable. and encouragement to stay about the human body and the
They want food and beverages healthy throughout their life. role food plays in overall health.
that are both nutritious and We can contribute by providing We currently have the most
delicious, made with ingredients clear nutritional information advanced science and innovation
that they easily recognise. By and portion guidance. This network in the food industry,
adding nutrients that support means they can make more which gives us the ability to
good health, and reducing informed food choices. Easy develop food and beverages
others, like salt, we offer better to understand information, at the cutting edge of nutrition
choices. At every moment of combined with advice and science. Throughout our 150-
the day, at every stage of life, guidance can help people select year history, we have created
Nestlé food and beverages the foods they need in their new products and systems,
deliver good nutrition without diet. Through our brands we new industries even. Now, as
compromising on taste. We are help people, especially children, scientific advances allow us to
working to ensure our products understand the importance of develop nutritional solutions to
and services can always make healthy eating and exercise by help tackle illness, along with
a positive contribution to health promoting activities and sports our partners in universities and
and development. programmes. In this way we public health, we continue our
support people on the journey pioneering work.
to better health.
Read more on our actions Read more on our actions Read more on our actions in the
in this chapter. in this chapter. Our people chapter.
Healthy and affordable food G4-DMA, Product and service labeling G4-DMA, G4-PR3
Nestlé in society – Creating Shared Value and meeting our commitments 2016 32
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External recognition
Our nutrition performance is independently audited and verified annually. We participate voluntarily
in a number of third-party reporting initiatives, where the results and feedback are made public. Our
leadership has been recognised in several rankings and indices:
Organisation Progress
FTSE4Good We were the first breast-milk substitute (BMS) manufacturer to be included in the FTSE4Good
Responsible Responsible Investment Index, and have maintained our inclusion for five years. In 2016, we
Investment Index achieved the highest score in two of the three Environmental, Social and Governance (ESG) themes.
2016 Access to Nestlé ranked second out of 22 global food and beverage manufacturers in the 2016 Access to
Nutrition Index Nutrition Index (ATNI)™, and topped the sub-indexes of breast-milk marketing practices, general
(ATNI)™ nutrition and undernutrition.
2016 Dow Jones With an overall score of 92 out of 100, we led our industry in all three dimensions (economic,
Sustainability Index environmental and social) of the 2016 Dow Jones Sustainability Index, a globally recognised
independent benchmark that measures the performance of the world’s largest 2500 companies.
Healthy and affordable food G4-DMA, Customer health and safety G4-DMA, Product and service labeling G4-DMA, G4-PR3, Marketing communications G4-DMA
Nestlé in society – Creating Shared Value and meeting our commitments 2016 33
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• Food and product safety – ensuring a high-quality product and preventing health risks arising
from use, consumption, handling, preparation and storage throughout the value chain.
Sub-issues:
–– Additives, preservatives, artificial ingredients
–– Chemical safety
–– Food safety
–– Product authenticity
• Responsible marketing and influence – marketing in ways that are appropriate to specific
audiences and shaping behaviour to promote healthful choices and better environmental outcomes.
Sub-issues:
–– Foster environmentally sensitive behaviours
–– Foster healthy behaviours
Visit our website for more –– Infant formula marketing
information on our material issues –– Product labelling
across our value chain.
–– Responsible marketing to children
Our commitments
Our public commitments stem from our respect for individuals and families, communities and the
planet. Having listened to the views of our stakeholders, we have refined our commitments in the
area of nutrition, health and wellness to enable healthier and happier lives for individuals and
families, with a strong focus on infants and children.
Put simply, we want to improve the lives of the individuals and families we serve. Where there are
gaps, we want to fill them, and where there are obstacles to ensuring a health-promoting
environment, we want to remove them.
Our commitments drive continuous improvement and allow stakeholders to hold us to account for
delivering on our promises. Our commitments have been updated to provide greater clarity and
transparency, allowing us to build on our efforts to date and what we have learned along the way.
To enable us to achieve our ambition, we have established a comprehensive series of commitments,
including new 2020 objectives to push us forward, and a robust set of key performance indicators.
Offering tastier and healthier choices
• Launch more nutritious foods and beverages, especially for mothers-to-be, new mothers
and children
• Further decrease sugars, sodium and saturated fat
• Increase vegetables, fibre-rich grains, pulses, nuts and seeds in our foods and beverages
• Address undernutrition through micronutrient fortification
• Simplify our ingredient lists and remove artificial colours
Inspiring people to lead healthier lives
• Support breastfeeding and protect it by continuing to implement an industry-leading policy to
market breast-milk substitutes responsibly
• Empower parents, caregivers and teachers to foster healthy behaviours in children
Our progress against our • Market to children only choices that help them achieve a nutritious diet
objectives is indicated • Inspire people to choose water to lead healthier lives
throughout the report using • Leverage our marketing efforts to promote healthy cooking, eating and lifestyles
the following icons: • Apply and explain nutrition information on packs, at point of sale and online
Achieved • Offer guidance on portions for our products
In progress • Partner for promoting healthy food environments
Not yet achieved
New objective Building, sharing and applying nutrition knowledge
• Build and share nutrition knowledge from the first 1000 days through to healthy ageing
Visit our website for more • Build biomedical science leading to health-promoting products, personalised nutrition and
information on our commitment
performance dashboard and GRI digital solutions
content index.
Progress against our nutrition, health and wellness commitments is detailed in the following pages.
Healthy and affordable food G4-DMA, Product and service labeling G4-DMA, G4-PR3, Marketing communications G4-DMA
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Launch more nutritious foods and beverages, especially for mothers-to-be, new mothers and children
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Reducing sugar
Our objective in 2016
B
y 2016 – Further reduce sugar content by 10% in products that do not meet the Nestlé Nutritional Foundation (NF) criteria
with respect to sugar, to ensure continual improvement – including the more challenging areas of our product portfolio.
Free sugars are all sugars added to foods and beverages by the manufacturer, cook or consumer, as
well as those naturally present in honey, syrups, fruit juices and fruit juice concentrates. Sugars are
added for taste or technical properties but, in excess, are linked to tooth decay, obesity and NCDs
such as diabetes. The guidelines issued by public health authorities recommend that people
maintain a free sugar intake below 10% of their total energy intake.
We aim to create and reformulate foods and beverages with less sugar that still delight our
consumers, deterring them from switching to less nutritional alternatives. For example, in
November 2016, we announced a ground-breaking discovery in materials science that will help our
sugar reduction efforts in the future. Campaigns explaining how we have achieved such changes
reinforce consumer trust in our brands.
By the end of 2016, we had reduced sugars by 8.0%, the equivalent of 39 000 tonnes, compared
with our 10% objective. As 7% of our total portfolio doesn’t meet our strict criteria for sugar –
including some more indulgent products that are not intended to do so for frequent consumption,
even though they may be healthier than similar products on the market – our efforts to drive
continuous improvement in this area will continue.
In Chile, a third of children under six years old are overweight. category threshold of 6 g. Nestlé Chile reformulated the recipe
To help address this, a new regulation was passed in June 2016 to meet the new requirements without compromising on the
requiring black logos on the packaging of foods and beverages ingredients or using any artificial sweeteners. The new Milo has
considered to exceed the Government’s thresholds in total 32% less sugar content, and now meets the new standard
energy, total sugars, saturated fats and sodium. while still delivering the nutritional requirements, convenience
and great taste expected in our Milo brand.
Under this new law, Nestlé Milo was considered to be high in
sugar, with 8.1 g of total sugars per 100 g compared to the
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Reducing sodium
Our objective in 2016
By 2016 – Further reduce sodium content by 10% in products that do not meet the Nestlé Nutritional Foundation (NF)
criteria with respect to sodium, ensuring a gradual reduction even in more challenging areas of our product portfolio.
Sodium, essential for normal cell function, primarily enters our diet as salt via processed foods,
home cooking or at the table. We aim to reduce the salt in our foods without consumers feeling the
need to add it themselves or choose saltier alternatives.
We have continued to reduce the sodium content of our products to help consumers achieve an
intake of 2 g per day, the level recommended by the World Health Organization (WHO). By the end
of 2016, we had reduced sodium content by 10.5% in our foods and beverages, the equivalent of an
overall salt reduction of 2700 tonnes. While this means we exceeded our 10% reduction objective,
our efforts in this area will continue through our new commitment on sodium reduction.
Our wider engagement on salt reduction includes:
• Contributing our expertise to the Salt-Smart Americas initiative led by the Salt Smart Consortium,
whose approach combines aggressive salt reduction targets and a relevant consumer awareness
strategy; and
• Pledging our ongoing support to the Pan-American Health Organization’s and the World
Economic Forum’s statement on Dietary Sodium/Salt Reduction in the Americas, signed in 2011.
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8%
reduction in sugar content
10.5%
reduction in sodium content 4
1
6.5% 2
reduction in saturated fat content 3
We're
Getting
Better All
the Time...
1 United States: Sugar 2 Venezuela: Sodium 3 Malaysia: Sodium 4 Ukraine: Saturated fat
Nestlé Professional has made several To ensure our market-leading Maggi Maggi has successfully improved Our product renovation team in Ukraine
recipe adjustments to its portfolio of Chicken Noodle soup remains a tastier, Malaysia’s most popular curry instant set an ambitious target to halve the
Vitality juices to meet demand for healthier choice in Venezuela, our noodles by using freshly selected saturated fat content in our portfolio of
purer, simpler ingredient lists and experts have reformulated the recipe, spices, a unique cooking technique Asian noodles. Our initial approach
reduced sugar content. As well as using traditional, natural ingredients and an improved recipe, while failed to maintain consumer preference
artificial colours and flavours, we have and reducing sodium by more than reducing sodium by more than 12%. so we have revised our approach, and
removed high-fructose corn syrup, 25%. This now supports the We plan to further decrease sodium now plan to introduce an emerging oil
helping reduce sugar across the government campaign raising levels by another 12%, without in collaboration with a local supplier.
portfolio by an average of 23%. awareness about obesity and targeting affecting consumer preference. A significant amount of time will be
products high in sodium, fat and sugar. required to grow this crop at scale and
industrialise it to our standards.
Fats and oils are an important part of a balanced diet. They provide energy, help us absorb vitamins
and contribute to many essential bodily functions.
The WHO recommends that only 10% of calories in our diet should come from saturated fats, and
our Nutritional Foundation (NF) criterion for saturated fats is meant to help consumers achieve that.
We have identified 8500 individual foods and beverages (around 7% of our portfolio) that do not
meet our NF criterion for saturated fats yet. By reformulating these products, by the end of 2016, we
reduced the saturated fat content by 6.5%, the equivalent of 6200 tonnes, compared with the 10%
we committed to achieve.
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Reformulation is challenging, not least because ingredients and manufacturing processes must be
considered simultaneously, and investment in new technologies and equipment may be required.
To complete these activities, while offering tastier and healthier choices to our consumers, we
require more time to develop, test and implement. We have therefore extended the deadline for
this specific commitment.
Healthy diets include fats and oils, but too much of them, especially partially hydrogenated oils
(PHOs), increase the risk of NCDs such as heart disease. Some trans fats are formed when vegetable
oil undergoes a process known as hydrogenation, which makes it more solid at room temperature
and more chemically stable. PHOs have been widely used due to their processing and stability
performance and their ability to stimulate the senses (through their taste, odour, colour and texture).
Through the Nestlé Policy on Trans Fat, we committed to removing trans fats originating from PHOs
from our portfolio by the end of 2016. Working with suppliers, we have been able to renovate our
products and, from 1 January 2017, more than 99.8% of the fats and oils that Nestlé will purchase in
2017 will not contain trans fats originating from PHOs.
Increase vegetables, fibre-rich grains, pulses, nuts and seeds in our foods and beverages
Balanced diets make space for ingredients such as vegetables, grains, pulses, nuts and seeds, as
they are excellent sources of fibre, vitamins, minerals and other essential nutrients. Yet recent
research indicates that these nutrient-dense foods are often lacking in the daily food choices of both
children and adults.
We are committed to encouraging their consumption. By adding more whole grains through our
foods and beverages, providing relevant nutrition guidance on-pack and online where relevant, and
promoting healthy home cooking, we have been offering solutions that help families achieve whole
grain recommendations.
More whole grain than any other Through Cereal Partners Worldwide, our joint venture with General Mills, we have set whole grain
ingredient in any serving of
children’s or teenagers’ breakfast requirements for our breakfast cereal brands. All those carrying the ‘Whole Grain Tick’ contain at
cereals (%) least 8 g of whole grain per serving and display a green banner for easy identification.
2016 93 Beyond that, we committed to ensuring that our cereals popular with children and teenagers
2015 85 contain more whole grain than any other ingredient, and we have been applying a more stringent
2014 95 classification to measure our progress since 2015. At the end of 2016, 93% of our cereals for children
*
eduction compared to 2014 due to the
R and teenagers had achieved this new, higher standard.
adoption in 2015 of a more stringent tracking
methodology for whole grains. Moving forward, we are committed to making all of our cereals a source of fibre (3 g of fibre per
100 g), with as much fibre as possible coming from whole grain. While progressing towards this
goal, we continue to ensure that any product reformulation does not adversely affect consumer
preference through changes to texture, taste or shelf life.
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Consumers increasingly seek reassurance about the composition of the food they buy, and new health
trends have reinforced the demand for transparency, authenticity and higher quality ingredients.
To meet these rising expectations, we have been transforming our foods and beverages through our
‘Kitchen Cupboard’ approach. This focuses on using familiar and recognisable natural ingredients
such as vegetables, spices, herbs and flours. Kitchen Cupboard also seeks to simplify ingredient
lists, increase the vegetable and whole grain content, and reduce the salt and sugar in our foods
and beverages.
We are complementing this work by accelerating the removal of artificial additives, flavours and
colours, and by providing transparent, easy-to-read information about their use.
Micronutrient fortification
Our objective in 2016
By 2016 – Reach 200 billion micronutrient-fortified servings of foods and beverages annually worldwide, helping to
address global micronutrient deficiencies with a special focus on children and women of childbearing age.
An estimated 2 billion people – over 30% of the world’s population – suffer from deficiencies in
essential vitamins and minerals, especially the ‘Big 4’: iron, iodine, vitamin A and zinc. Micronutrient
deficiencies disproportionately affect infants, young children and women, preventing them from
achieving their full potential in life. The consequences of this can be devastating, leading to mental
impairment, poor health, low productivity and, in severe cases, death. Even mild to moderate
deficiencies can affect a person’s wellbeing and development.
Ideally, these nutrients should come from a balanced, varied diet but this is not always possible,
particularly in developing countries. We improve the nutrition status of people at risk by adding
relevant micronutrients to foods and beverages consumed regularly by vulnerable populations.
In 2016, we provided 207 billion servings of micronutrient-fortified servings of foods and beverages
around the world, exceeding our target of 200 billion servings.
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Micronutrient deficiency
Why do • Production of red blood cells • Healthy metabolism • Healthy immune system • Healthy immune system
to carry oxygen to organs, • Healthy body weight • Growth and development • Maintaining eye health
we need it? muscles and tissues • Bone and brain development • Growth and development
0
2
What • Tiredness and lack of energy • During pregnancy: stillbirth, • Stunted growth in childhood • Impaired vision and
• Dizziness and shortness miscarriage and congenital • Skin disorders night blindness
happens of breath abnormalities • Poor wound healing • More prone to respiratory
if we • Heart palpitations • In children: reduced cognitive • Hair loss and digestive infections
don’t get • Delayed growth in infants development • Infections • Increased severity of childhood
• In adults: reduced mental diseases (e.g. measles)
enough? function, energy levels • Scarring of corneas
and productivity and blindness
Who is • Infants and children • Pregnant women • Pregnant women • Children in low-income
• Pregnant women • Women who breastfeed countries
most •P eople who live in regions • Pregnant women in
at risk? with iodine-deficient soils low-income countries
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We fortify foods and beverages such as condiments, children’s milks and cereals to provide
additional nourishment for vulnerable groups such as school-age children and expectant mothers.
These products are all effective carriers for micronutrient fortification because they are consumed
widely and frequently, building on existing eating habits. We focus our efforts on regions that face
some of the largest burden of micronutrient deficiencies such as Africa and South East Asia.
Of the 207 billion servings provided in 2016, 121 billion were fortified with iron (an annual increase of
23%), 113 billion with iodine (an 8% increase), 27 billion with zinc and 42 billion with vitamin A.
Products can be fortified with one or several micronutrients.
83% For example, the popularity and market reach of our Maggi product range give us a solid platform for
helping tackle micronutrient deficiencies at scale. Almost 103 billion individual servings of Maggi
of our Popularly Positioned Products
soups, condiments, seasonings and noodles were fortified in 2016, of which 59 billion were fortified
(PPPs) for lower-income consumers were
fortified with at least one of the ‘Big 4’ with iron.
As reported last year, the burden of iron-deficiency anaemia in the population of Côte d’Ivoire was
assessed through a model based on the principles of the global burden of disease. The result
showed that micronutrient-fortified bouillon cubes, the roll-out of which began in 2013, are an
effective way of reducing malnutrition (see below).
The WHO claims that iron deficiency is the biggest nutritional A separate analysis of India’s National Family Health Survey
risk factor in India, while the Indian National Family Health showed that, with only 16% of infants receiving fortified
Survey (published in 2007 using data collected in 2005–2006) complimentary food, approximately 21 million more infants
indicates that 80% of pre-school children (aged 6–23 months) could benefit from it, based on the number of births in 2016 and
are anaemic, mainly due to iron deficiency. Nestlé India fortifies the level of penetration of fortified infant cereals. (This figure is
foods that can become part of an infant’s diet, complementing a weighted average based on the number of breastfed children
breast milk after the critical first six months. This is when receiving fortified complementary food and the number of
iron-fortified complementary feeding can reduce the risks non-breastfed children receiving fortified complementary food
associated with iron deficiency. as included in the INFHS.) Recent evaluations suggest that
fortified infant cereals have a positive public health and
The Winterthur Institute of Health Economics, mandated by
economic impact, with research from Nestlé estimating they
the Nestlé Research Center, calculated the public health
have already reduced the annual burden of iron deficiency
burden of iron deficiency anaemia among infants aged
anaemia by up to USD 1.4 billion (CHF 1.4 billion) and
6 months to 59 months. The result is striking: due to untreated
0.6 million DALYs.
anaemia, India loses almost USD 24 billion (CHF 23.6 billion) a
year (1.3% of GDP) and sacrifices 8.3 million DALYs (Disability
Adjusted Life Years); one DALY is the equivalent of one lost
year of ‘healthy’ life.
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Our size and reach give us the potential to deliver more nutrition to more people. Through our
engagement in support of biofortification, we use and promote varieties of crops that are naturally
rich in micronutrients. Beyond their use in Nestlé products, these crops are intended for
populations, particularly in developing countries, that conventional fortification (with nutrients
added during food processing) may not be able to reach. However, biofortification is a lengthy
process that involves breeding and selecting enriched crop varieties, and engaging with distribution
partners and farmers. Establishing biofortified crops in local markets can take a decade or two.
In the past few years, we have worked with other society stakeholders to develop supply chains for
biofortified crops, and we have started using these materials in some of our recipes. The availability
of biofortified crops benefits rural farming communities, because these foods bring into their diets a
steady supply of micronutrients with no risk of excess or overdosing and in a sustainable way.
Since 2003 HarvestPlus, a global research programme bridging agriculture and nutrition, has played
an important role in this complex process. In support of this initiative, we are working with
agricultural research institutes to establish supply chains for biofortified crops in several countries.
The goal is to replace common varieties of staple crops with nutrient-rich alternatives, improving
access to nutrition almost by default.
“ After more than a decade of rigorous research into the proof of concept of biofortification,
HarvestPlus has achieved global recognition for this scalable, cost-effective innovation. Thanks
to our donors and partners around the world, we have proved it’s possible to grow nutrient-rich
varieties of everyday food crops using conventional breeding, and improve the lives of millions of
people in rural communities. Our goal is to work with partners to develop inclusive, sustainable
supply chains and reach one billion people with biofortified food by 2030.”
Bev Postma, CEO, HarvestPlus
In Nigeria, we use a mix of pro-vitamin A biofortified maize and normal maize. While local
production of the new variety was very small in 2015, we are working with farmers and intermediary
suppliers to increase the harvest, and we reserved more than 1000 tonnes of grain in 2016 for use in
our branded cereal porridge. In 2017, with support from HarvestPlus, we plan to use demonstration
plots to encourage more farmers to adopt biofortified seeds. We will also continue buying
biofortified maize for use in our commercial products.
Elsewhere:
• Our R&D Centre in Abidjan, Côte d’Ivoire, explored opportunities in cassava and rice, leading
to biofortified rice seeds being distributed to farmers in Madagascar;
• We participated in an academic study focused on the agronomic biofortification of wheat,
rice and maize with iodine; grains are being analysed to understand their behaviour in
commercial recipes, and a second phase of trials is under way in Turkey and India;
• With EMBRAPA, the Brazilian institute of agricultural research, we have been testing
biofortified crops in our products in Brazil; and
Read more about our commitment
• We are exploring the availability of zinc-biofortified wheat in India, in collaboration
to sustainable agriculture.
with HarvestPlus.
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Nestlé Quality • Sets out the basic principles for managing food safety and 94% of our sites are certified
Management product quality. against NQMS.
System (NQMS) • Allocates responsibilities for manufacturing practices, hazard
analysis and traceability throughout the value chain.
Nestlé Food Safety 96% of our manufacturing and
Management • Drives continuous improvement by eliminating defects and waste. R&D sites are certified against
System (NFSMS) • Certified by independent third parties. FSSC 22000/ISO 22000
standards.
GLOBE Quality • Ensures manufactured products meet consumer requirements. Implemented for 96% of our
Monitoring • Identifies and controls processes that impact consumer, food portfolio by the end of 2016.
Scheme (QMS) safety and regulatory requirements.
• Supports our manufacturing excellence strategy of zero waste
through ‘right first time’ approach.
Nestlé Quality • Quality support and laboratory services to help markets 24 Nestlé Quality Assurance
Assurance Centres and businesses comply with Quality Policy and meet food Centres are ISO 17025
(NQACs) safety objectives. accredited.
• Covers food safety and quality expertise, verification, certification
audits and training, and analysis of raw materials, packaging
and products.
• Encompasses diagnosis and resolution of quality gaps;
competence building in food safety and compliance;
guidance on implementing standards; capacity-building with
external stakeholders.
• Working with Nestlé Research Center on advanced technologies
that screen raw food materials.
Quality • Each factory has an annual quality compliance assessment 95.2% of sites comply with
Compliance base level for quality
Verification compliance assessment.
Early warning • Global system to identify, evaluate and anticipate emerging risks
system (EWS) (e.g. counterfeit products, adulteration of ingredients).
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More than Through the implementation of these and other associated systems, we have continued to improve
180 million our performance, and have reduced the number of complaints and incidents. In 2016, Nestlé
globally achieved a 17% reduction in consumer complaints, primarily related to a reduction in
samples tested every year, service-related complaints in the Nestlé Waters business. We continue to improve the quality of our
to ensure product quality
machines in our coffee businesses, resulting in a significant improvement in machine return rates
with a less than 1.5% return rate for the majority of machines launched after 2014. Additionally,
‘major incidents’ (product recalls or large withdrawals), already low in occurrence, have been
reduced by 3%.
Further improvements will become incrementally more challenging to achieve over time, not least
because our business and our product portfolio are expanding. To help ensure we continue to meet
the highest standards, we have invested CHF 30 million in the Nestlé Quality Assurance Centre
Visit our website for more (NQAC) in Dublin, Ohio, United States. This investment has doubled the size of NQAC Dublin,
information about food safety.
making it our largest and most sophisticated testing facility anywhere in the world.
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498 But it’s not just those who work in quality and food safety functions we need to reach; everyone in
our business has a role to play in ensuring our products and services meet the highest levels of
leaders further trained on quality and safety. With this in mind, we are committing resources to training, awareness and
responsibilities for quality, across all
operations and R&D functions engagement so that all Nestlé employees display a quality mindset at all times.
We have also incorporated our Culture of Quality Survey, which previously reached around 62 000
employees, into our company-wide ‘Nestlé and I’ Survey. This will help drive quality throughout
our business.
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Apply and explain nutrition information on packs, at point of sale and online
We believe in empowering people to make informed choices about what they consume. We help by
providing clear information about ingredients, nutritional benefits, health information and portion
size on all our packaging. This information must be truthful, meaningful, transparent and
scientifically substantiated, and cannot mislead.
We strive to ensure that our labelling is fully accurate, and follows the principles outlined by the
Food and Agriculture Association’s Codex Alimentarius. It also declares the absence, removal or
presence of a nutrient, ingredient or substance that an individual might wish to avoid, such as sugar
or saturated fats.
By 2016 – Introduce GDA-based labelling, based on children’s reference values, to all products designed for children,
where regulations allow, to help parents make better nutritional choices for children.
By 2016 – Make information more accessible by providing further product information and nutrition advice on-pack, via
Quick Response (QR) codes for smartphones.
Labels that use GDAs detail the nutritional composition of a typical serving of food or beverage, with
the reference daily guidelines for calories, sugars, fats and/or other nutrients.
We have accelerated the implementation of GDA information over the last two years, particularly in
Asia and Africa, where reach has increased from around 60% of relevant products to 96%. Today, in
countries where labelling regulations allow it, around 92% of all relevant foods and beverages, and
almost 96% of children’s products, carry on-pack GDA information.
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Due to differing regulations and labelling protocols around the world, not all countries allow GDA-
based labels on packs. Nonetheless, we remain committed to providing GDA percentages on all
packaging wherever possible and tailor the information in each market to make it as relevant, visible
and accessible as possible.
Brands 56 78 90
Countries 46 50 50
With our Nestlé Nutritional Compass®, people can learn more about what they consume through
our products. The compass presents a variety of information including at least the nutritional
composition of each product, contact details for more information and, whenever possible, lifestyle
and nutrition tips. The Nestlé Nutritional Compass® was displayed on 96.4% of our foods and
beverages at the end of 2016.
To meet the increasing consumer demand for product information, we have expanded the use of
Quick Response (QR) codes displayed within the Nestlé Nutritional Compass®. QR codes give
individuals with smartphones easy access to online information, enabling them to go ‘beyond the
label’ and learn more about a brand’s or product’s nutritional contributions.
We also provide ‘beyond the label’ information about social or community aspects or reductions in
environmental impacts associated with the production and distribution of our products or the
sourcing of the ingredients they contain.
Portion Guidance
Our commitment
Around the world, expanding portion sizes contribute to imbalanced eating habits and lead to adverse
health outcomes. We believe we share the responsibility for guiding consumers to pursue a healthy
diet when it comes to consumption quantity, frequency and quality, and we encourage age-
appropriate portion sizes through our voluntary Nestlé Portion Guidance initiative. This helps
individuals and families understand the nutritional value of our foods and beverages, and redefine
their portion habits, particularly for energy-dense foods and beverages. Our guidance is based on
Indicates commitments aimed at
national food guides and recommendations from internationally recognised bodies such as the WHO,
infants and children the US Institute of Medicine and other independent bodies.
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Nestlé Portion Guidance is made available in a variety of ways, including product form, pack design,
website content illustrations and, when possible, a serving device or dispensing machine. We also
continue to make our recipe sites more accessible, searchable and user friendly, and integrate
age-appropriate portion information.
By the end of 2016, we featured Portion Guidance on 66.7% of our foods and beverages for children
and families. On products that have a more significant impact on the overall diet of children, such as
recurring and more indulgent choices, 80.5% provided Portion Guidance.
Studies conclude that As part of our integrated approach to promoting healthier choices, we tailor our portion sizes
portion management and information to suit specific cultural habits. This often requires redesigned packaging, with
Portion Guidance considered alongside other elements such as brand messaging and local
strategies should be regulatory information.
part of multi-pronged,
We also evaluate the relevance and awareness of our messaging, and any efforts made by consumers
multi-sector efforts to to follow guidance on portions. To understand consumer receptiveness to portion guidance, we
improve health. Today’s undertook research among mothers in Brazil, the United States, the UK, India and Germany.
convening is therefore a Naturally, changing social norms takes time and effort, but we are pleased with the progress we are
welcome step towards making against our commitment to offer guidance on portions to individuals and families. We know
making it work for not to draw generalisations, as perceptions vary with age, culture, lifestyle and even type of product,
consumers.” but we remain committed to continuously engaging with parents, packaging experts and public
health researchers to learn – and do – more.
Anna Maria Corazza Bild,
MEP and host of ‘Healthier Portions for
a Healthier Diet’ convening Fuelling the discussion, inspiring action
On 16 March 2016, Nestlé helped bring together a group of 30 leading scientists, policy-makers,
health practitioners and consumer advocates at the European Parliament in Brussels to discuss why
portion size matters and explore ways to encourage healthier consumption habits.
Participants at the ‘Healthier Portions for a Healthier Diet’ convening debated the state of scientific
research, possible public health implications and potential stakeholder actions, and the impact of
such actions on people’s habits. Our commitment to providing portion guidance on foods and
beverages for children and families was also presented during the event.
While stakeholders expressed a variety of views on how best to address inappropriate portion
habits, several related and common themes emerged. These included: the contribution of oversized
portions to obesity and NCDs; the importance of the proportion of foods and nutrients within a meal
or snack, and the frequency of consumption; the importance of engaging with society at large; and
the complementary role played by policy and regulation interventions.
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Responsible marketing
Sustainable Development Goals
We have a responsibility to promote our foods and beverages truthfully and
reliably. In doing so, we are guided by the Nestlé Consumer Communication
We identified the following goals
where our work adds value: Principles, which set the highest standards for all our marketing and
communication to consumers.
We support healthy, active lifestyles and balanced diets, and our advertising states clearly that we
will not use extremely thin or obese people as role models when doing so. Our commitment to avoid
misleading information about our foods and beverages means we will not oversell potential benefits,
such as status or popularity, physical growth, enhanced strength or ability.
We aim to lead the industry, reporting transparently on our responsible marketing of foods and
beverages designed for consumption by children, including breast-milk substitutes (BMS).
Support breastfeeding and protect it by continuing to implement an industry-leading policy to market breast-milk
substitutes responsibly
Support breastfeeding
Currently, we have We believe breast milk is the ideal nutrition for infants. That’s why we promote the WHO’s
302 recommendation to exclusively breastfeed infants for the first six months of life, followed by the
introduction of adequate nutritious complementary foods, along with sustained breastfeeding up
breastfeeding rooms across to two years and beyond.
our global working facilities
We also seek to support breastfeeding among our employees by promoting a conducive
environment, as reflected in our global Maternity Protection Policy. The policy, based on the
ILO Maternity Protection Convention, is one of the most progressive programmes of its kind in the
industry, and establishes minimum standards that must be implemented at Nestlé workplaces
across the world by 2018.
The policy applies to all primary caregivers of a newborn, including male employees and those who
adopt children. It includes 14 weeks’ paid maternity leave, which can be extended up to six months,
Read more about our parental employment protection, flexible working arrangements and access to breastfeeding rooms during
support initiatives for employees.
working hours in head offices and sites with more than 50 female employees.
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Every August, World Breastfeeding Week is celebrated in more programmes, Nestlé intranet websites and Nestle.com, and
than 170 countries to encourage breastfeeding and improve the also our communications with healthcare professionals.
health of babies around the world.
In 2016, we reached more than 55 million people through
In 2016, activities focused on informing people about how activities such as our first global Superbabies campaign to
breastfeeding plays an important role in achieving the new support breastfeeding. Our Superbabies videos have been
United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). viewed more than 21 million times.
We have leveraged digital and social media, press and TV
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We also include clauses in formal agreements and contracts, as well as develop guidelines and
dispense regular training, to help distributors and retailers comply with our policy and any national
legislations implementing the WHO Code. We take disciplinary measures against Nestlé personnel
and terminate contracts with customers who deliberately violate our policy or national legislation
implementing the WHO Code.
Our compliance is verified through:
• Routine internal monitoring;
• Internal audits, undertaken in 37 different countries by our corporate auditors in 2016;
• External verifications by Bureau Veritas (assurance statements also available online) conducted in
Colombia, Uganda and Saudi Arabia in 2016, and one by PricewaterhouseCoopers; and
• The verification processes used for inclusion on rankings and indices (see below).
We publish an annual report, which summarises the results of our compliance record over the year
and actions taken to remedy any contravention found (available online).
We face two major challenges in ensuring that all Nestlé’s infant nutrition products are marketed
responsibly: the importation of products commercialised in other countries under different
legislation by independent businesses, and the multiplication of independent e-retailers. While we
do our best to encourage the responsible marketing of our BMS throughout the value chain,
anti-trust and commercial laws limit our influence over how BMS is sold by independent parties with
whom we do not have a commercial relationship. This is why we encourage the close collaboration
between the authorities, civil society and the private sector to monitor and ensure that breast-milk
substitutes are marketed responsibly.
FTSE4Good and ATNITM third-party validation
We are proud to have been the first BMS manufacturer included in the FTSE4Good Responsible
Investment Index and to have consistently met its rigorous criteria for the responsible marketing of
BMS since 2011. We congratulate Danone for following Nestlé’s lead, and encourage other BMS
manufacturers to seek inclusion in the FTSE4Good Index.
Nestlé topped the BMS sub-index of the 2016 Global Access to Nutrition Index (ATNI)™, which
assessed the BMS marketing policies and practices of the world’s six leading manufacturers. We also
topped the two sub-categories, undernutrition and general nutrition, and ranked second overall out of
22 global food and beverage manufacturers that were benchmarked on their nutrition-related
commitments, practices and performance.
ATNI™ also assessed Nestlé’s BMS marketing practices in India and reported in December 2016:
“With respect to BMS marketing, Nestlé India demonstrated a high level of compliance with the
Indian IMS Act and the Code. Nestlé India, like Nestlé S.A., is an industry leader with respect to
committing to provide facilities that support breastfeeding mothers at work.”
Good governance
Our Corporate WHO Code Compliance Committee, which includes three Executive Board
members, oversees compliance with our Policy, national legislations implementing the WHO Code
and the FTSE4Good verification criteria. In addition, all operations in higher-risk countries have
established WHO Code Compliance Committees that meet regularly to oversee compliance at a
country level.
Our monitoring is complemented by a range of internal and external grievance mechanisms:
• Our WHO Code Ombudsperson system allows employees to report concerns about infant food
marketing practices anonymously and confidentially; and
• Our ‘Tell us’ system enables external stakeholders to report potential violations online or by
toll-free phone line.
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Transparency
We believe we can continue to build trust by being open and honest, so we make the following
information publicly available:
• Our external reports of compliance with the Nestlé Policy on the WHO Code and national
legislations implementing the WHO Code;
• Our position statements on maternal, infant and young child nutrition; and
• As part of our comprehensive Q&A section, we address questions on why Nestlé supports
breastfeeding and the application of the WHO Code.
When we receive formal correspondence expressing concerns about our practices, we publish the
response on our website.
Engaging constructively with stakeholders
We encourage active and constructive engagement with stakeholders, including governments,
non-governmental organisations (NGOs), industry and civil society organisations, to promote
responsible conduct and establish accepted standards for assessing the marketing of BMS. When
doing so, we follow the Nestlé Policy on transparent interaction with authorities and organisations.
We are also a member of a number of national and regional industry associations dedicated to
specialised nutrition in the countries where we operate. Some of these associations are members of
the International Special Dietary Foods Industries (ISDI), which promotes high standards in the
production and trade of special dietary foods. We have been active in the ISDI since its foundation.
Continuous improvement
In 2016, we focused on improvement in the following areas:
• Internal grievance mechanism: we scaled up our WHO Code Ombudsperson system, which is
now a global mechanism covering all Nestlé Group employees (see ‘Good governance’, above);
and
• Internal audit process: we reinforced our internal audit mechanisms by issuing detailed
guidelines to our corporate auditors on how to assess compliance with our policy and national
legislations implementing the WHO Code by conducting more comprehensive interviews with
healthcare professionals (see ‘Compliance’, above).
Market to children only choices that help them achieve a nutritious diet
Our objectives
By 2017 – In support of the implementation of the Nestlé Policy on Marketing Communication to Children, we will roll out
targeted training for our marketing teams globally.
By 2017 – Promote to children only choices that are core to a nutritious diet.
Nestlé has long been a firm proponent of responsible marketing to children (see our Communication
Principles). We are a founding member of the International Food & Beverage Alliance (IFBA) and
are committed to complying with its Global Policy on Advertising and Marketing Communications
to Children.
Nestlé is also a signatory to voluntary industry Pledges, including one across the European Union
(the EU Pledge), to change the way leading food and beverage companies advertise to children. This
is an industry response to calls made by the EU institutions for the food industry to use commercial
communications that support parents in making the right diet and lifestyle choices for their children.
A third-party monitoring system ensures that children are not targeted by non-compliant
communications from member companies.
• In total, 217 142 Nestlé television spots were analysed by Accenture in 2016 as part of this
third-party auditing process, and our overall compliance rate was 98.3%.
• In addition, 18 Nestlé websites were reviewed by the European Advertising Standards Alliance
(EASA), and 100% were compliant with the EU Pledge commitment.
• EASA also carried out a pilot to assess the compliance of company-owned mobile applications
(apps). A total of 20 mobile applications were reviewed. One Nestlé app was reviewed and found
to be potentially in breach of the EU Pledge.
Indicates commitments aimed at The 2016 monitoring results are available to download on the EU Pledge website.
infants and children
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Shifting the marketing target for our children’s ice cream brands
Over the years, we have put considerable effort into reformulating As well as continuing to keep children’s ice cream below
our children’s ice cream portfolio, to ensure our products meet 110 calories per 100 g and working towards removing artificial
the EU Pledge criteria of not exceeding 110 calories per 100 g. colours and flavours from our portfolio, we will continue to
A dedicated ‘Quality for kids’ label guides parents to this healthier improve the nutritional, quality and taste profile by increasing
choice and, by the end of 2017, we will evolve our communication the milk and fruit content.
to specifically target parents only. We will not market ice cream
directly to children from 31 December 2017.
Leverage our marketing efforts to promote healthy cooking, eating and lifestyles
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To meet the growing demand for programmes that teach teens, including those from orphanages, children with
Russian schoolchildren about good nutrition and encourage disabilities, and young adolescent mothers who are
healthy lifestyles, our ‘Cooking Together’ classes have been experiencing hardship. During each session, around 20
designed to ensure children get the opportunity to practise children learn the principles of healthy nutrition from Nestlé
cooking healthy meals. volunteers, and are taught how to cook simple, healthy meals
with the support of Nestlé Russia professional chefs.
Held at a well-equipped culinary studio at Nestlé’s head office
in Moscow, the classes welcome disadvantaged children and
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Conception
United for Healthier Kids® Nestlé Start Healthy Stay Healthy
Dedicated to inspiring parents and working with Dedicated to educating parents on the importance of nutrition in the
Birth
like-minded partners to promote healthy habits in first 1 000 days of life, from conception to a child’s second birthday.
children below 12 years of age.
1 year
2 years
4 years
5 years
6 years
Sports and activities Neighbourhood Nestlé Healthy Kids Global Programme
Dedicated to empowering teachers and children with nutrition
7 years
education and promoting healthy lifestyles in the school
environment through authorities and expert groups.
8 years
9 years
11 years
12 years
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In a context where childhood malnutrition remains a major public health concern, we aim to foster
behaviours in children and families that contribute to building a healthier environment.
Our efforts touch a range of target audiences and allow Nestlé to reach children and families where
their needs are greatest and where we can offer a potential positive impact on health.
Three key areas of focus include early childhood, school nutrition and inspiring parents.
We believe this multi-faceted approach will support public health objectives effectively and give
children and families a strong foundation that enables healthier and happier lives.
Good nutrition and feeding practices during the first 1000 days of life lay the foundation for lifelong
health and wellbeing. It is therefore important for mothers to establish healthy eating habits for
themselves during pregnancy and breastfeeding, and for their children.
Our global education programme for parents and caregivers, Nestlé Start Healthy Stay Healthy, is
designed to support individuals caring for a newborn during this critical time. The engaging
e-learning course, created by nutrition scientists and based on the latest scientific findings and
public health data, helps mothers understand what to feed, how to feed and why the first 1000 days
are crucial to their baby’s future health. It also provides doctors with practical tools and support for
use in face-to-face sessions with parents.
In line with the WHO’s recommendation, the programme actively promotes exclusive breastfeeding
during the first six months of life, followed by the introduction of nutritious foods that complement
sustained breastfeeding for up to two years and beyond.
At the end of 2016, Nestlé Start Healthy Stay Healthy was live in more than 40 markets, and had
reached 55 million people through media. Although a global programme, Nestlé Start Healthy Stay
Healthy is customised to support local guidelines, with articles, videos and infographics tailored for
use across national websites from Australia to India.
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8.3 million
children reached worldwide
through the Nestlé Healthy Kids
Programme
84
countries in which the Nestlé 3
Healthy Kids Programme is active
311 1
active partnerships in the Nestlé
Healthy Kids Programme
Each October, chefs around the world celebrate International eating among children. In 2016, under the theme ‘Art on a Plate’,
Chefs Day, with the support of Nestlé Professional. Organised more than 2000 chefs joined an estimated 19 000 children in
by the World Association of Chefs Societies (Worldchefs), the 54 countries via Nestlé Healthy Kids cooking workshops.
activity sees chefs engage with their local communities,
providing exposure to their profession and promoting healthy Watch a short video about International Chefs Day.
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In the Middle East, United for Healthier Kids® is exploring new ‘Tummyfish’ was launched
ways of promoting healthier habits. Children in the region often in partnership with a leading
choose sugar-sweetened beverages over water as their primary publishing house and an
hydration choice. international hotel chain,
and is endorsed by the local
Using gamification and the power of storytelling, ‘Tummyfish’ is a
health authority.
behaviour change tool that encourages children to choose water
over sugary drinks on more occasions during the day. Using a
storybook, parents introduce ‘Tummyfish’ to their children, who
then care for their own ‘Tummyfish’ through an app.
We all need to drink water to function properly. About 20–30% of the water we consume comes
from food, and the rest is obtained through what we drink. Hydration levels vary with physical
activity, health, ambient temperature, age and gender, and even mild levels of dehydration can
affect how we perform mentally and physically. As well as thirst, dehydration can result in
headaches, tiredness and a decrease in alertness, concentration, memory and physical ability.
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We encourage debate between public and private partners on the topic of healthy hydration. For
example, Nestlé Waters North America supports the ‘Drink Up’ initiative, of which Michelle Obama
is the honorary chair. ‘Drink Up’ is run by the Partnership for a Healthier America, which works with
the private sector to urge Americans to choose water – still or sparkling, tap or bottled. Meanwhile,
the national ‘I Choose Water’ campaign, developed by the Polish Dietetics Association and
gathering interested parties such as Nestlé Waters Poland, has attracted new partners in 2016.
Healthy hydration is also promoted as a healthy habit through the Nestlé Healthy Kids Global
Programme and United for Healthier Kids®.
The findings of our own research have shaped our approach to education on healthy hydration.
A recent study shows a high proportion of Lebanese children failing to meet total water intake
recommendations, and calls for culturally relevant interventions to establish healthy consumption
patterns early in life. These results are similar to those previously observed in the United States,
Mexico and France.
Consumption of sugar is excessive for a large proportion of These included a recycling workshop and Reloj de la Hidratación
Mexican people, linked to high levels of sugar-sweetened drinks (Hydration Clock), where they had to identify the best times in
on an everyday basis. Against this backdrop, Nestlé Waters the day to drink water. Thousands of participants also signed a
Mexico teamed up with the country’s Federal Ministry of Health wall, marking their commitment to Family Hydration.
to create a National Family Hydration Programme, promoting
Other initiatives included a media tour in five major cities to
water as the drink of choice for healthy hydration among
share the healthy hydration message, and Hydration Brigade
Mexican families.
roadshows, which organised conferences with Health Sciences
The initiative was launched in July 2016 with a Family Hydration students at the country’s leading universities.
Day at Chapultepec, a park in Mexico City. The event attracted
Discussions to deploy similar initiatives in other countries
more than 40 000 people, who enjoyed a range of activities
are ongoing.
while learning about healthy hydration with Nestlé Pure Life.
Grocery stores use basic layout principles to create a general flow, keeping customers moving
through the aisles and making purchases. Food and beverage self-serve outlets do the same. Our
aim is to work with partners to ensure more of these purchase opportunities feature healthier diets
and lifestyles.
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Through long-term collaborations with strategic retail and food service partners, we work at
defining out-of-home programmes to fit their strategies and environments, while continuously
helping individuals and families make healthier choices. Such programmes may include placing
healthier choices at the checkout or on food service menus, messages to encourage healthier
shopping baskets in store and online, skin protection and good sleeping habits, in addition to
responsible marketing communications directed at parents and caregivers. These actions will be
tailored to suit local communities and cultures.
We will also develop a methodology that can be scaled up to engage further partnerships and actions.
168 Through our Nestlé Professional business, we work with chefs and food service operators – the
people who directly influence the nutritional content of the food served in restaurants, hospitals,
beverages sold every second schools and public institutions.
by Nestlé Professional
Based on research conducted at our culinary centres in the United States, Germany, China and
Singapore, Nestlé Professional creates foods and beverages in nine dedicated manufacturing
facilities. Here also, we continue to renovate foods and beverages to lower their salt, sugar and
saturated fat content, remove trans fats and introduce more essential nutrients.
We also provide educational materials and services to support food service professionals in
Read more about Nestlé improving the nutritional content of their food. We run articles in industry magazine Worldchefs,
Professional’s support for produce online videos and publish our own dedicated magazine, Nutripro, which contains cooking
International Chefs Day.
tips and advice for chefs.
The Blue Book is a new publication designed to help Nestlé encouraged to become volunteer trainers on the nutritional
Waters’ employees better understand the important role of value of water and the importance of healthy hydration. A
healthy hydration. Every employee worldwide will have a copy toolkit has been developed to help volunteers cascade the
so that they can learn more and share their knowledge with health-promoting messages. The programme, already running
family and friends. in North America and Italy, aims to spread awareness among
both internal and external audiences.
The Blue Book also helps engage Nestlé Waters people in the
Blue Book Ambassadors programme. Employees are
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A science-based approach
Through our research and associated network, we are working to discover
science-based nutritional solutions that can reduce and manage disease, or
improve care for the young and the elderly. By bridging the gap between
nutrition and pharmaceutical sciences, we are well placed to develop
innovative, personalised and effective therapeutic approaches.
Leading the food and beverage industry in R&D capabilities, we have 40 centres worldwide and
more than 5000 employees. Our two key research centres – the Nestlé Research Center (NRC) and
the Nestlé Institute of Health Sciences (NIHS) – act as focal points.
Our research activities allow us to develop foods and beverages that address specific health needs
and lifestyle issues, and we share this understanding through our research network.
Our R&D network drives innovation and supports the constant renovation of our food and beverage
portfolio. Our researchers are also exploring the role of nutrition to help people maintain or improve
their health, and investigating how we can help people look after their health, including their skin.
Visit our website for more We continue to build our research and development capabilities, forging key partnerships and
information on our R&D network.
looking to develop the nutritional therapies of the future.
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geographical regions.
Results provide useful
diet and behaviour Our research-led approach to children’s nutrition: FITS and KNHS
information at the Our objective in 2016
market level, and a
By 2016 – Launch large-scale research projects in at least 10 countries, including the United States, Mexico, China and
broad perspective on Russia, to expand understanding of children’s nutrition and inform our own product and service development.
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2
1
Such findings are already influencing the foods and beverages we are developing to tackle
nutritional gaps. For example, to address toddler diets lacking in vegetables and whole grains,
Lil’ Pastas contain half a serving of vegetables ‘hidden’ in the wholegrain pasta dough and in the
filling, while Lil’ Beanies use navy beans in a snack for toddlers whose diets lack vegetables, fibre
and vitamin E. They contain 1 g of fibre, 2 g of protein (9% of a toddler’s recommended daily intake)
and 10% of the recommended amount of vitamin E, which comes naturally from sunflower oil.
Neither contain artificial colours, flavours or preservatives.
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As we learn more, we intend to share more with healthcare professionals and other groups who
share a common interest in improving the lives of children and families.
Having looked at eating occasions and energy intake of children supported by a guide that gives nutrition and lifestyle
aged 2–13, findings from local FITS and KNHS research have recommendations for children and adolescents.
been applied to United for Healthier Kids® platforms in Mexico.
Nestlé Brazil has also integrated KNHS findings into its United
Snacking was identified as a potential area for diet improvement,
for Healthier Kids® efforts. Insights from a pilot in São Paulo
as sweets are the second-highest percentage of calories per
suggest that more than 50% of overweight kids spend too much
capita. These findings have underscored Nestlé Mexico’s
time being sedentary. The Brazil team is therefore focusing on
decision to pursue the United for Healthier Kids® behaviours of
the United for Healthier Kids® behaviour ‘Move more, sit less’,
‘Manage portions’ and ‘Choose nutritious and varied options’.
using gamification to encourage behaviour change. As part of a
A portion plate was developed to help parents provide the right
Superheroes game, kids are sent on ‘healthy missions’, where
portion sizes and balance of food groups in their children’s
they can earn points for completing fun and healthy activities
meals. The tool was distributed among 50 000 families,
such as exercising and playing outside.
In one of the largest public–private partnerships of its kind, we are looking at the impact of nutrition
and lifestyle on maternal and infant health in collaboration with the EpiGen Global Research
Consortium (EpiGen).
The latest findings were presented at an international conference in Munich, Germany, in October
2016. The event ‘The Power of Programming’ brought together experts to discuss the impact of
early nutrition and lifestyle factors on obesity and related disorders later in life. Topics presented
from the EpiGen collaboration included:
• Associations between epigenetic changes at birth and disease risk factors in childhood;
• The impact of specific nutrients during pregnancy on maternal and infant metabolic health; and
• Associations between maternal feeding practices and children’s eating behaviours and
weight status.
The partnership has also led to articles appearing in a number of scientific publications and the
launch of the NiPPeR study in 2015. Through this study, mothers-to-be in Singapore, New Zealand
and the UK are helping us explore whether a specific combination of nutrients and probiotics, taken
before conception and during pregnancy, improves the health of mothers and their babies. By the
end of 2016, the NiPPeR study had recruited more than 1300 women (over 80% of target) with more
than 90 babies (over 17% of target).
Gestational diabetes mellitus (GDM) is a condition that affects To understand the economic burden of GDM, we are
millions of pregnant women worldwide, causing high blood conducting studies in China, Italy and Mexico, in cooperation
glucose levels during their last term. Evidence shows that this with Peking University (Beijing), Bocconi University (Milan) and
may lead to serious adverse health outcomes during pregnancy, the National Institute of Public Health (Cuernavaca)
delivery and the initial post-natal period for both mother respectively. We are analysing the difference in cost between a
and baby. normal pregnancy and one complicated by GDM, which incurs
additional medical expenses during and after pregnancy.
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There is much still to learn about the links between nutrition and cognitive health, and how nutrition
could help prevent the onset or slow the progression of conditions such as Alzheimer’s disease.
NIHS is involved in a number of collaborative studies and clinical trials into brain health, including:
• The PUFA clinical trial: a trial among older adults to evaluate the ability of a fish oil extract
(polyunsaturated fatty acids) to prevent vascular injury in the brain, a factor in the decline in
mental ability associated with ageing; and
• The MIND diet trial: involving 600 people aged at least 65. This is the largest diet-only
intervention for preventing age-related cognitive decline and neurodegeneration such as
Alzheimer’s disease.
We are also involved in three major clinical cohort studies:
• The Nutrition and Brain Aging Study (NBAS) is a partnership between the NIHS and Oregon
Health & Science University’s Layton Aging and AD Center. Involving 315 older subjects at risk of
dementia, the study uses blood profiling conducted by the NIHS to identify distinct nutritional
requirements to prevent Alzheimer’s disease and cognitive decline.
• ADAGE, funded by the EU Joint Program for Neurogenerative Disease, seeks to identify distinct
molecular, genetic and physiological factors that explain the evolution of cognitive ageing,
Alzheimer’s disease and neuropathology. Investigators from Italy, Sweden, Switzerland and the
UK will test how ‘omics’ technologies will help identify the molecular ‘signatures’ of the ageing
process, pointing towards new risk factors and relevant targets for preventing age-related
cognitive decline. NIHS will conduct several of these ‘omics’ studies, which aim to characterise
and quantify many different molecules (DNA, proteins, etc.) at a time. This information is used to
more completely characterise physiological states of how nutrition alters the balance between
health and disease.
• The Swiss Brain Aging Study, a collaboration with the CHUV Leenaards Memory Center in
Lausanne running until 2017, is the first within Nestlé to pilot the ‘multi-omics systems’ approach.
Using biomarker platforms including genomics and comprehensive nutrient profiling, we hope to
gain holistic insights that will lead to the development of nutritional interventions.
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For example, the NNI began broadening its audience to a wider array of frontline medical staff
through its first event for midwives, held in the Philippines in November 2015.
The NNI also fostered exchange on nutritional and health-related topics through four conferences
and four symposia in 2016, and held two major international workshops. In May 2016, the 87th NNI
workshop in Singapore focused on complementary feeding as a foundation for a healthy life, while
the 88th NNI workshop, held in Mexico in September, centred on the intestinal microbiome and its
role in health and disease.
The NNI Fellowship supports young clinicians, with a particular focus on those from the developing
world. An educational grant given in 2012–2015 to medical universities in Cape Town and
Stellenbosch helped educate African paediatricians in paediatric gastroenterology and nutrition,
while an investment in the Centre for Global Child Health in Toronto, Canada, is helping fund a new
online course on public health and nutrition.
“The NNI Fellowship allowed me to pursue training in Cape Town and to network with other
Fellows across Africa. This, together with the ESPGHAN Goes Africa Initiative, created a rich
resource of interconnected paediatricians who are free to share interesting and challenging cases
and learn from each other. The award opened my mind, and taught me to notice conditions that I
previously may not have identified. I see opportunities for improving the services offered, training
younger doctors and engaging in research. I am excited by the opportunities of growth in our
country and region, and look forward to contributing to this growth.”
Dr Waceke Nganga,
Paediatric Gastroenterologist, Aga Khan University Hospital, Nairobi, Kenya (and NNI Fellowship recipient)
Build biomedical science leading to health-promoting products, personalised nutrition and digital solutions
Personalised nutrition
Our objective towards 2020:
By 2020 – Develop digital nutrition profiling for calculating nutrient intakes, as well as for making recommendations for
nutritional balance, into a comprehensive tool to assist individuals and families to lead happier and healthier lives.
The data from sensors and devices in our daily lives, such as mobile phones, wearables and ‘smart’
homes, can help us understand our nutrition and activity, and guide us towards a healthier lifestyle.
207 Our long-term aim is to combine this increasingly connected technology with breakthroughs in
nutrition science, to provide people with greater ownership of their quality of life.
scientific manuscripts have
been published by NIHS since In one of NIHS’s most exciting areas of research, we have begun a collaboration with the Samsung
it was founded Strategy and Innovation Center (SSIC) to harness the combined power of nutrition science and
digital sensor technologies. Together, we are creating a new digital health platform that will provide
individuals and families with personalised recommendations around nutrition, lifestyle and fitness.
We aim to empower people to better manage their health and wellness using one simple connected
entity rather than multiple platforms and devices.
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Innovative therapies
Our objective towards 2020
By 2020 – Develop new interventional nutritional solutions driven by studies and diagnostic profiling. These programmes
will focus on key areas such as metabolism, gastrointestinal and brain health, healthy ageing, skin health and pets.
We want healthy nutrition to be accessible to everyone, regardless of age or health status, and offer
a range of nutrition products designed to meet the needs of people with specific medical conditions,
including nutrition needs related to ageing. Our nutrition-based therapies are founded on scientific
research and an in-depth understanding of both consumers and healthcare providers.
To support consumers throughout their lives, we have created new opportunities dedicated to
innovative therapies. One of them, Nestlé Health Science (NHSc), seeks to develop scientific
methods and products to improve health through nutrition.
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Gut health
Our exploration into nutritional therapies to address food-related digestive discomfort and Irritable
Bowel Syndrome (IBS) include the development of low FODMAP1 diets. These eliminate short-chain
carbohydrates (commonly found in wheat bread, beans, yogurt, milk, apples, onions and
mushrooms) that are not easily absorbed in the small intestine. NHSc launched the website
www.LowFODMAPCentral.com in April 2016 to support consumers and healthcare professionals
looking for information. We are also developing innovative products such as ProNourish, a
nutritional drink that makes it easier for consumers to follow a low-FODMAP diet.
Other types of inflammatory bowel disease, including Crohn’s disease and ulcerative colitis, have a
complex range of causes that appear to be at least partially related to Western lifestyle factors. With
clinical trials starting in 2016, NHSc’s Project Crown is developing an amino-acid-based medical
food to help patients with Crohn’s disease.
Brain health
We are helping US company Accera fund clinical trials featuring Axona, a prescribed medical food
for patients with mild or moderate Alzheimer’s disease. Axona helps the brain metabolise glucose,
providing the fuel needed for cognitive function and memory.
Our work is also exploring nutritional innovations designed to target seizure control for sufferers of
epilepsy who do not respond to medication. Ketogenic diets replace carbohydrates with fats as the
main source of energy and while high-fat diets may not sound particularly healthy, they significantly
reduce the number of seizures. Nonetheless, such diets are challenging to sustain, so in 2016 we
initiated clinical trials with Vitaflo®, a nutritional drink. Taken twice day as part of a normal balanced
diet, this may enhance seizure control in children, dramatically improving the quality of life for those
with epilepsy.
The NHSc website My Ketogenic Diet provides dietary information, videos and other resources, as
well as product details, hints and tips, and recipes.
Food allergies and intolerances
Cow’s Milk Protein Allergy (CMPA) is the most common food allergy among infants and young
children, yet it is often missed due to the non-specific nature of its symptoms. NHSc co-funded a
tool to help primary healthcare professionals identify CMPA and intervene sooner. The CoMiSS®
(Cow’s Milk-related Symptom Score) tool is now available in more than 10 markets.
NHSc also entered into a strategic collaboration with French company DBV Technologies in May
2016 to develop its innovative patch-test tool for diagnosing CMPA in infants.
And in November 2016, NHSc announced a USD 145 million (CHF 142.9 million) investment in
Aimmune Therapeutics, based in California. The collaboration will accelerate the development of
innovative oral immunotherapies for people with food allergies.
Acute care
Other key areas of focus for us include the critically ill, and older people suffering from malnutrition
or who have difficulty swallowing. We launched the Compat Ella® tube feeding pump, which adjusts
feeding rates to patient needs, and also announced a collaboration with GE Healthcare to develop
integrated management systems that improve nutrition during stays in intensive care units.
Visit our website for more Beyond acute care in hospitals, NHSc has also developed launched two online resources,
information about our medical
MyTubefeeding and MyTubefeedingKid, to help patients transition to tube feeding at home while
nutrition R&D.
maintaining a normal life.
1 Fermentable, Oligosaccharides,
Disaccharides, Monosaccharides
And Polyols.
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Skin health
The skin, our largest organ, protects us from harmful environmental factors,
acts as an envelope for the body and can influence the way we interact with
the world. Other people look at our skin, shaping their perception of who we
are; and when we look at our skin, it influences our view of ourselves and our
sense of wellbeing. As people live longer, their needs and expectations
change, and we want to help them maintain healthy skin as they age.
To provide the healthcare community and consumers with innovative technologies and products to
preserve, restore and maintain healthy skin, hair and nails, we founded Nestlé Skin Health. Our
solutions are delivered through Galderma, its medical solutions business, and Consumer Skin
Health, which is aimed at the broader market.
Camp Wonder
Galderma supports Camp Wonder, a week-long summer camp Children’s Skin Disease Foundation, Galderma provides
for children with chronic and life-threatening skin diseases. funding, employee volunteers and Cetaphil products, both
Every year, around 100 children get away to experience the during the camp and throughout the year.
childhood joys of summer camp. In partnership with the
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Rural development
Helping develop thriving, resilient communities
Our 2030 ambition is to improve 30 million livelihoods in communities directly connected to our
business activities. We source supplies of raw materials from millions of farmers across the world.
These farmers and their many workers are critical to a secure, long-term supply, and therefore
to our success. By understanding and managing where and how our ingredients are produced,
and the issues farmers and their communities face, we can better support rural development.
Working closely with farmers will enable us to promote better agricultural practices, work towards
responsible sourcing, and address issues such as rural poverty.
75 Our rural development strategy 78 Enhancing rural livelihoods 83 Responsible sourcing and traceability
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Our work establishing milk districts According to the UN, 1.2 billion people still live in extreme poverty. More than 75% of them live
has enabled us to become the in rural areas and depend on agriculture, including family smallholdings, for their livelihoods. We
world-leading milk company. Our aim to improve livelihoods and develop thriving communities. Driven by our company purpose
Nespresso AAA Program gives us a
clear commercial differentiation.
to enhance quality of life and contribute to a healthier future, we have defined an overarching
We can also distinguish ourselves ambition which will guide our work towards achieving our 2020 commitments and supporting
from our competitors through our the achievement of the SDGs. Our 2030 ambition is to improve 30 million livelihoods in
Nespresso supplier agreements,
communities directly connected to our business activities.
which have enabled us to become
the first company to offer Cuban
coffee in the United States. Enhancing rural livelihoods Respecting and promoting Promoting decent
Our activities for the Nescafé Plan human rights employment and diversity
and the Cocoa Plan have
strengthened these businesses
Human rights abuses often Global uncertainty over
commercially. Consumers are
increasingly wanting to know where occur when people are at their the economy is generating
their products come from and our most vulnerable, and can take concern over the future.
traceability work ensures we meet many forms – from labour Young people everywhere are
their needs. abuses to slavery or child labour. finding it harder than ever to
People expect companies to find jobs, with many lacking
uphold the highest standards qualifications and skills. The
in protecting, respecting and world cannot afford to lose a
promoting the rights of their generation to unemployment.
By 2050 the world will have to employees and those who work We are determined to help
produce 50% more food than for their partners and suppliers. young people find jobs and
today to feed the population – The values of our company training while supporting local
but climate change is making are rooted in respect. Human communities, fairly and without
it harder for farmers in rural rights abuses of any kind have prejudice. Good working
communities to grow enough no place in our business and conditions, respect for labour
crops and earn a living. We rely supply chain, and we have a practices and human rights
on people living and working in responsibility to respect human are essential – as are a safe
rural communities to produce rights across our business. It and healthy work environment
the ingredients that go into our is critical to the security and and flexible employment,
food. We have a responsibility to wellbeing of our workforce which enable us to attract and
make sure that our farmers and and suppliers. retain the best people, from
their families are healthy and the widest range of people
have sufficient resources and and cultures.
food. By supporting them and
helping their children to thrive,
we build stronger communities.
Read more on our actions in Read more on our actions Read more on our actions
this chapter. in the Human rights and in the Our people chapter.
compliance chapter.
Indirect economic impacts G4-DMA, Procurement practices G4-DMA, Supplier environmental assessment G4-DMA, Environmental grievance mechanisms G4-DMA, Investment G4-DMA,
Child labor G4-DMA, Supplier human rights assessment G4-DMA, Local communities G4-DMA, Supplier assessment for impacts on society G4-DMA
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External recognition
Through our rural development activities, we are tackling key global issues such as rural poverty and
Visit our website for more
information about our gender equality. Our leadership is independently reviewed and audited as part of voluntary third-
partnerships alliances. party reporting initiatives, where the results and feedback are made public. We have summarised
the most significant recognition below.
Organisation Progress
KnowTheChain In the 2016 benchmark, which covers the 20 largest food and beverage companies, Nestlé ranked
benchmark 3rd, with a score of 57, for addressing forced labour. Our score demonstrates a higher degree of
transparency in our approach to managing forced labour risks in the supply chain. KnowTheChain
is a leading benchmark of corporate practices. Nestlé ranked 1st in the ‘worker voice’ theme,
displaying leading practices, and in the top three for commitment and governance and risk
assessment.
UN Guiding We were one of the first companies to adopt the UNGPRF, with 2016 being the first full year of its
Principles implementation within Nestlé.
Reporting
Framework
Oxfam Behind We were ranked second on Oxfam’s Behind the Brands scorecard in April 2016.
the Brands
Material issues
Out of our formal materiality process, four material issues fall under the banner of rural development
and responsible sourcing that are rated as being of concern to our stakeholders and of strategic
importance to our business.
These issues are critical to our business, and our stakeholders expect us to play a leading role in
addressing them.
• Animal welfare – safeguarding the wellbeing of animals in the supply chain and promoting farm
animal health and welfare.
Sub-issues:
–– Animal testing
–– Antimicrobial resistance
Indirect economic impacts G4-DMA, Procurement practices G4-DMA, G4-EC9, Supplier environmental assessment G4-DMA, Environmental grievance mechanisms G4-DMA,
Supplier assessment for labor practices G4-DMA, Investment G4-DMA, Child labor G4-DMA, Forced or compulsory labor G4-DMA, Supplier human rights assessment G4-DMA,
Local communities G4-DMA, Animal welfare G4-DMA, Supplier assessment for impacts on society G4-DMA
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• Rural development and poverty alleviation – directly and indirectly promoting stable economic
activity and improving livelihoods of agricultural farmers and workers in the supply chain to
promote sustainable agricultural communities and alleviate poverty.
Sub-issues:
–– Land tenure security
–– Rural living wage
• Responsible sourcing and traceability – ensuring that key ingredients have been grown and
processed responsibly and can be traced back to origin where possible.
• Women’s empowerment – empowering women to participate fully in society and the economy
across the value chain.
Sub-issue:
–– Women farmers
Our commitments
Our public commitments align directly with our material issues. They drive continuous improvement
and allow stakeholders to hold us to account for delivering on our promises. Our commitments are
Our progress against our
supported by a series of objectives through which we will achieve each of them. This year we have
objectives is indicated
introduced a number of new 2020 objectives to take our work forwards.
throughout the report using
the following icons: Our commitments are:
Achieved • Roll out of rural development baseline assessments to understand the needs of farmers;
In progress • Improve farm economics among the farmers who supply us;
Not yet achieved • Improve food availability and dietary diversity among the farmers who supply us;
New objective • Implement responsible sourcing in our supply chain and promote animal welfare;
• Continuously improve our green coffee supply chain; and
Visit our website for more
information on our commitment • Roll out the Nestlé Cocoa Plan with cocoa farmers.
performance dashboard and GRI
content index. Progress against our objectives is detailed in the following pages.
Indirect economic impacts G4-DMA, Procurement practices G4-DMA, Supplier assessment for labor practices G4-DMA, Investment G4-DMA, Forced or compulsory labor G4-DMA,
Supplier human rights assessment G4-DMA, Local communities G4-DMA, Animal welfare G4-DMA, Supplier assessment for impacts on society G4-DMA
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Roll out of rural development baseline assessments to understand the needs of farmers
The sustainable
development of
agriculture has to be a The Rural Development Baseline Assessment
central pillar in the Through a series of diagnostic tools, we assess the sustainability of our farmers’ livelihoods and
endeavour to achieve understand their needs. These baseline assessments are complementary to the rural development
activities within Farmer Connect and allow us to identify further areas for interventions going
food and nutrition forward. The insights and learning gained from our findings help shape the focus of programmes
security. All actors in such as the Nescafé Plan, the Nestlé Cocoa Plan, the Nespresso AAA Sustainable Quality™ Program
the food value chain, and Dairy 4 You.
starting with farmers, The tools for rural development baseline assessment are:
must be involved.”
• The Rural Development Framework (RDF); and
Paul Bulcke,
• Response-Inducing Sustainability Evaluation (RISE).
CEO, Nestlé
G4-EC1, Indirect economic impacts G4-DMA, G4-EC7, G4-EC8, Procurement practices G4-DMA, G4-EC9, Employment G4-DMA, Supplier assessment for labor practices G4-DMA,
Child labor G4-DMA, Forced or compulsory labor G4-DMA, Indigenous rights G4-DMA, G4-SO2, Supplier assessment for impacts on society G4-DMA
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The RDF has a broad focus and includes relevant development drivers at farm and community level.
It enables us to gain data, insights and information including, for example, the Household Dietary
Diversity Score and the Individual Dietary Diversity Score for nutrition, and the Months of Adequate
Household Food Provisioning survey. The RDF was designed in collaboration with key partners,
including the Danish Institute for Human Rights, the Fair Labor Association, the Rainforest Alliance
and Solidaridad.
The RDF has been mainly applied in our coffee supply chain since it was introduced. We’re using the
insights gained through the RDF to help shape the focus of our plans and programmes by
addressing the root causes of issues, such as poor nutrition and poverty among the communities
from which we source.
The RISE tool is more targeted at the farm level. It is a well-proven tool for sustainability assessment
Find out more about the findings
from our RDF studies. in agriculture and helps make sustainable farming measurable, communicable and tangible to
farmers. RISE uses a number of indicators and identifies strengths and weaknesses. Indicators
include, but are not limited to, economic viability, quality of life and natural resources such as water,
soil and biodiversity. In addition, the tool evaluates the embeddedness of the farms in the local
context. RISE is a means of achieving continuous improvement.
RISE continues to be systematically integrated into our development approach. It is particularly
suitable to obtain a holistic view of mixed farming systems, including crop and animal production. In
2016, RISE studies were mainly conducted in Mexico, Pakistan and Ukraine on a variety of
production systems. Some studies have allowed us to gather insights for agricultural production
potential, whereas others served to identify gaps for continuous improvement.
Pakistan is one of the world’s largest milk producers, but the Training Farm provided training in good practices, with ongoing
sector relies mostly on farmers with just two or three cows. support. We then used RISE to identify further improvements.
Using agripreneurship and the Response-Inducing
Thanks to this, Muhammad’s daily yields rose sharply to
Sustainability Evaluation tool (RISE), we help farmers increase
13 litres of milk per cow, while his earnings tripled to
milk yields and incomes.
PKR 30 000 (CHF 282.2) per month. These major improvements
Muhammad Amjad had kept poultry before switching to dairy have enabled him to increase his herd to 17 cows, renovate
cows in 2008. However, with only two cows, each yielding just his house and install a milking machine and a maize chopper
5 litres of milk a day on average, his expenses exceeded for silage production – and even send his children to a
earnings. Nevertheless, we saw the potential in his business better school.
and together we developed an action plan. The Nestlé Dairy
Number of farmers supplying Farmer Connect is our unique flagship sourcing programme, helping ensure the supply of high-
directly to Nestlé
quality agricultural raw materials, along with providing traceability back to farm level. Through
2016 719 000 Farmer Connect we engage with farmers directly, to develop a supply chain that meets our social,
2015 760 000 environmental and ethical requirements. It also helps towards establishing consistent and fair
2014 695 000 pricing, improved yields and reduced environmental impacts. Farmer Connect places an emphasis
on activities such as local sourcing, assistance, farmer training, developing alternative income
streams and supporting women and young farmers.
G4-EC1, Indirect economic impacts G4-DMA, G4-EC7, G4-EC8, Procurement practices G4-DMA, G4-EC9, Employment G4-DMA, Supplier assessment for labor practices G4-DMA,
Child labor G4-DMA, Forced or compulsory labor G4-DMA, G4-SO2, Supplier assessment for impacts on society G4-DMA
Nestlé in society – Creating Shared Value and meeting our commitments 2016 79
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Our progress
In 2016, we worked with 719 000 farmers to train them in good agricultural practices. Our emphasis
was on helping them grow safe, high-quality raw materials, using training designed to produce
effective impacts.
We also continued supporting women in our supply chain, and provided training and assistance.
At the Cacao Fino de Aroma San Placido co-op in Ecuador, for example, we have been providing
Read more about how we training to women in chocolate production to develop an additional income stream, enabling them
are supporting women in our to use raw materials they produce to manufacture hand-made chocolates. These can then be sold to
supply chain.
tourists as an additional income stream.
719 000
farmers engaged through
Farmer Connect
28.9 million
leaf-resistant coffee trees
distributed in Colombia 4
3 1
35% 2
41%
rise in profitability for
Colombian farmers
Indirect economic impacts G4-DMA, G4-EC9, Child labor G4-DMA, Supplier assessment for impacts on society G4-DMA
Nestlé in society – Creating Shared Value and meeting our commitments 2016 80
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CHF 13.9m Training is one of the central tools of our rural development work. We are working to turn poor-
performing farmers into skilled farmers, helping them to meet our standards and become suppliers.
invested in plant science We also aim to further improve the performance of advanced farmers and agripreneurs, with a
special focus on owner-operated family farms.
In total
CHF 23m
In 2016, we provided training to around 363 000 farmers globally, focusing on a range of issues including:
• Seed and plant propagation techniques;
in financial support was offered
to farmers worldwide, including • Soil fertility and plant nutrition;
CHF 19 million in direct • Plant health and protection;
financial assistance
• Post-harvest processing, storage and waste reduction;
• Animal feed and fodder production, storage and conservation;
363 000 • Farm animal nutrition, including raw material safety and quality;
farmers received training in 2016 • Farm animal health, care and welfare;
• Farm management and record-keeping (e.g. farm economics);
• Water conservation and irrigation management; and
• Water and environmental sanitation for farming communities (including liquid and solid waste
management) at farm level and in farming communities.
Agripreneurship is our programme to accelerate the development of a new generation of farmers to
nurture their farming skills, competencies and business management. It particularly addresses
farmers who are operating in our Farmer Connect and direct sourcing operations. We believe
agripreneurship produces social and economic benefits for farmers, empowers and enables them to
embrace sustainable farming methods, and supports the UN’s Sustainable Development Goals.
We also continue to invest in plant science, developing plants that are more disease resistant and
Read more about our commitment produce higher yields. In 2016, we invested CHF 13.9 million in plant science at our two research
to enhance gender balance.
centres in Tours, France and Abidjan, Côte d’Ivoire.
Indirect economic impacts G4-DMA, G4-EC9, Child labor G4-DMA, Supplier assessment for impacts on society G4-DMA
Nestlé in society – Creating Shared Value and meeting our commitments 2016 81
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Our commitment
Improve food availability and dietary diversity among the farmers who supply us
Farmers – and their families – sometimes have insufficient food or dietary diversity for themselves.
This can lead to health and developmental problems for farmers, their families and communities.
Nutrition is a very sensitive topic, as there is a need to balance support and advice with a respect for
local beliefs and traditions. We need to take what we’ve learned about this issue and work with
government entities, multilateral agencies and NGOs where we don’t have the capacity ourselves to
build the necessary framework to address the issue.
Through our RDF, we carry out various studies, such as the Household Dietary Diversity Score
(or Individual Dietary Diversity Score) and the Months of Adequate Household Food Provisioning.
These surveys assess the nutrition status of farmers and their families. To address this in the short
term, we provide training to farmers on nutrition, promote intercropping, and help farmers develop
and maintain kitchen gardens and livestock. In 2016, for example, the concept of house gardening,
and the growing of vegetables for home use, was introduced in Indonesia. This has a double impact,
as the food grown can improve the farmers’ nutrition and diets, and surplus crops after those needs
have been met can provide additional income.
During 2016, we gathered more detailed information on dietary diversity in Mexico and the
Philippines, and commissioned further detailed research in Kenya. We were part of a study to gather
similar information in Côte d’Ivoire and Ghana. We already have information from Indonesia and
China. Based upon the insights we have from these studies, we have commenced designing
programmes to support farmers and their families to improve the availability and diversity of food.
To address this in the short term, we provide training to farmers on nutrition, promote intercropping,
and help farmers develop and maintain kitchen gardens and livestock. We are also taking our Nestlé
Healthy Kids programme to rural areas in Indonesia, the Philippines and Kenya. We continued our
project with an NGO, Solidaridad, to improve food security for farmers in Kenya and Ethiopia by
increasing production and incomes. Solidaridad is focusing upon farmer training on nutrition and
coffee production, as well as developing intercropping to improve farmer income; Nestlé, meanwhile,
is developing training and support for kitchen gardens to improve individual family nutrition.
In 2013, Nestlé joined Solidaridad in an important project The first round of training, on sustainable coffee production
to improve food security and nutrition in Kenya and Ethiopia and nutrition, took place in April 2016, followed by a second
– FOSEK. The project is a seven-year, public–private session in June. In total, 55 000 farmers received training
partnership targeting 120 000 smallholder coffee farmers across the two sessions. Following a progress review in
across 77 co-operatives, and aims to increase production August, we participated in a monitoring visit to eight randomly
and farmers’ income, as well as improving farmers’ knowledge selected co-operatives. The results showed significant change
and awareness of nutrition and diets. in household behaviour towards nutrition, with more farmers
aware of what constitutes a nutritious diet. Diversification of
In Kenya, the project developed manuals and modules on two
food crop production was also taking root, and intercropping
subjects: good agricultural practices (GAP) for coffee and GAP
was generating interest, although there was reluctance by
for food crops. The food crop manual includes information on
some co-operatives to allow this. Results also showed that
a selection of crops based on their importance for food and
household expenditure on vegetables reduced by 20–30%
nutrition security, suitability for intercropping with coffee,
because of farmers growing their own vegetables. Some
and opportunities for marketing locally. A third manual, on
challenges were also identified, such as difficult terrain making
agrinutrition, developed by the United States Agency for
it hard to reach all farmers. The project will tackle this and other
International Development (USAID), will be used to address
issues as it continues its activities.
knowledge gaps among communities and households on the
importance of nutrition. It integrates agriculture and nutrition
with the aim of minimising cases of disease and malnutrition.
Indirect economic impacts G4-DMA, G4-EC9, Child labor G4-DMA, Supplier assessment for impacts on society G4-DMA
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Responsible sourcing
and traceability
Sustainable Development Goals In addition to our direct sourcing activities, we use traditional procurement
We identified the following goals channels to help meet our raw ingredients requirements. With consumers
where our work adds value: and stakeholders increasingly wanting to know what’s in their food, where it
comes from and how it’s made, responsible sourcing is an essential part of
ensuring the integrity and sustainability of our business. It consists of
sourcing our raw materials and paper in compliance with our Supplier Code
and Responsible Sourcing Guideline (RSG) criteria, with traceability and
transparency throughout our supply chains. The RSG sets out detailed
requirements with a focus on critical economic, social, environmental and
farm animal welfare-related issues that can affect supply, livelihoods and
sustainability in our sourcing activities.
Our commitment
Implement responsible sourcing in our supply chain and promote animal welfare
44%
of raw materials Responsibly In 2016, we continued to work towards our responsible sourcing goal and achieved our overall
Sourced, exceeding our target objectives for the year. Many of our supply chains are complex and geographically remote, so
we work with a range of partners to address issues and develop appropriate local responses
and initiatives.
We exceeded our 2016 targets, with 61% of our total volume being sourced from suppliers
See our GRI Index for further
information on supplier screening compliant with the Nestlé supplier code, 51% of raw ingredients in our priority categories being
using environmental, labour traceable and 44% Responsibly Sourced, although progress varied across categories due to
practices, human rights and
individual circumstances in each supply chain.
impacts on society criteria
(indicators G4-EN32, G4-LA14, One significant change in 2016 was the introduction of cereals to our 12 priority categories in place
G4-HR10 and G4-SO9).
of shea. This was due to the volume of cereals purchased and its importance as a category to our
consumers and our product portfolio. Initial assessments of our cereals supply chain began in 2016.
Also in 2016, we extended the scope of Tier 1 audits to include service and indirect materials, with a
target of 50%.
We have a further set of objectives for 2017 and beyond:
FP1, Supplier environmental assessment G4-DMA, G4-EN33, Supplier assessment for labor practices G4-DMA, G4-LA15, Child labor G4-DMA, Supplier human rights assessment G4-DMA,
G4-HR11, G4-SO1, FP9, FP10, FP11, FP12, FP13, Supplier assessment for impacts on society G4-DMA, G4-SO10
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Commodity Target (%) Actual (%) Level of traceability Target (%) Actual (%)
Coffee
Our commitment
In 2016, Nestlé purchased 874 000 tonnes of coffee globally. However, coffee production faces
serious challenges, with pressure on supplies of high-quality coffee to keep up with constantly
growing demand. The availability of arable land will be increasingly limited, and coffee cultivation will
need to compete with other food crops around the world. Climate change brings further challenges
through the spread of extreme or erratic weather conditions in some key coffee-growing areas.
That’s why we assist coffee farmers to improve the economic returns from their crops and to help
their communities be more resilient and successful. This especially includes younger farmers and
farm workers. We also need to support actions to manage land more sustainably, including climate
change adaptation, while ensuring compliant practices and working conditions.
*
ata relates to Nestlé Purina only, which
D
receives around 92% of total volume.
G4-12, G4-EC7, Procurement practices G4-DMA, FP1, FP2, Supplier environmental assessment G4-DMA, G4-EN33, G4-LA15, Child labor G4-DMA, Supplier human rights assessment G4-DMA,
Local communities G4-DMA, G4-SO1. Supplier assessment for impacts on society G4-DMA, G4-SO10
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We support responsible value chains, from coffee farming to coffee consumption, through two
major schemes:
• The Nescafé Plan, a global initiative that brings together our commitments and activities. These
range from on-the-ground support for farmers who supply us both directly and indirectly, to
improving the environmental footprint of our Nescafé factories. The Plan also makes specific
efforts to empower women and young people to become leaders in the coffee sector.
• The Nespresso AAA Sustainable Quality™ Program, developed, in collaboration with the
Rainforest Alliance, which aims to protect the highest-quality coffees required for Nespresso
Grands Crus, preserve the environment and enhance farmer welfare.
The Nescafé Plan
Our objectives towards 2020
Nescafé ranked
By 2020 – Nescafé to improve the quality, quantity and sustainability of its coffee supply chain by distributing 220 million
36 th coffee plantlets.
Total number of coffee plantlets distributed through the Nescafé Plan (million)
in Interbrand’s Top 100 Best Global 2012–2014 2015 2016 Goal: 220 million by 2020
Brands 2016 with a 2% increase in
73.8 26.8 28.3
brand value
Total 2016: 129.0 million
By 2020 – Nescafé to source 90 000 tonnes of coffee that is compliant with the Sustainable Agriculture Network
(SAN) principles*.
*
uring 2017, Nescafé will be reviewing this objective, including any related progress, to realign it towards a reinforced emphasis on enabling
D
positive impacts on coffee farmers, their communities and landscapes. This will support the focus of our efforts in relation to a clearly
identified set of sustainability impacts for each of the coffee-growing regions.
Having achieved our 2015 objectives, and implemented various initiatives with farmers, we are
working hard to update the Nescafé Plan, incorporating our learning and experiences from the past
Number of coffee farmers receiving
technical assistance and training six years. We are shifting the focus of our activities from inputs – such as the number of plants
through our Nescafé Plan* provided or farmers trained – towards outcomes and impacts, and assessing the improvements
2016 113 446 facilitated by our actions. Working with the Rainforest Alliance, we are developing an impact
assessment toolbox, which we will begin to roll out in 2017. This will enable us to systematically
2015 88 771
measure, and demonstrate the impact of our actions on farmer livelihood, rural communities and
2014 134 078 broader landscapes.
*
xcludes the Nespresso AAA Sustainable
E
Quality™ Program. Our selected impact areas are focused on improving coffee economics, developing the resilience of
Double-counting can occur but there is no coffee farming families and communities, and helping them to sustainably manage coffee
double counting in the 2015 or 2016 figures.
landscapes and be compliant with our Responsible Sourcing Guideline. The implementation in each
coffee-producing country will follow their identified priorities and align with the Rural Development
Framework insights, all supported by the impact assessment toolbox. The renewed Nescafé Plan
will enable meaningful change and improvements in farmers’ livelihoods.
In 2016, the Nescafé Plan was active in 20 countries. We provided training to 113 446 farmers during
the year, bringing the total since the Nescafé Plan was launched in 2010 to 504 484. Our 364 Farmer
504 484 Connect staff also visited coffee farms throughout the year, providing training, distributing plantlets
and providing technical assistance to help farmers implement good practices aligned with the
farmers trained since the Nescafé Plan
was launched in 2010 Nescafé Better Farming Practices. We distributed 28.3 million coffee plantlets in the year, bringing
our cumulative total to date to 129 million.
We purchased 204 163 tonnes of Farmer Connect coffee in 2016 from 191 372 farmers, of which
180 148 tonnes were Responsibly Sourced (4C verified). In total, we sourced 480 000 tonnes of
Responsibly Sourced (mostly 4C verified but also other voluntary sustainability standards) in 2016,
representing 55% of our entire green coffee volume.
Coffee farmer Bamba Nihigbe Jeanette is a widowed mother of higher-yielding coffee plantlets, her production rose to 1300 kg
three living in West Africa. She farms around three hectares, in 2016, with potential to grow further. As a result, Jeanette has
but before joining the Nescafé Plan in 2013 only managed to been able to ensure her children can attend school, and is
produce 500 kg of coffee a year. After receiving training in building a new house to replace the tiny dwelling in which she
better agricultural practices through the Plan, and 375 new and her children lived.
G4-12, G4-EC7, Procurement practices G4-DMA, G4-LA15, Local communities G4-DMA, G4-SO1, Supplier assessment for impacts on society G4-DMA
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The Nespresso AAA Sustainable Quality™ Program has grown from 6225 farmers in 2007 to more
than 71 000 farmers in 12 countries in 2016. By the end of the year, 74% of Nespresso coffee was
being sourced through the programme.
Through the programme, we worked closely with the Colombian National Coffee Federation in 2016
to rejuvenate coffee production in areas of Colombia severely affected by decades of conflict. We
are currently exploring similar opportunities to develop coffee growing in Cuba following the easing
of political and economic restrictions. In South Sudan, we built on the successful 2015 launch of a
new coffee, Suluja ti South Sudan, by releasing a second wave in 2016, in France, Germany, the
Netherlands, Switzerland and the UK. This work is helping coffee farmers revive the industry after
years of conflict.
Nespresso is also working with the International Finance Corporation in a BioCarbon Fund to
support coffee farmers in East Africa in combating climate change.
Through the AAA Program, we will work with 40 000 farmers to increase sustainable practices and
plant trees on their land. Training will also be provided to help farmers improve the quality and
productivity of their coffee, enabling them to increase their income.
750 373 This is also part of our agroforestry initiative, which covers all countries within the AAA Program.
We have identified more than 100 benefits to planting trees within and around coffee crops,
native fruit trees planted as part
of our agroforestry initiative including reducing the impact of climate change, enriching the soil and providing an additional
income source. While farmers select and plant the trees, using only native fruit trees, Nespresso
provides technical assistance and funding, and we aim to see 10 million trees planted by 2020.
Some 750 373 were planted in 2016.
Cocoa
Our commitment
G4-12, G4-16, G4-EC7, G4-EC8, Procurement practices G4-DMA, FP2, G4-LA15, G4-HR5, Local communities G4-DMA, G4-SO1, Supplier assessment for impacts on society G4-DMA
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Cocoa sourced through the The Nestlé Cocoa Plan is active in the main producing countries of Côte d’Ivoire, Ghana, Indonesia,
Nestlé Cocoa Plan (%)
Brazil, Dominican Republic, Ecuador, Mexico and Venezuela, with the focus being on the world’s
2016 34.0 largest sources of cocoa, Côte d’Ivoire and Ghana. The Plan’s vision is to improve the lives of farmers
2015 30.0 in our supply chain. Most cocoa farmers are smallholders with low productivity and incomes, living
2014 23.0 in poor communities, with depleted soils and older, less productive trees. They often resort to using
their children for tasks that could be harmful to their physical or mental development and are
therefore classified as child labour. Women in the cocoa supply chain are often under-rewarded for
Number of high-yield, disease-
resistant cocoa plantlets distributed their work, or not given a voice in their communities.
(million)
The Plan addresses these issues through three pillars – Better Farming, Better Lives and Better
2016 2.2
Cocoa. Better Farming activities include farmer training and distribution of new cocoa trees, Better
2015 1.71 Lives includes our child labour and gender equality work, while Better Cocoa covers certification
2014 1.60 and building long-term relationships in our supply chain.
Underlying all these activities is transparency and partnerships. In 2016, we continued our work
Number of cocoa farmers trained
within World Cocoa Foundation’s CocoaAction, the industry strategy for cocoa sustainability.
2016 57 000 We also developed our relationship with UTZ, to extend their work from certification to field KPI
2015 44 617 collection. We kicked off a partnership with Jacobs Foundation to add literacy training to our child
2014 45 833 labour work.
The Plan has been evolving since its inception in 2009 and this continues with CocoaAction helping
us focus on impacts and initiate community development programmes. This year we will start to
report on the outcomes and impact of the Nestlé Cocoa Plan, along the lines of CocoaAction KPIs
and reporting. We will develop and improve this reporting as we have more data in the coming years.
Better farming
Activity KPIs Country Unit 2015 2016
Outcome indicators
Average yield per hectare (Côte d’Ivoire) Côte d’Ivoire Tonnes/ n/a 0.6
hectares
Plant distribution exceeded our target, thanks in part to better access to seeds, especially in Ghana
due to co-operation through CocoaAction with the Ghana Cocoa Board. This also ensured we
remain on track to achieve our 10-year commitment on plant distribution. We have initiated
reporting on yield and application of good agricultural practices.
Better lives
37 130 Our roll-out of the Child Labour Monitoring and Remediation System (CLMRS) continued as
planned, with all 69 co-ops registered in the Cocoa Plan at September being in the CLMRS by the
farmers covered by our Child Labour end of the year. The CLMRS now covers 37 130 farmers. The roll-out will continue in 2017, with all
Monitoring and Remediation System
new co-ops in the Nestlé Cocoa Plan being in the CLMRS within a year. We also began to set up the
system in Ghana in 2016, with initial results next year. The impact of the CLMRS is also increasing
with the addition of literacy training to the support offered to farmers and communities, partly
funded by the Jacobs Foundation. In 2016, we tightened the definition of ‘child labour cases no
longer in child labour’, which now requires at least two visits from the community liaison person
over a six-month period. The number is low due to this redefinition, and an area of focus for us in
2017 will be to follow up many of the children we have helped and evaluate how well the system
is working.
The CLMRS is only sustainable if the farmer organisations can continue to drive the work using the
premium they receive from the cocoa. Ensuring this transfer of responsibility has been a particular
challenge and will be a focus of our effort during 2017.
Read more about how we are
tackling child labour in our The Fair Labor Association continued its annual auditing of our Côte d’Ivoire supply chain: the
supply chains. resulting report can be found on its website.
We were very disappointed not to build more schools in 2016. Our plans were delayed while we
reconfigured the tendering procedure and our partner brought more technical expertise on board.
We intend to get back on track in 2017. School construction is guided by need identified by the
CLMRS and government education plans.
G4-12, G4-16, G4-EC7, Procurement practices G4-DMA, FP2, G4-LA15, G4-HR5, Local communities G4-DMA, G4-SO1, Supplier assessment for impacts on society G4-DMA
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We continued our work to empower women in 2016. In Côte d’Ivoire, we supported 1073 women to
develop income-generating activities, while the percentage of women in leadership positions in
Côte d’Ivoire, Ghana, Ecuador and Indonesia is now 8.9%.
Farmers and community members who attended Côte d’Ivoire Number 120 067 193 424
awareness-raising sessions
Outcome indicators
Number and % of children participating in child labour Côte d’Ivoire Number 5 135 6 065
% 19 16
Number and % of child labour cases assisted Côte d’Ivoire Number 3 591 4 680
% 70 77
Number of families of children identified in child labour Côte d’Ivoire Number 1 167 1 305
benefiting from income-generating activities
Better cocoa
Activity KPIs Country Unit 2015 2016
100% In 2016, we continued to increase the amount of cocoa purchased through the Nestlé Cocoa Plan,
hitting our target despite drought affecting crops in West Africa and Brazil, and supplier financing
certified cocoa used by
our KitKat brand
issues. Our KitKat brand became the first global confectionery brand to be sourced from 100%
certified cocoa. Our plan is to continue to increase the Nestlé Cocoa Plan to 150 000 tonnes in 2017,
175 000 in 2018 and 230 000 tonnes by 2020. A high proportion of this cocoa was sourced from farms
and plantations that meet the UTZ certification Code of Conduct for Cocoa standard, one of the
largest sustainability programmes for coffee, cocoa and tea, and the Fairtrade certification standard.
The Nestlé Cocoa Plan cost around CHF 30 million in 2016, broken down as follows:
Total 30 259
G4-12, G4-16, G4-EC7, Procurement practices G4-DMA, FP2, G4-LA15, G4-HR5, Local communities G4-DMA, G4-SO1, Supplier assessment for impacts on society G4-DMA
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Working with the Fair Labor Association, we’ve established Women representatives on the fora were selected by the
women’s fora in two cocoa-growing communities in Côte existing associations. The fora also gave women a clear path to
d’Ivoire, Yaokouakoukro and Zaranou. These platforms will give obtain advice when needed.
the women a voice in their communities, and the opportunity to
High illiteracy rates in the communities meant that training
have grievances addressed.
materials and techniques needed to be designed to suit the
A Social Impact Assessment in the communities found that participants. This led to a strong focus on participatory
women’s participation in community affairs was limited, their activities such as role plays and simulations. In all, 108 women
inclusion in decision-making linked to their economic status, from Zaranou and 67 from Yaokouakoukro participated.
and women often felt more comfortable using informal
grievance structures than existing groups. Read more about gender balance in the Our people chapter.
Dairy
Dairy is our single biggest category by volume. We bought approximately 14 million tonnes of fresh
milk and milk derivatives in 20151 either directly from our milk districts (through Farmer Connect) or
sourced from Tier 1 suppliers. Fresh milk and milk derivatives are used not only in dairy and infant
nutrition products, but also as ingredients in ice cream, beverages, confectionery and culinary items.
Fresh milk: our ‘milk district’ model
353 000 An integral part of our Farmer Connect programme, our milk district model supports our direct milk
procurement. It helps us develop shorter, more sustainable supply chains and drive positive change
farmers in 30 countries benefit through direct relationships with around 353 000 farmers and farming communities in 30 countries
from our milk district model
around the world.
G4-12, G4-EC7, Procurement practices G4-DMA, G4-LA15, G4-HR5, Local communities G4-DMA, G4-SO1, Animal welfare G4-DMA, FP9, FP10, FP11, FP12, FP13,
Supplier assessment for impacts on society G4-DMA
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Dairy 4 You
Dairy 4 You is a new internal initiative launched in 2016, building on work we’ve been carrying out
for some years and acting as an umbrella for a range of activities. It has two main objectives:
• To help continuously improve our sourcing operations, with special focus on traceability, trusted
milk quality, responsible sourcing and agripreneurship; and
• To proactively share with consumers information on the entire value chain, on the work done with
local farmers and communities and on all the projects to enhance environmental sustainability
(particularly on water, emissions and natural resources).
Verification and certification
We buy large quantities of milk derivatives, such as whey protein, lactose, cheese and milk powders
from Tier 1 suppliers. These are used in many applications, including healthcare products, beverage
mixes, ready-to-drink milk and infant formula.
As well as launching the Dairy 4 You initiative in 2016, we carried out a range of actions across both
fresh milk and milk derivative supplies including:
• Assessed, through SGS, 445 dairy farms worldwide, finding issues ranging from missing
documentation (e.g. training and fertiliser application records) to painful procedures carried out
without local anaesthetic; and
• Some assessments were attended by representatives from World Animal Protection, who also
support us in training SGS auditors on animal health and welfare issues. Seven training sessions
were delivered by our Global Procurement Team to SGS auditors in 2016, covering our RSG
requirements and the assessment process, while World Animal Protection conducted training on
farm animal welfare. Nestlé staff also attended the training provided via phone and as classroom
training. We are gradually implementing our RSG and category-specific requirements along our
global supply chains. These reinforce our commitments on farm animal welfare, and cover
breeding, feeding, housing and husbandry, health, transport and slaughtering.
Following assessments, Nestlé USA organised a ‘lameness in dairy cows’ session with one of its
suppliers and its member farmers. While the lameness issue involved an educational component
featuring herd health experts from the University of Wisconsin-Madison School of Veterinary
Medicine, the day-long session was also an opportunity for other animal care and sustainability
issues to be discussed, such as issues with dairy cattle and painful procedures, and protocols for
hoof care on their farms.
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We are actively involved in an international, multi-stakeholder officially released the new technical specification in December
working group that has developed an international 2016. The TS is science based, non-prescriptive and outcome
Organization for Standardization (ISO) technical specification based. It will facilitate the integration of animal welfare
(TS) on animal welfare. The goal of the TS is to improve the principles in business-to business relations between suppliers
living conditions of animals bred and kept for food production, and customers, and will provide a route to demonstrate
and to provide a management tool to facilitate the conformance through additional assurance by an external
implementation of the animal welfare principles of the World party. We will now work to implement the TS in our supply
Organisation for Animal Health’s welfare principles. We chain and engage with the OIE to develop further species-
contributed to a series of working group meetings, and ISO specific guidance.
Cereals
In 2016, we added cereals to our 12 priority categories, replacing shea, because of the volume of
cereals purchased and their importance to our consumers and our overall product portfolio. We are
particularly focusing on cereals used as ingredients in breakfast products and in pizza bases, due to
their importance for consumers.
As cereals is a new addition to our priority ingredient list, we’re working to assess the state of the
supply chain. Once completed, we’ll set out an action plan for addressing any issues in the coming
years. At present this process is focusing on seven priority countries (based on volume sourced and
business priorities): USA, Argentina, Brazil, France, Mexico, Russia and the United Kingdom.
Information on our other priority categories, our approach to traceability and assessment and how
we map our supply chains can be found on our website.
Hazelnuts
We source around 4400 tonnes of hazelnuts annually, mostly from the Black Sea region of Turkey.
We do not source directly from the growers, but from two suppliers, Olam-Progida and BALSU,
which obtain the hazelnuts through a chain of intermediaries. In 2016, 84% of our supplies were
traceable and 43% responsibly sourced, both figures exceeding our targets.
The most widespread and serious issue in the hazelnut supply chain is safe and healthy working
conditions for labourers. This is particularly so for the many temporary migrant workers employed
during the harvest period. Child labour has also been identified as an issue within the hazelnut industry.
For many of these workers and their families, seasonal work is sometimes the only means of
survival. A number of specific issues faced by these workers have been identified, including:
• Limited access to sanitation and potable water;
• Overcrowding and lack of personal space and privacy;
• Children not receiving education; and
• Limited knowledge of safe working practices, such as the appropriate use, storage and disposal
of chemicals.
A lack of employment records, compensation discrimination and harassment are also issues that
have been found to occur.
To address these issues, we have been working with the Fair Labor Association (FLA). FLA audits
have found a number of non-compliances, and inadequate hygiene was observed in most hazelnut
gardens. Audits have also identified inadequate worker safety as an issue in the majority of gardens,
with a lack of both equipment and awareness being particular problems. Personal protective
equipment and first aid kits have been provided, but workers were not fully aware of their
importance. Moreover, most of the kits were kept at farmers’ houses, reducing their use. We have
been working on these issues with our suppliers, providing awareness-raising sessions as well as
safety equipment.
There are also ongoing issues around the use of child labour in the Turkish hazelnut harvest, possibly
as a result of the region’s proximity to the conflict in Syria. Many children, young people and women
have left the region on their own to seek safety elsewhere.
We have identified and implemented a range of measures to address these issues, such as training
farmers on good agricultural practices, and running summer schools to remove children from labour
in the orchards. Olam-Progida has helped provide workers with better facilities, such as electricity,
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toilets and access to city water in the camp areas, as well as training and awareness-raising
sessions, and we have provided drinking water, adequate sanitation and hand-washing facilities.
Farmers are provided with a toll-free phone number enabling them to report any complaints. Both
our suppliers have teams of agronomists and social workers. These teams are active in the field, not
only in harvest time but all year round, running awareness-raising activities on child labour, labour
standards and good agricultural practices with farmers, local authorities and middlemen.
In 2016, the FLA continued its work on reducing child labour as part of a US Department of Labor-
funded project in partnership with Nestlé and our suppliers. Much of the remedial work is based
around organising school facilities for the children of migrant workers and providing educational
activities to take them out of labour in the orchards.
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Palm oil
In 2016 we bought 420 000 tonnes of palm oil. Our supplies come from processing countries that
source palm oil, mostly from Malaysia and Indonesia. Of our total volume, 91.5% was traceable back
to the mill, and 57% responsibly sourced.
Our category-specific requirements for palm oil require our suppliers to source oil from plantations that:
• Comply with local laws and regulations;
• Do not come from areas cleared of natural forest after November 2005;
• Respect the Free, Prior and Informed Consent (FPIC) of local and indigenous communities;
• Protect high-carbon-value forests;
• Protect peatlands; and
• Comply with the principles and criteria of the Roundtable on Sustainable Palm Oil (RSPO), the
industry-wide certification body that promotes the growth and use of sustainable palm oil products.
The Nestlé Responsible Sourcing Guideline also goes beyond the RSPO standard. The Responsible
Sourcing Guideline makes explicit provisions for the protection of peatland and high-carbon forest,
which are critical in combating deforestation, and for preventing social conflict arising from
potential disputes over land rights and land acquisition.
Palm oil supply chains often have a lack of transparency and available information. To address this, we
use our Traceability Declaration Document, which suppliers complete quarterly to declare the supply
chain linked to our foods and beverages. Although information gaps remain, the Document allows for
unprecedented transparency and facilitates discussions with suppliers to address those gaps.
Deforestation
Deforestation is a major environmental issue associated with palm oil production. Poor forest
management and the loss of high conservation value (HCV) areas remain a challenge. Rising
consumer demand means tropical rainforests and associated peatlands have been cleared to make
way for plantations, which contribute to greenhouse gas emissions, soil erosion, water pollution and
a loss of biodiversity.
In 2010, Nestlé made a ‘no deforestation’ commitment, stating that all of its products, globally, will
not be associated with deforestation by 2020 (we also support the Consumer Goods Forum’s
ambition for zero net deforestation by 2020). This commitment was the first of its kind by a food
company, and covers all the raw materials we use to make our foods and beverages, as well as
our packaging.
Land rights
Another challenge within the supply chain is land tenure and acquisition, with farmers’ land subject
to ‘landgrabs’ by others. We have been gathering data and insights on the status of farmers’
property rights, and are developing an action plan to address this issue.
Nestlé is working with partners The Forest Trust (TFT) on a Following this, four projects involving over 400 farmers began
major initiative, Rurality. Rurality aims to connect key in 2016, in Ghana, Côte d’Ivoire, Malaysia and Indonesia. Initial
stakeholders in palm oil supply chains, share innovation and actions have included training on practical topics such as use of
knowledge, and connect farmers with bodies such as research appropriate tools, safety equipment and fertilisers, organising
centres and schools and to the consumers. field visits to success stories to share ideas, and building
awareness of the importance of forest conservation. Supported
The initiative began with a Rural Dynamics Diagnostic phase,
by Nestlé’s funding, Rurality will continue to grow in 2017. As
in which Rurality field officers assess farmers’ environments,
we gather more information, we will be able to implement more
their farming systems and household economics, and their
activities. These will include capacity building and developing
challenges and needs. This phase was also important in
good agricultural practices, improving access to tools and
building trust with the farmers. The information gathered
equipment, developing farmers’ associations, and developing
enabled a transformation strategy to be designed to identify
KPIs to monitor performance.
opportunities for change to strengthen the farmers and help
them overcome their challenges.
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Water
Stewarding resources for future generations
Our 2030 ambition is to strive for zero environmental impact in our operations. Water is a universal
human right. It is critical to every part of our value chain: our employees, suppliers, customers and
consumers all need access to safe, clean water and sanitation, as do the farmers we work with and
the communities in which we operate. In the next 15 years, almost half of the world’s population will
be living in areas that are running out of water. Water, and the lack of it, is the biggest challenge the
world faces going forward. As we are committed to responsible stewardship of this precious resource,
we seek continuous improvement in our withdrawal, use and treatment of water.
SDG 1: SDG 2: SDG 3: SDG 6: SDG 12: SDG 14: SDG 15: SDG 17:
No poverty Zero hunger Good health Clean water Responsible consumption Life below water Life on land Partnerships
and wellbeing and sanitation and production for the goals
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A- estimated 60% more food will be needed to feed the world, and growing that food will put
more stress on already fragile water supplies. If we are to continue to grow sustainably we must
Received a leadership score of A- from ensure we use the planet’s resources wisely. Driven by our company purpose to enhance quality
the CDP Water Program for our best
of life and contribute to a healthier future, we have defined an overarching ambition that will
practices and actions to manage water
and mitigate water risks guide our work towards achieving our 2020 commitments and supporting the achievement of
the SDGs. Our 2030 ambition is to strive for zero environmental impact in our operations.
Investor benefits Caring for water Acting on climate change Safeguarding the
environment
We save costs by increasing the
efficiency of water use. Investing in
zero water factories can help us In the last century, average Food waste is growing: a
avoid future costly relocations. global temperatures have third of all food is wasted or
Protecting water resources helps risen by almost 1°C, causing lost annually. Per the UN, if
protect the future of our Nestlé
huge changes in the climate. these trends continue we
Waters business and helps ensure
that the sourcing of our raw
It’s forcing food producers to will need the equivalent of
materials remains competitive. adjust how, when and where two Earths to support us by
Applying WASH practices can they manage their land and 2030. As a food and beverage
positively impact productivity by crops. We are determined company we depend on a
improving the health and wellness to be a leader in reducing healthy environment; all our
of our employees and communities More than 2 billion people GHG emissions and use more ingredients come from plants
and reducing lost working days. globally are affected by a renewable energy. We set and animals, from forests,
lack of safe water, with not ambitious targets to improve farms and oceans. Protecting
enough water to wash, or environmental performance where those raw materials
grow sufficient crops. The and strive for zero impact in grow and live is essential. Our
WHO estimates that more our operations, in line with the agricultural expertise means we
than 630 million people lack Paris Agreement. We rely on can help our farmers keep their
access to clean drinking water farmers and food producers to land healthy and productive.
and almost 2.4 billion people supply our key raw materials; By working with partners and
are exposed to contaminated we are always looking for how governments, we can also help
water. As producing our food to produce food with fewer protect the environment around
and beverages takes a lot of natural resources. their farms.
water, it is essential we are as
efficient as possible. We are
always exploring how to reduce
and where possible reuse
water. By working with other
users, we have the best chance
of conserving this precious
resource and ensuring the long-
term health of our business and
the neighbouring communities.
Read more on our actions Read more on our actions Read more on our actions
in this chapter. in the Environmental in the Environmental
sustainability chapter. sustainability chapter.
Water is a shared resource – and yet it is increasingly scarce. As a food and beverage company,
water is key to our direct operations. We use it to clean and prepare our raw materials and cool and
clean our equipment. We also bottle water to offer our consumers a healthy hydration solution.
Water G4-DMA
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In 2015, we launched our Water Stewardship Master Plan, based on our water commitments and
designed to mobilise local stakeholders to address shared water challenges collectively, following
the steps of the Water Stewardship Ladder (see below).
We are in the process of taking water stewardship at Nestlé even further through a new corporate
water strategy. The strategy will help secure more sustainable access to water, multiply water
efficiency innovations and engage most of our stakeholders, including consumers and employees,
making them water experts, in collective action to sustainably manage our shared water resources.
Catchment
level SUSTAINABILITY
Engage with local stakeholders to address
Collective Action
shared water challenges at catchment level
Sphere of influence
Stewardship level
Local level
Transparency Improvement Engagement
External recognition
Our leadership in responsible management of water is built on our policies, continuous improvement
and transparent reporting. We have summarised the most significant recognition below.
Organisation Progress
UNGC CEO We publish a Communication on Progress as part of the CEO Water Mandate every year, which is
Water Mandate submitted to the UNGC for review. Read more about our work with the CEO Water Mandate.
CDP Water In 2016, we participated in the CDP Water Program and in November received a ‘Leadership’ score
Program of A- for our best practices and actions to manage water and mitigate water risks. Reporting on
water can be found in our response to the CDP Water Program.
Dow Jones With an overall score of 92 out of 100, we received industry-best scores in all three dimensions
Sustainability (economic, environmental and social) of the 2016 Dow Jones Sustainability Index (DJSI), a globally
Index recognised independent benchmark that measures the performance of the world’s largest 2535
companies. This year, these scores included industry-best scores in all environmental areas. In the
‘environmental’ dimension, Nestlé was awarded a maximum score of 100/100.
Oxfam Behind In the Oxfam Behind the Brands 2016 scorecard, we received the highest score in water and land
the Brands and second-highest in climate. The scorecard assesses rights and access to water and land
resources, sustainable use of both, and the strength of actions to mitigate climate change.
Water G4-DMA
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Material issues
Out of our formal materiality process, two material issues fall under the banner of water that are
Visit our website for more
information on our material issues rated as being of high concern to our stakeholders and of strategic importance to our business:
across our value chain. water stewardship; and water, sanitation and hygiene.
These issues are critical to who we are as a responsible business. Our stakeholders expect us to play
a leading role in addressing these issues.
• Water stewardship: implementing the actions, individually and/or collectively, needed for the
sustainable management of shared water resources.
Sub-issues:
–– Bottled water
–– Water quality
–– Water security
–– Water use
• Water, sanitation and hygiene: improving access to safe water and sanitation, and appropriate
facilities to ensure personal hygiene across our value chain.
Our commitments
Our public commitments are a result of our respect for individuals and families, communities and
the planet. Having listened to the views of others, we have identified what is important and where
our skills and expertise can be best focused to achieve positive outcomes for some of the world’s
biggest challenges.
Our public commitments align directly with our material issues. They drive continuous improvement
Our progress against our and allow stakeholders to hold us to account for delivering on our promises. Our commitments are
objectives is indicated supported by a series of objectives to ensure we achieve each of them. This year we have introduced
throughout the report using several new 2020 objectives to take our work forwards.
the following icons: Our commitments are:
Achieved • Work to achieve water efficiency and sustainability across our operations;
In progress
• Advocate for effective water policies and stewardship;
Not yet achieved
• Treat the water we discharge effectively;
New objective
• Engage with suppliers, especially those in agriculture; and
Visit our website for more • Raise awareness on water conservation, and improve access to water and sanitation across our
information on our commitment value chain.
performance dashboard and GRI
content index. Progress against our objectives is detailed in the following pages.
Water G4-DMA
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concerning water The main challenges that we face in terms of water stewardship are:
efficiency. Water • Ensuring efficient water management in our raw material sourcing and manufacturing operations;
savings only have an • Securing access to safe water for the local communities where our operations occur; and
impact if achieved at • Helping our factories and supply chain communities understand and apply our water
the right place, at the stewardship philosophy.
right time and in the We share the water that we use with local communities; we must therefore work together to protect
right form.” the catchments and supplies we all rely on.
Peter Brabeck-Letmathe,
Chairman, Nestlé
Water G4-DMA
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R Raise awareness on water conservation, and improve access to water and sanitation across our value chain
Our commitment
CHF 31.6m Water withdrawal refers to the water we take from all sources for our factories, including purchases
from suppliers, as well as surface, ground and rainwater. We implement programmes to reduce
spent on water-saving initiatives water withdrawal, reuse water and use alternative sources. By the end of 2016, we had reduced
water withdrawal by tonne of product in every product category, achieving an overall reduction
of 25% versus 2010. We also use our Water Target Setting methodology to identify further
reduction opportunities.
In 2016, we assigned CHF 31.6 million to water-saving initiatives and are currently conducting 516
water-saving programmes across our factories, saving around a projected 3.7 million m3 of water a year.
In 2014, we were the first company in the world to implement condensed milk, the whey is removed by evaporation, and
zero water withdrawal technology at a factory in Mexico. In further transformed into clean water for re-use in factories’
2015, we replicated the approach in our factory in Palmeira das cooling or cleaning processes.
Missões, Brazil, and included the technology early in the design
In Brazil, this approach reduced water withdrawal to zero;
of our new Dolce Gusto capsules factory in Montes Claros. As a
four additional factories are expected to implement zero water
result, this new factory was the first to be built with zero water
technology by 2018.
technology in its original design.
Zero water withdrawal is achieved by extracting and using Read more on our Triple Zero achievement at Montes Claros.
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Water discharge 81 78
100%
By 2016 – Carry out 45 new Water Resource Reviews (WRRs) in selected manufacturing facilities and all greenfield sites.
Water Resource Reviews (WRRs) aim to raise awareness at an operational level, identify risks and
opportunities, and devise action plans for more sustainable water use. In 2016, we conducted 22
new WRRs in several locations, including Cuba, the USA, Vietnam and Switzerland. We carried out
65 new WRRs in the period 2014/16, thus exceeding our public target (45). We have now reviewed a
total of 158 of our factories worldwide since the WRRs began 10 years ago, while Nestlé Waters
completed WRRs at 100% of its facilities1, and continues to work on improving its overall water use
ratio (the amount of water required to produce one litre of bottled water). The water that goes into
our bottles helps to meet the hydration needs of our consumers, an essential use of water. The WRR
process also embeds the human right to water and sanitation principles.
We fully respect and support the human right to water and sanitation. In 2016, we continued to work
1 This data excludes recently acquired or on our guidelines on how our markets and factories can reflect this support across their supply
built factories that have not been in Nestlé’s
operational control for the full year.
chains. The guidelines are expected to be launched in 2017.
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We support the World Business Council for Sustainable Internally, we are committed to achieving and maintaining
Development’s (WBCSD) pledge to ensure safe access to WASH for all our employees. In 2015, more than 90% of
water, sanitation and hygiene (WASH) in the workplace. Nestlé employees had access to WASH; this rose to an estimated
has supported the WBCSD in its aim to reach 50 signatory 100% in 2016. We remain in the process of continuing self-
companies by 2016; to date, 42 signatories have adopted the assessments across our facilities, identifying and correcting
WASH Pledge, representing 2.5 million employees in Europe, gaps through action plans.
the United States, Africa, Asia and the Middle East.
High-priority manufacturing facilities (HPMF) are sites located in areas of severe water stress or that
represent a significant portion of our annual water withdrawals. The list of HPMF is annually
updated; in 2016 we identified 24 such facilities. By year-end, we implemented water-saving
projects at 21 out of 24 sites, saving 1.8 million m3 of water.
We understand that our investment in multi-stakeholder initiatives can make a real difference to the
wellbeing of local water supplies. We target initiatives that allow us to favour water stewardship
together with other catchment users. By the end of 2016, visible progress had been made in
Pakistan, Mexico and California, USA.
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Commitment
2030 Water The 2030 WRG is a collaboration between We currently chair the 2030 WRG, and many of
Resources Group public, private and civil groups that seeks to our most senior people, including our
(2030 WRG) reform water resources in water-stressed Chairman, play a leading role in the group,
developing economies. whose governing council meets annually. In
2016, the WRG launched programmes in Brazil
(São Paulo state), Ethiopia and Vietnam.
UNGC CEO Water The UNGC CEO Water Mandate helps We are a founding signatory of the UNGC CEO
Mandate companies develop, implement and disclose Water Mandate. We publish a Communication
their water sustainability policies and practices. on Progress every year, and have a seat on the
steering committee. We attended the Mandate’s
2016 Working Conference in Stockholm, and
participated in two projects through the
California Water Action Collaborative (CWAC),
an initiative driven by the Mandate.
Sustainable The Joint Water Risk Assessment and We have supported the project since the start,
Agriculture Mitigation project enables food companies to initially by mapping sourcing information from
Initiative Platform share strategies for assessing and mitigating member companies and additional experts but
(SAI) and the food risks. also by active participation in initiatives.
Sustainable Food
Lab (SFL)
Alliance for Water The AWS International Water Stewardship This year we applied the AWS Standard
Stewardship (AWS) Standard is a universal reference tool for any principles at four selected high-priority
organisation to use as a framework for locations (India, Pakistan, South Africa and
evaluating its water stewardship practices Mexico) that were chosen due to water scarcity
against a series of environmental, social and and reputational concerns. We also rolled out
economic criteria. the AWS standard in North America.
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Despite increases in rain and snowfall in 2016, California The other two projects are:
remains in a severe drought. In 2014, Nestlé became a founding
• Farmland Groundwater Recharge: the application of
member of the California Water Action Collaborative (CWAC),
excess floodwater to active and fallowed farmland to refill
which today consists of 19 companies and environmental
aquifers; and
organisations. The coalition was set up as platform for food and
beverage companies and non-profits, to identify areas of • San Gabriel and Big Tujunga Watershed: a partnership to
shared interest. The result has been collective action projects restore large quantities of water annually to the damaged
that aim to advance a sustainable water future in California for San Gabriel and Big Tujunga Watershed.
people, business, agriculture and nature.
Nestlé Waters North America has direct involvement in two of
the four initial projects identified by CWAC:
Water is a shared resource – one that
communities, industry, government and the
• American River Headwaters Restoration: a project run by
Nature Conservancy with a coalition of partners to determine
agricultural sector all rely on to ensure our
how forest restoration can improve watershed health, reduce shared prosperity. CWAC will help members
the risk of fires and potentially increase water supply; and uncover new and creative ways to work together
• Corporate Water Stewardship and the California Water and define and take actions that benefit us all.”
Action Plan: a collaborative action facilitated by the CEO Nelson Switzer,
Water Mandate to bring together private companies, the Chief Sustainability Officer, Nestlé Waters North America
public sector, academia and leading NGOs to identify
opportunities for the private sector to advance elements in
the California Water Action Plan.
R Raise awareness on water conservation, and improve access to water and sanitation across our value chain
Commitment
At the end of 2016, we improved the average discharged water quality to 72 mg COD (Chemical
Oxygen Demand) per litre versus 2015. Since 2006, we have reduced water discharge per tonne of
product by 55%.
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All our factories either have their own on-site wastewater treatment plant or are linked to a
municipal facility. Where required, we invest in our plants to keep them up to our standards,
spending CHF 22.5 million in 2016 on maintenance and improved treatment facilities. We have
invested CHF 107 million in water treatment projects since 2010.
We aim to minimise waste generation and recover value from by-products; more than 96% of sludge
is recovered or reused. We have improved water effluents training at our operations, engage
internally through Safety, Health and Environmental Sustainability workshops and work with
stakeholders to identify how best to protect the environment while promoting sustainability.
Commitment
We prioritise training farmers in water-scarce locations on water quality and use. Our R&D teams
support the selection and dissemination of drought-resistant cocoa and coffee trees.
Through SAIN, we address water issues and promote remediation measures for key water
management challenges, including drought and flooding resilience, wastewater and organic waste
Read more about our direct treatment, and agricultural intensification tools. We are in the process of implementing water
sourcing operations.
management initiatives for coffee, sugar, dairy and cereals in water-stressed areas.
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47 188
coffee farmers trained on
improved water management
techniques in Vietnam
46%
sugar responsibly sourced, 4
including assessment on
4
water awareness
1 3
37 2
Commitment
Raise awareness on water conservation, and improve access to water and sanitation across our value chain
Water G4-DMA
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We work with expert partners to improve access to water and sanitation across our value chain. We
support education initiatives to help our employees, communities, suppliers and consumers make
better-informed decisions on how to protect water.
513 345 We have partnered with the IFRC in Africa since 2002, and since 2006 we have focused on
improving access to clean water, sanitation and hygiene in rural communities of our supply chain.
people in rural areas given During this time, we have enabled 226 685 members of rural communities in Côte d’Ivoire and now
access to clean water and
sanitation since 2002
Ghana to gain greater access to clean water and sanitation, achieving our 2016 objective.
In the cocoa-growing region of Côte d’Ivoire, a programme of activities has been introduced to
improve health and hygiene awareness among vulnerable groups, including schoolchildren,
teachers and local community members. These have included:
• The rehabilitation and establishment of water points;
• The provision or renovation of sanitation facilities; and
• The raising of awareness through hygiene awareness programmes in villages and schools.
In 2016, we developed a plan for how the Côte d’Ivoire projects would continue, while supporting
the IFRC in its roll-out of WASH activities in Ghana.
The Ghana Sustainable Water, Sanitation and Hygiene Project (Gha-WASH) aims to provide the rural
population in the Eastern and Ashanti regions of Ghana with access to WASH by 2017, to improve
the health and resilience of vulnerable groups. The two regions were selected after in-depth surveys
and consultations with governments and other stakeholders; the communities selected are key to
Nestlé’s cocoa supply chain.
Water G4-DMA
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We seek water management opportunities that allow us to • WASH: we commissioned a new community facility for
work closely with communities, particularly in the developing Maderegi village, which will provide access to safe and clean
world. One such country is Nigeria, which is undergoing rapid drinking water to the community. This is our second
growth. Through Nestlé Waters, we engaged with the community water facility in Nigeria, after the first centre in
community in the Abaji region through several projects in 2016. the Korogboji community, Agbara, Ogun state.
These activities were upheld by three pillars:
• Water stewardship: in 2016, we launched Water Education We have pledged globally to water stewardship
for Teachers and students (PWET) to help teachers raise in an effort to adopt sustainable water practices,
awareness about water conservation and proper hydration especially in areas where we operate, source our
among schoolchildren. To date, we have trained 8411
students and 453 teachers in 140 schools in the Lagos,
goods and where our suppliers and consumers
Ogun, Osun and Abaji regions; live. Local communities play a very important
• Supporting economic growth: we opened a new role in achieving this objective.”
manufacturing facility for Nestlé Pure Life bottled water. Jason Lambe,
We plan to incorporate a Technical Training Centre to Country Business Manager, Nestlé Waters, Nigeria
provide practical training for young local engineering
students in future; and
Water G4-DMA
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Environmental sustainability
Stewarding resources for future generations
Our 2030 ambition is to strive for zero environmental impact in our operations. If we are to continue
to grow sustainably we must ensure we use the planet’s resources wisely. As a major nutrition, health
and wellness company, we can shape sustainable consumption and steward resources for future
generations. We set ourselves commitments and objectives for real progress: from using sustainably
managed and renewable resources to operating more efficiently, and from working towards our goal
of zero waste to acting on climate change. Together, we can help steward the planet’s resources, and
safeguard its future by encouraging more sustainable consumption. We are working towards the day
when, through efficiencies and new technologies, we can reduce our environmental impact to zero.
This will take time but we firmly believe it is achievable.
1st
109 Our environmental sustainability strategy 112 Acting on climate change 118 Safeguarding the environment
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Read more on our actions Read more on our actions Read more on our actions
in the Water chapter. in this chapter. in this chapter.
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External recognition
Our leadership from an environmental perspective is built on our policies, continuous improvement
and transparent reporting – and the recognition that we achieve. We have summarised the most
significant recognition below.
Organisation Progress
Dow Jones With an overall score of 92 out of 100, Nestlé received industry-best scores in all three dimensions
Sustainability Index (economic, environmental and social) of the 2016 Dow Jones Sustainability Index, a globally
recognised independent benchmark that measures the performance of the world’s largest 2500
companies. In the ‘environmental’ dimension, Nestlé was awarded an industry-best maximum
score of 100/100. In addition, Nestlé received a Gold Class Sustainability Award 2017 for our
industry-leading sustainability performance.
CDP Climate Change Nestlé has been recognised as a global leader in tackling climate change, earning a place on CDP’s
Programme Climate A List. Nestlé is among the 9% cent of participating companies to be awarded an A grade,
in recognition of its work to reduce emissions and tackle climate change.
CDP Forest Nestlé was recognised for its participation in combating deforestation, achieving the score of A- for
Programme its work in cattle products, palm oil, soya and timber sectors.
Oxfam Behind In the Oxfam Behind the Brands 2016 scorecard, Nestlé received the highest score in water and
the Brands land and second-highest in climate. The scorecard assesses rights and access to water and land
resources, sustainable use of both, and the strength of actions to mitigate climate change.
Material issues
Out of our formal materiality process, three material issues fall under the banner of environmental
Visit our website for more
information on our material issues sustainability that are rated as being of concern to our stakeholders and of strategic importance to
across our value chain. our business: natural resource stewardship; climate change; and resource efficiency, (food) waste
Read more about how we and the circular economy.
engage in responsible marketing
of our products.
These issues are critical to our business, and our stakeholders expect us to play a leading role in
addressing them.
• Natural resource stewardship – identifying and preserving natural resources and
ecosystem services.
Sub-issues:
–– Biodiversity
–– Deforestation
–– Soil fertility
–– Land use
• Climate change – reducing GHG emissions and contributing to the mitigation of and adaptation
to the effects of climate change.
Sub-issues:
–– Climate change adaptation
–– Climate change mitigation
–– Advocacy on climate policy
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• Resource efficiency, (food) waste and the circular economy – reducing the direct and indirect
use of resources, reducing (food) waste and optimising opportunities for recovery, reuse or
recycling of by-products and disposing of waste appropriately.
Sub-issues:
–– Circular and bio-economy
–– Energy consumption
–– Food loss and waste
–– Littering
–– Manufacturing environmental impacts
–– Marine plastic debris
–– Packaging
–– Transport and distribution
–– Consumer behaviour
Our commitments
Our public commitments are a result of our respect for individuals and families, communities and
the planet. Having listened to the views of others, we’ve identified what is important and where our
skills and expertise can be best focused to achieve positive outcomes for some of the world’s
biggest challenges.
Our public commitments align directly with our material issues. They drive continuous improvement
and allow stakeholders to hold us to account for delivering on our promises. Our commitments are
supported by a series of objectives through which we will achieve each of them.
Materials G4-DMA, Energy G4-DMA, Biodiversity G4-DMA, Emissions G4-DMA, Products and services G4-DMA, Compliance (Environmental) G4-DMA, Transport G4-DMA, Overall G4-DMA,
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Ensuring a more sustainable supply of safe raw materials demands a united approach between
Read more about Nestlé’s water
stewardship activities. governments, our industry and civil society. This approach will require several fundamental
changes, including energy: there must be a rapid development of sustainable renewable energy
sources, replacing fossil fuel uses with cleaner fuels and renewable energy.
Nestlé is committed to further reducing emissions from our operations and value chain through:
• Mitigation – reduce GHG emissions in line with the scientific requirements to limit global
warming to less than 2°C (in alignment with SDG 7);
• Adaptation – helping farmers to adapt and engage with stakeholders to determine the best
practical support we can provide to build farmer resilience; and
• Reporting – transparently report our activities and work with governments, trade bodies and
non-governmental organisations (NGOs).
Our aim is to ensure the continuity of our own business while protecting the future of the planet.
However, we cannot do it alone. It is vital that we work with our stakeholders to find solutions to the
environmental challenges that climate changes may exacerbate.
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Adaptation, as defined by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), is the ‘process of
adjustment to actual or expected climate and its effects, to moderate harm or exploit beneficial
opportunities’ (IPCC, 2014). Companies such as ours must be aware that we all have a responsibility
to protect our value chains and serve customers, by anticipating and adapting to the new conditions
that climate change will generate.
Successful adaptation requires companies to adopt strategies that allow them to counteract and
manage the risks that climate change generates. These strategies vary between companies, due to
differing operational requirements, but should include the identification of risks and the
determination and piloting of projects to reduce their impact.
With operations and activities around the world, we depend on our value chain – which is large,
complex and geographically dispersed by its very nature. We further depend on the resilience of the
communities where we live and operate, source materials from and sell our products.
39%
practical timescale.
By 2020 – Reduce GHG emissions (Scope 1 and 2) per tonne of product in every product category to achieve an overall
per tonne of product since 2006 reduction of 35% in our manufacturing operations versus 2010.
GHG emissions (kg CO2 eq/per tonne) 2010 2016 Reduction (%)
Water 28 22 22
Our science-based objectives are part of our holistic approach to tackle climate change and
contribute to efforts to limit climate warming to less than 2°C. Since 2006, we’ve reduced direct
greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions per tonne of product by 39% while increasing production by 46%
since 2006. We are on track to achieve our science-based 2020 objective, as we have reduced GHG
emissions (Scope 1 and 2) per tonne of product in every product category, achieving an overall
reduction of 22% in our manufacturing operations versus 2010.
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As more than 90% of our GHG emissions occur along our value chain, we will also work to reduce
Scope 3 GHG emissions by 8% between 2014 and 2020. Our detailed reporting of Scope 3
emissions can be found here and on pages 136–145 of our CDP Climate change submission.
17%
factory energy use comes from
renewable sources
39%
3
1
reduction in direct GHG emissions
per tonne of product since 2006
CHF 82.2m
invested in improving factory
environmental performance 4
22
factories using spent coffee
grounds as a renewable fuel
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Our Environmental Target Setting programme is designed to help our factory teams improve
resource efficiency. To support this ambition, we have developed a web-based tool, Do It Yourself,
which enables each site to identify and adopt energy- and water-saving opportunities that have
already been successful elsewhere in the Group.
We aim to transfer our transportation networks from road to rail or sea wherever possible, and use
natural gas in our trucks. These advances are made possible through innovation, which is where we
invest to make environmental improvements.
Our transport and distribution operations generated 3.2 million tonnes of GHG in 20151. We continue
to work to improve the environmental performance of these operations, tightening the efficiency of
our distribution networks and making better use of transport space. We are making good progress
in reaching our objective, with emissions per tonne of product covered by reporting reduced by
2.7% in 2015 when compared with our 2014 baseline.
We strive to ensure that ‘no vehicle leaves empty’, improving the efficiency of our transport while
reducing unnecessary journeys. We have also redesigned several local distribution networks to
improve efficiency.
We investigate and develop opportunities for transport options that lower emissions and continue
our research into using alternative fuels.
Emissions from transport Transport modes global
(estimated million tonnes of CO2eq)1 (%)1,2
2015 3.2 2015 68 15 2 15
2014 3.1 2014 72 10 2 16
2013 3.2 2013 74 10 2 13 1
0% 50%100%
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G4-EN30, Overall G4-DMA
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Chilled products represent a small but challenging proportion use of space by sharing a distribution centre, run by a third-
of our business: they must be transported at temperatures party logistics company with other industry members.
between 2–4°C, and often small quantities are required quickly.
By working with several external organisations, we made sure
In terms of optimising transport, this represents a significant
that our collaboration complied with legal competition
challenge – which is not unique to Nestlé.
requirements and protected both of our interests. The project
Thanks to an industry working group, our operations in Belgium was a success, providing both operational and environmental
were brought together with other companies to find a solution benefits: by lowering the amount of trucks on the road, we have
that helped both companies resolve this transportation issue. reduced carbon exhaust fumes by 63% and reduced CO2
After analysing the chilled product supply chains for our Herta emissions by 43 tonnes per year.
brand, we discovered that we could make the most efficient
Cumulative GHG reduced from 2011–2015 based Cumulative GHG savings from 2011–2015 (per
on changes to transport modes compared tonne of product dispatched) based on changes to
to 2011, e.g. shifting from road to rail/sea transport modes compared to 2011, e.g. shifting
(tonnes of CO2 eq saved) 3 from road to rail/sea (%) 3
2015 430 000 2015 12
2014 225 000 2014 7
2013 151 000 2013 5
Emissions dispatched through top We continually search for ways to further reduce the energy consumption in our warehouses by
100 warehouses
(kg CO2eq per tonne)4
improving illumination, heating, cooling, insulation and internal movements. We are particularly
focused on switching to renewable energy. We are currently ahead of schedule to meet our 2020
2016 8.0 objective, having reduced emissions by 11% against our 2014 baseline.
2015 8.7
2014 8.8 Using natural refrigerants
Hydrofluorocarbons (HFCs), known to contribute to climate change, are widely found in
refrigeration fluids. We are committed to using safe, natural refrigerants, such as CO2, ammonia,
water, air and hydrocarbons that do not contain HFCs for our refrigeration needs.
By 2016 – All our new ice cream chest, upright and island freezers will use natural refrigerants.
2016 – Expand the use of natural refrigerants, which do not harm the ozone layer and have a negligible impact on
By
climate change, in our industrial refrigeration systems.
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Our commitment
By 2016 – Provide climate change information in our Annual Report package using the Climate Change Reporting
Framework developed by the Climate Disclosure Standards Board.
We achieved our 2016 objective by providing climate change information in our Annual Report package,
using the Climate Change Reporting Framework. After careful consideration, we have extended our
objective to implement the Guide for Responsible Corporate Engagement in Climate Policy to 2020.
Nestlé endorses the following climate change initiatives, which we believe are aligned with
our commitments. These initiatives reflect our respect for the society, the environment and
future generations.
Our climate change initiatives
Initiative Description 2016 activities
Caring for The world’s largest By supporting Caring for Climate, Nestlé commits to renewing its efforts
Climate global coalition on to improve energy efficiency, reducing the GHG emissions of its products,
climate issues, with the setting voluntary targets and publicly reporting on progress in the spirit of
UNGC, UNEP and continuous improvement, as well as supporting related initiatives by other
UNFCCC leading international organisations such as the CDP.
CDP Climate Six initiatives on climate We have endorsed the following six climate action initiatives:
Action change with the CDP • Adopt evidence-based GHG emission reduction targets;
• Aim to procure 100% electricity from renewable sources;
• Remove commodity-driven deforestation from our supply chain;
• Provide climate change information in mainstream corporate filings;
• Responsibly engage policy-makers on climate change policy; and
• Put a price on carbon.
World Alliance Initiative launched We provide funding for the alliance, which exists under the aegis of the
for Clean by Solar Impulse United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC).
Technologies Foundation at COP22
We support several other major initiatives by leading international organisations. These include the
Trillion Tonne Communiqué by the Prince of Wales’s Corporate Leaders Group and the New York
Declaration on Forests.
Feed the Future is a US government initiative that supports farmers in cocoa-producing locations such as Ghana and Côte
country-driven approaches to addressing the root causes of d’Ivoire adopt agricultural practices to offset the challenges of
hunger and poverty. As part of its approach, Feed the Future climate change.
develops public-private partnerships, designed to create
Through the Climate Smart Cocoa project, we will directly
economic and social benefits for specific communities.
contribute to developing evidence-based action strategies, and
In this context, Nestlé signed a partnership with Feed the will also support the design and piloting of services and tools.
Future in 2016 to support its new strategic cocoa initiative. These could include agroforestry and drought-resistant
The Climate Smart Cocoa project aims to support smallholder agricultural practices to increase productivity.
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Our life-cycle assessments (LCAs) enable us to focus on improving our products’ environmental
impact. The LCAs also inform our decision-making, helping us to improve our environmental
performance by identifying environmental hotspots while responding to stakeholder concerns and
providing us with credible evidence to support specific communications.
We systematically conduct environmental assessments through our EcodEX (Eco-design for
Sustainable Product Development and Introduction) tool. EcodEX enables our product development
teams to assess environmental performance faster and much earlier in the design process,
assessing the overall impact of a packaged food along the value chain. We now deploy EcodEX
across our entire research and development (R&D) organisation. By the end of 2016, we evaluated
6641 projects and 19 297 scenarios using eco-design tools.
By 2017 – Identify or update and address the sustainability ‘hotspots’ for 15 product categories.
By 2020 – Identify, update and address the sustainability ‘hotspots’ for 20 product categories.
Prior to developing a new product, we assess its potential impacts through a five-point scale. We
share the data produced by our environmental assessments internally through the Nestlé Category
Sustainability Profiles. The profiles summarise areas of significant environmental impact (or
6 641 ‘hotspots’) and what we are doing to improve performance. In 2016, we published profiles for
19 product categories, including instant coffee, ice cream and pet food.
projects evaluated using
eco-design tools
Objective towards 2020
By 2017 – Further enlarge the scope of our database on agricultural raw materials used in EcodEX.
Our environmental findings are also useful for the wider environmental community, in terms of
Visit our website for more developing a better understanding of LCAs and the data they generate. To ensure the greatest
information on how we research accuracy, we work with external organisations to develop and maintain databases, particularly for
and apply the data we generate
raw materials. In 2016, more than 50 datasets were added to EcodEX. We are also funding further
through the LCAs.
data development projects.
Read more about how we apply our
LCA experience in Europe through Internally, experts from our Sustainability by Design networks continually seek ways to improve
piloting the Product Environmental our understanding of our LCAs and eco-design, building sustainability into the earliest phase of
Footprint.
product development.
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Consumption Manufacturing
The LCA assessment
Hotspots Hotspots
shows:
Water and energy: cup manufacturing, coffee Energy, water and waste: coffee production.
preparation, cup washing and machine cleaning Reduced GHG
Solutions
emissions by 21%
Solutions Responsible production and supply:
• LCA communication tools to encourage Reduced impact on • Zero waste for disposal
customers to compare energy and water use of water scarcity by 16% • Reduced water withdrawal and
different machines, cups and types of coffee Reduced non-renewable GHG emissions
• Online courses developed by Nestlé Professional resource depletion • Spent coffee grounds used as a
for hospitality and food service customers by 10% factory fuel
on waste management, including food loss
and waste
• An efficient and cost-saving machine due to a
better idle and an energy-saving mode
Packaging
Distribution and storage Hotspots
Energy: raw material extraction, packaging
Hotspots
processing
GHG emissions and energy: transportation from
Nestlé factory to point of sale. Solutions
• Development of materials made from
Solutions
responsibly managed sources and with
• A lternative modes of transport and reduced
improved environmental performance
journeys to reduce GHG emissions
*
ssessment of life cycle environmental impacts: Ispirazione Italiana/Milano 2 MTS130 solution vs. average roast and
A
ground solution serving a 40 ml black espresso to the consumer for out-of-home consumption in Europe.
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Our commitment
With ongoing We are committed to further playing our part in helping to reduce food loss and waste to help
collaboration and contribute to a resource-efficient circular economy. Not only will this help us secure supply of the
agricultural raw materials it sources, but it will also have a positive impact on society by supporting
commitment, we can rural development, water conservation and food security.
turn the tide. Those
To overcome one of the major challenges to measure food loss and waste, we steered the
who measure waste
development of a major global and recognised protocol, the Food Loss and Waste Protocol (FLW
can better manage it. Protocol) to coherently measure food loss and waste throughout the food chain. The Protocol,
That’s good news for which was created on behalf of the CGF and together with the WRI, UNEP, FAO, the WBCSD, the EC
people, business and and WRAP, was launched at the Global Green Growth Forum, held in Copenhagen, Denmark, in
the planet.” June 2016. We have piloted the Food Loss and Waste Accounting and Reporting Standard (FLW
Standard) standard in our dairy supply chain in Pakistan, and, to encourage its broader use, we ran a
Paul Bulcke,
CEO, Nestlé
training workshop at the first CGF Sustainability Summit together with WRI in October 2016.
Our Zero Food Wastage Taskforce leads food waste reduction initiatives across our value chain.
Following on from the 2015 launch of our commitment to reduce food loss and waste, the Taskforce
has developed and updated an operational masterplan to monitor progress. It also launched the
Food Waste Toolkit, designed to share and promote activities to reduce food loss and waste along
our value chain and raise awareness on the issue.
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In low income countries, the highest losses are at the beginning of the food chain (FAO, 2014).
80% 20%
30% 70%
We recently launched our transformation of the milk district in • Direct Supplier Farm Training – in which we assisted and
Qingdao, China. In practice, this implied the transition from trained the Qingdao farmers.
milk collection centres and small farms to direct supplier (DS) Since the implementation of the projects, the Qingdao milk
farms. The main objective of this change was to reduce milk district has changed dramatically. There are now 315 DS
loss and collection costs, increase quality, and improve farm farmers, providing better quality milk with fewer losses. This is
sustainability and product traceability. an example of how Nestlé intervention can help make the
We achieved this through three key projects: difference in the Vital First Mile of production.
• Cow Insemination Project – to help improve milk quality Read more about our work in the Dairy sector.
and production through nurturing a better quality of cow;
• Equipment Support Project – we helped farmers purchase
specific dairy farming equipment; and
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To further understand and reduce the waste occurring in our value chain, we analysed all potential causes of wastage, with
supply chain, we initiated a milk waste mapping exercise in losses quantified and extrapolated across the supply chain.
Pakistan, applying the Food Loss and Waste (FLW) Protocol
Results were impressive. The total milk loss in our supply chain
(see above). The Pakistani dairy sector was chosen because of
was estimated to be only 1.4%, significantly lower than
its complexity, the high volumes involved and because it
expected, due to the cooling, storage and transport systems
provided an opportunity to test our dairy hub model.
we have in place. In addition, sharing best practice between
Working with external consultants, we mapped the value chain farmers contributes to increased milk production and less milk
from farms to consumers. In total, Nestlé processes 480 being rejected by chilling centres, while improved management
kilotonnes of milk a year, sourced mainly from traditional small at the retail stage could further reduce product losses.
farms but also some larger operations. For each stage of the
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By-products
By-products are materials that leave our sites and are reused or recovered, including recycling,
Find out more about the Nestlé
Policy on Environmental composting and incineration with energy recovery. In 2016, we recovered 94% of the materials used
Sustainability. in manufacturing. We analyse the waste and by-products we generate through manufacturing to
identify best practices and opportunities that can be shared across markets.
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Our commitment
By 2020 – Drive alliances with relevant stakeholders to address packaging waste management and marine littering in
10 relevant markets.
The difference in approaches to packaging and waste recovery infrastructure across our markets
makes it harder to standardise our methods. We have intensified our efforts to prevent our
packaging from ending life as litter that then reaches oceans. Our new objective will ensure that we
work together with stakeholders – internal Nestlé departments as well as external industry and NGO
groups – to make an impact in key markets, including locations in the South-East Asia region.
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Packaging optimisation
Packaging materials used We began optimising packaging in 1991, ahead of our competitors; since then, we have avoided
(million tonnes) using 794 355 tonnes of packaging material and saved almost CHF 1.4 billion. We have also avoided
2016 5.0 more than 430 893 tonnes of CO2eq – equivalent to 91 679 cars being taken off the road for one year.
2015 5.3 As a result, we are pleased to announce that we have almost reached our 2017 target of optimising
our packaging portfolio – a year ahead of schedule.
2014 5.6
Although our target is in reach, we are also getting to the stage where removing more weight from
packaging could increase food loss and waste. This reality has seen us lower our expectations in
terms of how much packaging we can reduce in the years ahead. For this reason, we have
committed to implement a process for optimising package weight and volume from creation, which
we hope to have achieved by 2020. We also continue to seek new, innovative and sustainable
solutions that can help us further optimise packaging weight.
We continually seek innovative approaches to packaging. A enabled us to lower the weight of the 1.5 litre bottles from
recent example was our re-design to produce new lightweight 31.0 g to 25.5 g – a 17% saving. In terms of total PET saved from
bottles for our market-leading Vittel and Contrex bottled water all bottles, that is the equivalent of 2708 tonnes of plastic.
brands. The challenge was to generate real improvements in
Our initial tests for the new bottles, known as Ecoshape (Vittel)
terms of weight reduction while maintaining the premium
and Greenlight (Contrex), combined with our EasyGrip cap,
positioning of both brands.
showed clear consumer preference for the optimized
Our Packaging Development team identified several design packaging. As a result, we started manufacturing the bottles
modifications, including conversion to a shorter neck finish that for both brands, launching to market in 2016.
Renewable materials
Renewable packaging materials We are currently looking to focus on optimising our packaging using innovative materials, to further
(% of materials for packaging purposes)
improve its environmental performance. At present, 34.9% of the packaging materials we use are
2016 34.9 made from renewable materials, primarily paper and board. The renewable materials also include
2015 38.3 bio-polymers made from renewable resources. We are an active member of the Bioplastic
2014 39.6 Feedstock Alliance (led by WWF) to determine how to responsibly select raw materials.
The Bioplastic Feedstock Alliance (BFA) is a collaboration BFA, Nestlé has actively participated in the development of a
between many of the world’s leading brands that aims to methodology on how to assess feedstock sustainability, which
increase awareness about the sources of bio-based plastics. is currently being transferred online as an internet-based
Founded in 2013, the BFA seeks to raise understanding about Supply Risk tool.
the social and environmental performance of these sources. Its
The BFA has also been working on a position in support of
meetings are organised and convened by the WWF.
measurable, verifiable bio-based claims, which was released in
The primary focus of the alliance is to create guidance on the September 2016. The latest meeting of the alliance took place
responsible selection and harvesting of the feedstocks used to in the Northern Great Plains region, South Dakota, where the
make bioplastics. These feedstocks can include sugar cane, WWF is running a grassland restoration project that can
corn, bulrush and switchgrass. As a founding member of the generate by-products that can be converted into bioplastics.
Recovery
We also seek to recover packaging, particularly to prevent it from contaminating natural habitats,
such as oceans. Our recovery initiatives see us work with all partners along the supply chain, from
raw material suppliers to consumers, governments and non-profits, to engage stakeholders in
improving the collection, sorting and recycling infrastructure, and to find solutions that are
appropriate for all. Examples of our engagement in 2016 include an industry-wide collaboration to
collect packaging in Chile, and a project to up-cycle laminate sheets and chairs into school furniture
through Bear Brand in the Philippines.
G4-EN1, G4-EN2, Effluents and waste G4-DMA, G4-EN28, Supplier environmental assessment G4-DMA
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Recycled content
We use recycled materials for our packaging where they are proven by LCAs to be equal or better in
environmental performance, and do not jeopardise the quality, performance, safety or consumer
acceptance of our products. Recycled PET (rPET) is the only recycled plastic currently used by
Nestlé in direct contact with food and beverage products. We use it in countries where it has similar
or better environmental performance than virgin PET, and where it helps encourage consumers,
communities and other stakeholders to collect and recycle packaging.
We were a project partner for REFLEX, a UK-based R&D project that explored how to increase the
recyclability of flexible packaging across the supply chain. Although REFLEX concluded in 2016, it
has merged with another European project that we support, called ‘Mapping flexible packaging in a
circular economy’ (FIACE). The new partnership, CEFLEX (A Circular Economy for Flexible
Packaging), aims at capturing the added value of flexible packaging solutions in a circular economy
and identify future opportunities to make flexible packaging more circular.
In the USA, we are members of Materials Recovery for the Future (MRFF), an industry research
collaboration committed to finding recovery solutions for flexible plastic packaging. MRFF endorses
the use of plastics recovery facilities (PRFs), which convert plastics that were previously hard to
recycle into flakes or pellets that can be used by companies that produced recycled items, with the
remainder going into energy recovery. The sorting equipment was tested by the MRFF in 2016, with
a view to making it more efficient and feasible in the years to come.
Nestlé also contributed to the Ellen McArthur Foundation report, The New Plastics Economy, which
was published in January 2016, and participated in the inaugural workshop for the programme, held
in May.
G4-EN1, G4-EN2, Effluents and waste G4-DMA, G4-EN28, Supplier environmental assessment G4-DMA, G4-PR3
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We believe that people are more likely to adopt more sustainable behaviours when they have access
to clear, science-based and relevant information. We aim to keep our consumers as aware as
possible of the environmental performance of our products, through science-based evidence and
clear, meaningful information. Our LCAs give us a clear view of our products’ environmental
performance. We use this data as the basis of the information we give our consumers via packaging
and digital channels. We continue to support the development of the World Food LCA Database in
order for the food sector at large to benefit from sound and reliable datasets and we welcome its
inclusion in European Commission Product Environmental Footprint (PEF) compliant studies.
In 2016, we provided information to our consumers and other interested stakeholders on packaging,
brand websites and corporate websites in 131 countries.
The Product Environmental Footprint (PEF) is a project led by the The second phase of the pilot focused on how to communicate
European Commission to develop a common environmental assessment results to customers. For instance, for this phase,
footprint methodology for different product categories. We have we tested our Purina ONE and
worked closely with the Commission since 2014 to set up and Nestlé Waters Vittel bottled
validate the process of the development of category rules for water brand, tracking our
packed water, coffee and pet food, including the development efficiency in communicating
of performance benchmarks to test different compliance and first phase results. The aim
verification systems, and communication vehicles. of the pilot, the results of
which will be announced in
For example, the first phase of the pilot assessed our range
2017, was to determine how
of premium pet food, Purina ONE. We reviewed the
best to engage customers
environmental impacts from barn to bowl for adult dry cat food,
in more sustainable
focusing on our impact on climate change, water resources
purchasing decisions.
and land use. The analysis gave us a clearer idea of where
Purina ONE performs well and which areas require work.
We have deployed quick response (QR) codes via 4400 product websites covering more than
90 brands in 50 countries. The codes link packaging to mobile websites that contain related, user-
friendly content, including tips on sustainable consumption and use, and advice on how to avoid food
waste and how to reuse, recycle or dispose of packaging. But more work remains to be done, which
is why we have extended our commitment to 2020.
We engage internally and externally to ensure that we communicate science-based information
relevant to our stakeholders. Many of our products highlight their environmental sustainability
aspects through on-pack messaging, stating ingredients, production methods and adherence to
standards. Product packaging also often indicates how it can best be used and recycled to maximise
resource efficiency.
Internally, we educate our people through brand-led ‘Doing More’ workshops, designed to help teams
formulate action plans for effectively communicating their brand’s contribution across the three key
dimensions of nutrition, environment and society. We conducted two of these workshops in 2016.
We have developed new programmes that allow consumers to confectionery. With this in mind, Dairy 4 You was piloted in
learn more about the products that we offer. One such Brazil in 2016 for our Nido milk powder and liquid milk drinks.
programme is Dairy 4 You, a milk sourcing initiative that gives
We interviewed dairy farmers, milk factory workers and
consumers access to where it comes from.
nutritionists on where the milk that we use for Nido comes
Dairy is our single biggest category: we bought 14 million from, making this information easily available for consumers.
tonnes of fresh milk and derivatives in 20154, which we use in a We did this to give them insight into our practices and
range of products, including ice cream, beverages and processes. Dairy 4 You is set to be rolled out in several other
locations in the coming year.
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Our commitment
We recognise that our long-term success depends upon natural capital, particularly forests, land,
soils and water. We aim to develop our business and operations to safeguard natural capital, acting
as a responsible steward of natural resources, particularly in terms of water preservation, net zero
deforestation by 2020, soil management and biodiversity conservation.
Materials G4-DMA, Biodiversity G4-DMA, G4-EN11, G4-EN12, G4-EN13, G4-EN14, Effluents and waste G4-DMA, G4-EN26, Supplier environmental assessment G4-DMA
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Forest Several of our priority commodities – palm oil, paper packaging, soya and cattle – are associated with
high levels of deforestation. Other crops such as cocoa and coffee also contribute to deforestation in
some locations.
We are applying our Responsible Sourcing Guideline (RSG) to these commodities to eliminate
deforestation at the earliest opportunity. To facilitate measuring progress in this work, during 2016 we
piloted technology developed by Airbus, the Forest Trust and SarVison to use satellites to determine
the impact of deforestation programmes.
Ocean We apply our RSG to seafood, follow best practices on fertiliser application for our categories and
implement plastic recycling schemes.
Fresh water We are committed to responsible water stewardship across our supply chains, factories and
public policy.
Grasslands We apply a high conservation value approach to responsible land management and sourcing, and
seek to restore areas through our silvopastoral programmes.
Atmosphere We are reducing our emissions in factories and using natural refrigeration units, tackling
deforestation and facilitating dairy farmer investment in biogas digesters.
Soil As part of our agroforestry initiatives, we train farmers in soil conservation, water management, solid
waste and the use of agrochemicals and fertilisers. This training particularly forms part of our
responsible sourcing guideline on palm oil, soya and sugar, which we supplement with UTZ certification.
Our aim with Maggi is to responsibly source 21 of the group of farmers to receive training in environmental issues
vegetables and herbs we use for the brand by 2020. One of and sustainable growing practices, with the aim of protecting
these vegetables is tomatoes, which Maggi uses large water catchments and local biodiversity. The tomatoes grown
quantities of – 50 000 tomatoes annually for the German market were then tested in a Conesa-owned laboratory; after
alone. Some of these tomatoes are delivered as powder, some processing, including washing, 85% of that water is reused in
as puree and others are processed fresh. We depend on the process.
suppliers in the Mediterranean region and the specific climactic
Over the two years since we implemented the project, small
conditions there.
mammals have begun to make their home in the tomato fields
In 2014, we began a project with Conesa, one of the largest – an indicator of responsible water and soil use. Furthermore,
tomato producers in Europe, based in Extremadura, Spain. the application of drip irrigation has ensured that water use is
Conesa cultivates 4000 hectares, with an average crop yield of kept to a minimum. We plan to extend this project to other
95 tonnes per hectare. In the pilot, the supplier selected a crops in other regions
Materials G4-DMA, Biodiversity G4-DMA, G4-EN11, G4-EN12, G4-EN13, G4-EN14, Effluents and waste G4-DMA, G4-EN26, Supplier environmental assessment G4-DMA
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Collaborative action
The successful management of agrobiodiversity can deliver real benefits, at a regional and
global level. For several key categories, we have taken a direct, hands-on approach to assessing
impacts and influencing behaviours at a ground level. In locations close to areas of high
conservational value, we work with farmers to review their practices and develop action plans
that can support agrobiodiversity while providing socio-economic gains. These action plans
can include the following:
• Managing crop diversity through rotation and agroforestry;
• Adopting sustainable soil management practices;
• Promoting mixed farming systems, such as crop and livestock;
• Enhancing diversity by providing habitats for sensitive animal, plant and tree species; and
• Managing landscape diversity by conserving ecological corridors.
For example, for dairy, we assess farmers through Response-Inducing Sustainability Evaluation
Read more about RISE.
(RISE) studies, completing 55 studies in six markets in 2016. We also help farmers through specific
programmes, and support in the planting of different species of trees, hedges and shrubs to improve
localised biodiversity.
We engage with several initiatives that aim to help businesses assess, measure and value their
dependencies and impacts. These initiatives aim to enable organisations to better understand their
impact and identify appropriate environmental protection, management and restoration projects.
Nestlé is an active member of the Cambridge Natural Capital Leaders Program and the WBSC work
on redefining value.
Nestlé and Nespresso also helped the Natural Capital Coalition pilot its Natural Capital Protocol, a
global multi-stakeholder programme designed to support organisations in their understanding and
valuation of their own impacts and dependencies on nature. The Natural Capital Protocol was
launched in 2016.
As the fifth-largest papaya producer in the world, Mexico with a focus on plant protection and fertiliser. Alternative
exports multiple varieties to many countries. The recent agricultural methods tested included:
development of a variety specifically for the export market,
• Insect repellents made from aromatic herbs and plants;
which requires large quantities of pesticide to produce, has
forced us to source papaya from Ecuador for our babyfood • Plant disease control using natural fungicides; and
company Gerber. However, in 2015 we reassessed our Gerber • Fertilising plants with compost and organic fertiliser.
operations and began a new collaboration in Mexico. The project was a success: although papaya yields were lower
The collaboration involved local farmers and Frexport, a nearby than those for hybrids, samples from the Tierra Caliente harvest
processing facility. To support the adoption of good agricultural contained no traces of chemical contaminants, including
practices, the papaya growers were assessed through RISE, pesticides and heavy metals. Higher yielding seeds, although
more expensive, will be introduced in future, and the project
aims to achieve organic certification by 2019.
Materials G4-DMA, Biodiversity G4-DMA, G4-EN11, G4-EN12, G4-EN13, G4-EN14, Effluents and waste G4-DMA, G4-EN26
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9 Nestlé UK published
a report on modern
In Côte d’Ivoire, all
co-operatives registered
Began implementing
action plan to tackle
New action plans slavery and with our Nestlé Cocoa Plan human rights abuses
developed for 9 of human trafficking by August were part of our in Thai seafood
the 11 salient issues Child Labour Monitoring supply chain
and Remediation System
(CLMRS); the CLMRS also
expanded into Ghana
133 Our human rights and compliance strategy 136 Human rights 147 Compliance
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Read more on our actions in the Read more on our actions Read more on our actions
Rural development chapter. in this chapter. in the Our people chapter.
Our responsibility to respect human rights is at the forefront of our business. We continually review
and assess the human rights risks of our business activities, and strive to prevent and address any
negative impacts we may have on the rights of those whom we employ, do business with or interact
with along our value chain.
Through our Human Rights Due Diligence Programme (HRDDP), we identify and manage salient
human right issues – those at risk of the most severe impacts through our activities and business
relationships – and report on our progress through the UNGP Reporting Framework. Integrating this
reporting into our CSV report reflects the way human rights are integrated into our policies,
procedures and management systems. We believe this approach ensures human rights
considerations are embedded in our daily business activities wherever we operate.
G4-2, Investment G4-DMA, Child labor G4-DMA, Indigenous rights G4-DMA, Assessment G4-DMA, Supplier human rights assessment G4-DMA, Human rights grievance mechanisms G4-DMA
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External recognition
Our human rights and compliance leadership is independently reviewed as part of voluntary
third-party reporting initiatives, where the results and feedback are made public. We have
summarised the most significant recognition below.
Organisation Progress
Dow Jones With an overall score of 92 out of 100, Nestlé received industry-best scores in all three dimensions
Sustainability Index (economic, environmental and social) of the 2016 Dow Jones Sustainability Index (DJSI), a globally
(DJSI) recognised independent benchmark that measures the performance of the world’s largest 2500
companies. Our score for Social dimension, which includes labour practice indicators, was 86, the
joint-highest industry score in 2016.
The Index stated that ‘Nestle’s first-class human rights due diligence program demonstrates the
outstanding steps the company has taken to embed human rights measures into suppliers’
management policies’.
KnowTheChain In the 2016 benchmark, which covers the 20 largest food and beverage companies, Nestlé ranked
benchmark third, with a score of 57, for addressing forced labour. Our score demonstrates a higher degree of
transparency in our approach to managing forced labour risks in the supply chain. KnowTheChain is a
leading benchmark of corporate practices. Nestlé ranked first in the ‘worker voice’ theme, displaying
leading practices, and in the top three for commitment and governance and risk assessment.
UN Guiding We were one of the first companies to adopt the UNGP Reporting Framework, with 2016 being the
Principles first full year of its implementation within Nestlé.
Reporting
Framework
Corporate Human The CHRB assesses 98 of the largest publicly traded companies in the world on 100 human rights
Rights Benchmark indicators. Nestlé was ranked second in the agricultural products category with a score of 57%,
(CHRB) behind only Marks & Spencer (64%) and ahead of Unilever (55%). The average score in this
category is 28.8%. Overall, we were ranked fourth, behind Marks & Spencer and two extraction
companies, BHP Billiton and Rio Tinto.
Material issues
Out of our formal materiality process, two material issues fall under the banner of human rights and
compliance that are rated as being of high concern to our stakeholders and of strategic importance
to our business.
These issues are critical to our business, and our stakeholders expect us to play a leading role in
addressing them.
• Human rights: respecting human rights in our business activities, operations and supply chains.
Sub-issues:
–– Child labour
–– Forced labour in the upstream supply chain
–– Labour rights in our operations
G4-2, G4-56, Investment G4-DMA, Non-discrimination G4-DMA, Freedom of association and collective bargaining G4-DMA, Child labor G4-DMA, G4-HR5, Forced or compulsory labor G4-DMA,
Indigenous rights G4-DMA, Assessment G4-DMA, Supplier human rights assessment G4-DMA, Human rights grievance mechanisms G4-DMA, Anti-corruption G4-DMA,
Compliance (Society) G4-DMA, Customer privacy G4-DMA, Compliance (Product responsibility) G4-DMA
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Our commitments
Our public commitments are a result of our respect for individuals and families, communities and
the planet. Having listened to the views of others, we’ve identified what is important (with regards to
protecting human rights, for example) and where our skills and expertise can be best focused to
achieve positive outcomes for some of the world’s biggest challenges.
Our progress against our Our commitments align directly with our material issues. They drive continuous improvement and
objectives is indicated allow stakeholders to hold us to account for delivering on our promises. This year we have
throughout the report using introduced several new objectives for 2020 to help us achieve our commitments.
the following icons: Our commitments are:
Achieved Respecting and promoting human rights
In progress • Assess and address human rights impacts across our business activities;
Not yet achieved • Improve workers’ livelihoods and protect children in our agricultural supply chain;
New objective
Compliance
Visit our website for more • Enhance a culture of integrity across the organisation; and
information on our commitment
performance dashboard and GRI • Provide effective grievance mechanisms to employees and stakeholders.
content index.
Progress against our objectives is detailed in the following pages.
G4-2, Investment G4-DMA, Non-discrimination G4-DMA, Freedom of association and collective bargaining G4-DMA, Child labor G4-DMA, G4-HR5, Forced or compulsory labor G4-DMA,
Indigenous rights G4-DMA, Assessment G4-DMA, Supplier human rights assessment G4-DMA, Human rights grievance mechanisms G4-DMA, Anti-corruption G4-DMA,
Compliance (Society) G4-DMA, Customer privacy G4-DMA, Compliance (Product responsibility) G4-DMA
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Human rights
Sustainable Development Goals Our responsibility to respect human rights is at the forefront of our business,
and we continually review and assess the human rights risks of our business
We identified the following goals
where our work adds value: activities. We work to prevent and address any negative impacts we may
have on the rights of those whom we employ, do business with or interact
with throughout our value chain. We carefully balance compliance and
continuous improvement with transparency and confidentiality, adapting our
approach to local circumstances wherever we operate.
Assess and address human rights impacts across our business activities
G4-2, Freedom of association and collective bargaining G4-DMA, Child labor G4-DMA, Forced or compulsory labor G4-DMA, Indigenous rights G4-DMA, Assessment G4-DMA,
Supplier human rights assessment G4-DMA, Human rights grievance mechanisms G4-DMA
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In 2015 Nestlé identified 11 salient issues – those human rights at risk of the most severe negative
impact on stakeholders through the company’s activities and business relationships, and therefore
the material issues we most need to address. In 2016, we developed action plans for nine of these
issues – accommodation and basic service needs; child labour; freedom of association and
collective bargaining; forced labour; living wage; safety and health; working time; access to water
and sanitation; and data protection and privacy – the majority of which are important labour rights
issues for labourers and agricultural workers (for more information on labour rights, see Labour
rights in agricultural supply chains). We also further developed our existing plans for grievance
mechanisms. Our plans to tackle these issues are detailed in the chart below, and an action plan for
the remaining salient issue, land acquisition, will be developed in 2017. These action plans will guide
the work we do across all our markets to address human rights issues in the coming years.
We also developed our response to the Corporate Human Rights Benchmark (CHRB) initiative.
We contributed detailed inputs to the CHRB and were ranked fourth overall, and second in the
agricultural products category with a score of 57% (nearly double the average score of 28.8%
for this category).
In 2016, we continued to work on our unmet objective for 2015, to ensure that all FTSE4Good
Countries of Concern where we operate are covered by a human rights impact assessment and our
employees there trained to reduce human rights risks in our operations. In total, 12 out of 13 such
countries are now covered by impact assessments.
Salient issues
See our Index of Answers for
further information on our
The two tables below show the 11 salient issues identified and the stakeholders they affect, as well
response to the UNGPRF.
as the progress made towards addressing each issue in 2016.
Freedom of
1
association
and collective • • • • Human
Resources
Procurement
Our people, p171
bargaining
Human
Discrimination
Resources;
Procurement;
Safety, Agriculture;
4 Safety and health • • • • • Health and
Environment
Engineering;
Manufacturing;
Our people, p162
Supply Chain;
Sales; Group Risk
Services; Security
Freedom of association and collective bargaining G4-DMA, G4-HR4, Forced or compulsory labor G4-DMA, Indigenous rights G4-DMA, Assessment G4-DMA, Customer privacy G4-DMA
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p93
9
Access to water
and sanitation • • • • • Water Operations Water, p105
Access to
10 grievance
mechanisms
• • • • • • Compliance Public Affairs
Human rights and
compliance, p140
11
Data protection
and privacy • • • Legal IT security
Human rights and
compliance, p149
9 Freedom of
association and
collective
2017 – work with suppliers to promote the rights for their workers to establish and join
organisations of their choosing and engage in constructive negotiations; engage a discussion with
the International Labour Organization (ILO) and Fair Labor Association (FLA) to better understand
salient issues
bargaining what freedom of association and collective bargaining means in the context of smallholder farming.
Working time 2017 – work with suppliers to identify how to gather data.
2018 – roll out system to major Tier 1 suppliers. Report annually on progress.
2020 onwards – start rolling out system to Tier n1 suppliers, farmer co-operatives and farmers/
farm workers; report annually on progress.
Workers’ 2017 – create minimum standard for worker accommodation and measurable KPIs; work with
accomodation partners and suppliers to gain data and address gaps.
and access to 2018 – roll out system to major Tier 1 suppliers; report annually on progress.
basic services 2020 onwards – start rolling out system to Tier n1 suppliers, farmer co-operatives and farmers/
farm workers; report annually on progress.
Safety and health 2017–18 – data gathering to understand material risks; work with key suppliers to establish
suitable measurable KPIs to measure progress on safety and health that is comparable to our
reporting in our own (direct) Nestlé operations.
2019 – roll out system to major Tier 1 suppliers; report annually on progress.
2020 onwards – start rolling out system to Tier n1 suppliers (ie, those beyond Tier 1), farmer
co-operatives and farmers/farm workers; report annually on progress.
Living wage 2017–18 – engage externally to develop a better understanding of the identification and methods
that can be applied to promote and deliver living wages and incomes; undertake pilot projects in
four countries and commodities to gain better understanding of living wages and incomes.
2019 – roll out system to major suppliers and Farmer Connect farmers, and report annually
on progress.
Child labour 2017 – continue to tackle child labour in our cocoa supply chain in Côte d’Ivoire and our hazelnut
supply chain in Turkey, where child labour is endemic, as well as projects in the vanilla supply chain in
Madagascar; identify remediation efforts for other commodities, focusing on vulnerable groups,
especially girls and children of migrant workers.
2018 – roll out system to major suppliers and report annually on progress.
Forced labour 2017 – continue to address forced labour in Thai seafood supply chain, as well as in palm oil supply
chains in Indonesia and Malaysia, including collective action. Identify measurable KPIs and work
with suppliers to gather data. The immediate priorities are that: no worker should pay for a job; every
worker should have freedom of movement; no worker should be indebted or coerced to work.
2018 – roll out system to major suppliers, report annually on progress.
Access to water 2017 – focus on access to water and sanitation in water-scarce countries where we operate. Release
and sanitation the Nestlé Guidelines on Respecting the Human Rights to Water and Sanitation.
Access to grievance Ongoing – continue to roll out ‘Tell us’ system for external stakeholders.
mechanisms By 2020 – pilot different grievance mechanism models to the upstream supply chain in priority
countries identified by our labour rights roadmap; report annually on progress.
Data protection 2017 – continue to develop data protection and privacy measures for our employees and consumers
and privacy in line with the evolving regulatory environment and our own Privacy Policy.
Freedom of association and collective bargaining G4-DMA, G4-HR4, Forced or compulsory labor G4-DMA, G4-HR6, Indigenous rights G4-DMA, Assessment G4-DMA, Customer privacy G4-DMA
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Nestlé’s salient human rights issues and corresponding SDG goals and targets
1 Freedom of 8.5
16.6
association and 8.8 16.7
collective 16.10
bargaining 16b
3 Workers’ 6.1
7.1
11.1
1.4
3.3
accommodation 6.2 11.2 3.4
and access to basic 6.3 11.c
services 6.4
10 Access to 16.3
grievance 16.6
mechanisms 16.7
16.10
16.b
Freedom of association and collective bargaining G4-DMA, Forced or compulsory labor G4-DMA, G4-HR6, Assessment G4-DMA, Customer privacy G4-DMA
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1. Policy commitments
Our approach
We mainstream human rights into corporate policies and commitments to make them operational.
Our achievements in 2016
Disseminated the Nestlé Commitment on Labour Rights in Agricultural Supply Chains, published in
December 2015.
2. Stakeholder engagement
Our approach
We engage with key stakeholders to get global and local insights into our human rights
performance.
Our achievements in 2016
In 2016, we continued to engage with stakeholders both locally as part of our Human Rights Impact
Assessment in Egypt and globally with a variety of organisations such as the Danish Institute for
Human Rights, the Fair Labor Association, the International Labour Organization (ILO), Oxfam,
Solidaridad, UN Global Compact, UTZ and Verité. In addition, we organised a stakeholder convening
in Geneva, which included a specific human rights breakout session with expert stakeholders.
5. Impact assessment
Our approach
We assess human rights impacts in our business activities to address them effectively.
Our achievements in 2016
We conducted a human rights impact assessment in Egypt. We also started to carry out
assessments on our tomato supply chains in Spain and Italy since in both countries, the workforce in
this supply chain is largely migrant. Our partner Proforest also began assessing child labour issues in
our sugar cane supply chain.
6. Governance
Our approach
We establish clear roles and responsibilities at different levels of the company. Nestlé’s top management
commitment and leadership on human rights is reflected at different stages of the company.
Our achievements in 2016
There have been no updates in 2016.
Investment G4-DMA, Freedom of association and collective bargaining G4-DMA, G4-HR5, Forced or compulsory labor G4-DMA, Assessment G4-DMA, G4-HR9, G4-HR11, G4-HR12
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7. Partnerships
Our approach
We partner with leading organisations to improve our human rights performance on the ground and
deliver on our commitments.
Our achievements in 2016
We started to engage with our second vanilla supplier, MANE, to upscale our activities on the
ground in Madagascar.
Audits/ Grievance
assessment mechanisms
Tier 1 suppliers Nestlé Supplier Responsible Sedex Members ‘Tell us’ DIHR
Code Sourcing Audit Ethical Trade SGS
Programme Audits (SMETA)
4-Pillar Intertek
Bureau Veritas
G4-LA15, Investment G4-DMA, G4-HR1, G4-HR2, Freedom of association and collective bargaining G4-DMA, G4-HR5, Forced or compulsory labor G4-DMA, Assessment G4-DMA, G4-HR9,
G4-HR11, Human rights grievance mechanisms G4-DMA, G4-HR12
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Freedom of association and collective bargaining G4-DMA, Forced or compulsory labor G4-DMA, Assessment G4-DMA, G4-HR11, G4-HR12
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Our Nestlé Supplier Code and Responsible Sourcing Guideline Development Center (SEAFDEC) to develop a training
require all our suppliers to respect human rights and to comply programme to educate fishing vessel owners, captains and
with all applicable labour laws. To reinforce this, we are acting crew members on living and working conditions onboard the
to eliminate labour and human rights abuses in the seafood boats, and on workers’ rights. We are currently assisting in the
supply chain. In 2015, we commissioned Verité, an development of a training vessel that will demonstrate
independent non-governmental organisation (NGO) that works acceptable conditions, ahead of its deployment in 2017.
with companies to help understand and tackle labour issues, to
In March, we entered into a partnership with the Issara
investigate allegations of abuses in the Thai fishing industry. It
Institute, a not-for-profit body specialising in worker voice and
collected information from fishing vessels, ports, mills and
grievance mechanisms. The partnership will help drive
farms in Thailand on a range of issues, including trafficking,
improvements in conditions by providing workers with a new
forced and underage labour, lack of grievance procedures,
channel through which to voice their concerns. Our suppliers
workplace conditions, and wages and benefits. Following
are working with Issara, which is visiting sites in our supply
Verité’s investigation we developed and launched an action
chain to implement its Inclusive Labour Monitoring
plan on seafood sourced from Thailand, with a dedicated
programme.
manager based in Thailand to oversee its implementation. The
plan contains a series of actions designed to protect workers We also joined the Seafood Task Force in 2016, and we
from abuses, improve working conditions and tackle continue to participate in Task Force multi-stakeholder
unacceptable practices. meetings. We believe collaborative actions can lead to broader
and more effective solutions to address human rights and
In 2016, we worked with Verité, our supplier Thai Union, the
labour abuses.
Royal Thai Government and the Southeast Asian Fisheries
Protecting children
Combating child labour is a top priority for Nestlé, especially in our supply chains for hazelnuts in
Sustainable Development Goals
Turkey, vanilla in Madagascar and cocoa in Côte d’Ivoire. Child labour has been identified as a
We identified the following goals serious issue in all three supply chains, but the root causes and remedies differ considerably.
where our work adds value: Moreover, the scale of the challenge is enormous – one of the biggest global challenges we have.
The size of the problem is such that eliminating child labour in its entirety may not be possible, but
we need to be able to detect it everywhere and take all the actions necessary to decrease the
reasons why it exists. We aim to ensure that in the future, the only occurrences we find are of
children helping their own families.
We therefore work with a range of stakeholders to identify the root causes of child labour, and to
develop and implement effective solutions, such as enabling children to receive an education rather
than being used for labour. Together with these partners, we provide comprehensive monitoring,
effective remediation activities and targeted support to local communities.
In Côte d’Ivoire, all co-operatives registered with our Nestlé Cocoa Plan by August were part of our
Child Labour Monitoring and Remediation System (CLMRS) by the end of the year. Thanks to the
success of the CLMRS, in 2016 we were able to extend the system into Ghana. The first data
collection from Ghana will be available next year.
193 424 Outcome indicators Country Unit 2015 2016
farmers and community members
reached through the CLMRS % of women in leadership positions Côte d’Ivoire, Ghana, % n/a 8.9
Indonesia, Ecuador
Number and % of children participating in child labour Côte d’Ivoire Number 5 135 6 065
% 19 16
Read more about our cocoa Number and % of child labour cases assisted Côte d’Ivoire Number 3 591 4 680
supply chain. % 70 77
G4-LA15, Freedom of association and collective bargaining G4-DMA, Child labor G4-DMA, G4-HR5, Forced or compulsory labor G4-DMA, Assessment G4-DMA, G4-HR11, G4-HR12
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Our partner the Fair Labor Association (FLA) produced an updated report on our standard (i.e.
non-Nestlé Cocoa Plan) cocoa supply chain in Côte d’Ivoire, interviewing 110 farmers and 322 farm
workers in four communities. In light of the findings from this monitoring, we’re focusing on
identifying and addressing the root causes of child labour. We are developing a number of specific
actions, such as an electronic database of farmers and their families, training and labour standards,
and further communication of our Supplier Code. We will also be working with farmers to help them
increase their yields and incomes, as low income is known to be a driver of child labour at farm level.
Furthermore, we are preparing a major report on child labour in Côte d’Ivoire, which will be published
in mid-2017. This will enable us to learn from the findings, and agree best practices to help children.
Farmers
Sell the cocoa they
Trained to improve produce to a farming In Côte d’Ivoire we buy
their productivity and co-operative (co-op) cocoa from about 79 co-ops
income and to avoid and farmer groups
child labour
Community
Liaison People
Chosen by their local
Gather data about whether community
the children of farmers are Responsible for educating
working and, if so, if it is communities about the dangers
child labour, or children face on farms. These
non-hazardous work that sessions are open to everyone,
doesn’t interfere with not only farmers supplying Nestlé
schooling
Co-op Child
Labour Agents
Help to devise and Coordinate the
organise the specific Community Liaison
intervention efforts People in their co-op
needed to help each child
Suppliers
Help to recruit child
labour agents Support data
gathering process
Nestlé
Ensures data is
collected and
intervention efforts
are taking place
This infographic shows how the Child Labour Monitoring and Remediation System (CLMRS) works.
Although the CLMRS operates exclusively in our cocoa supply chain, similar mechanisms exist to
address child labour in other categories, including vanilla in Madagascar and hazelnuts in Turkey.
G4-LA15, Freedom of association and collective bargaining G4-DMA, Child labor G4-DMA, G4-HR5, Forced or compulsory labor G4-DMA, Assessment G4-DMA, G4-HR11, G4-HR12
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Number of 22 40 69
co-operatives in the
CLMRS
10 069 In Turkey, we identified an increase in the number of children working in the hazelnut supply chain,
possibly due to rising numbers of Syrian refugees moving into Turkey. Remedial activities include
community awareness taking children out of the supply chain and into education. However, temporary schools in migrant
sessions held
camps are often very basic and conditions may not necessarily be beneficial.
Along with key suppliers Olam-Progida and BALSU, and the Turkish Ministry of Labour and Social
Security, we are also working on an FLA-led project, funded by the United States Department of
Labor, to reduce child and forced labour in the hazelnut supply chain. As part of an institutional
survey, in 2016, the FLA published the results of worker profiling carried out with 456 workers and
99 farms, with community profiling scheduled for early 2017. The local implementing partner, the
Young Life Foundation, piloted a number of interventions in Ordu and Duzce municipalities during
the harvest period, such as summer schools for the children of migrant hazelnut pickers,
establishing a database of labour contractors, and providing awareness-raising training to farmers,
families and their children, and government representatives. A total of 286 children from 22 villages
were provided with a safe space during the harvest season. The findings from the institutional
survey have been shared with the companies involved, enabling further company-level
interventions to be planned for 2017.
In Madagascar, vanilla farmers often have low incomes and vanilla farming is labour intensive. As a
result, farmers often rely on child labour. Nestlé has been working to help farmers diversify their
crops and gain additional sources of income. Having previously focused our responsible sourcing
activities on one supplier, Givaudan, in 2016 we started to engage with our second supplier, MANE,
to upscale our activities on the ground.
We continue to work with Verité, an independent NGO specialising in fair labour, to assess the
extent and causes of child labour in our seafood supply chain. The assessment has highlighted
unethical recruitment as a root cause, with child labourers being trafficked from other countries
such as Myanmar, Cambodia and Indonesia.
Also in 2016, Proforest continued to carry out assessments for Nestlé on child labour in the sugar
cane supply chain.
Child labour, and its root causes, are also part of a wider set of issues involving forced and migrant
labour. These issues are interconnected, and so our work with our partners and our remedial
activities must form part of a connected response. The issue of migrant workers and its effects on
child labour became particularly apparent in 2016, with a sharp increase in migrant workers from
Syria and southern Africa. By improving our knowledge of how workers from these and other
countries are being recruited, we can gain a better understanding of the root causes of child labour,
especially in the hazelnut, cocoa and vanilla supply chains. From the audits carried out, we also
Read more about how Nestlé realised that the audit system was no longer adequate to address the causes. The audits informed us
combats child labour. of the number of children working in the supply chain, but any number is too many. Instead, we need
to identify why they are there, and we are now working with the FLA to replace this audit
programme and to identify and implement new ways of working that will be more effective in
enabling us to address these causes.
G4-LA15, Freedom of association and collective bargaining G4-DMA, Child labor G4-DMA, G4-HR5, Forced or compulsory labor G4-DMA, Assessment G4-DMA, G4-HR11, G4-HR12
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Many of the workers in the sugar cane industry in Mexico are We implemented a number of checks, such as ID inspections,
migrant labourers from poor areas, including children. to avoid children entering field work or working with chemicals.
Working with Proforest, we have been tackling this issue at the We also worked with La Gloria to develop policies stating that it
La Gloria mill. was not appropriate or permissible to employ children in the
harvesting, and particularly the cutting, of sugar cane. Policies
Although there is a lot of pressure from the government, NGOs
were shared with the cabos, the leaders of the cutting teams
and others to address child labour, it can be a sensitive issue in
who were responsible for hiring workers. We trained the cabos
the actual mills, with some resistance to attempted remedies.
in what was expected from them and made sure they
This has made it difficult to establish a clear plan, and so it
understood the relevant law and sanctions relating to
became clear that a progressive approach was required. This
employing children. The mill subsequently monitored the cabos
meant initially aiming to reduce the number of children working
to ensure the policies were followed.
in the field rather than seeking an immediate end to child
labour, and ensuring that children were involved in areas that The number of children employed at the mill has since fallen
did not put them or their health at risk. significantly, and our expectation is that within three years,
child labour will have been eliminated at La Gloria.
G4-LA15, Freedom of association and collective bargaining G4-DMA, Child labor G4-DMA, G4-HR5, Forced or compulsory labor G4-DMA, Assessment G4-DMA, G4-HR11, G4-HR12
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Compliance
Sustainable Development Goals We are committed to a strong compliance culture across our business, as
reflected in the Nestlé Corporate Business Principles. We will do what is
We identified the following goals
where our work adds value: necessary to ensure that our company is managed in line with the principles,
through both internal reporting and external audits. We encourage employees,
suppliers and stakeholders to report practices or actions at Nestlé that are
believed to be inappropriate or illegal, and we investigate all complaints with
impartiality, prohibiting retaliation. When a breach is identified, we put an
immediate end to it and take appropriate response measures.
Anti-corruption
Our commitment
36 524 This builds on and strengthens our previous commitment to work against bribery and corruption.
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Minor 52 9 14 7 20
Major 14 4 5 0 4
Critical 0 0 0 0 0
Our commitment
31%
38% Leadership style
Other
12% 19%
Discrimination Labour practices
and harassment
G4-50, G4-57, G4-58, Compliance (Environmental) G4-DMA, Environmental grievance mechanisms G4-DMA, Labor practices grievance mechanisms G4-DMA, G4-LA16,
Non-discrimination G4-DMA, Security practices G4-DMA, Anti-corruption G4-DMA, Compliance (Society) G4-DMA, G4-HR7, Grievance mechanisms for impacts on society G4-MDA, G4-PR7
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‘Tell us’
‘Tell us’ is a communication channel run by Nestlé but managed externally that enables external
7 748 stakeholders to report possible compliance and non-compliance issues against the Nestlé Corporate
suppliers have access to ‘Tell us’ Business Principles or applicable laws. ‘Tell us’ has been made available to 7748 suppliers.
In 2016, an additional 35 Nestlé countries, including Brazil, Thailand, India and countries in Central
America, the Equatorial Africa Region and ZAR (South Africa Region), communicated a ‘Tell us’ link
on local corporate websites. Remaining regions will follow suit so that, where legally possible, all
Nestlé countries will have communicated the system on their websites by the end of 2017. Other
communication methods are also used where appropriate to reach as many employees as possible.
In 2016, we received 642 messages via ‘Tell us’. These fell into two main categories – compliance-
35 related complaints, and non-compliance-related issues, e.g. consumer-related or general
countries implemented our complaints. All comments received have been, or are being, addressed, and are detailed below.
‘Tell us’ communication channel
for reporting non-compliances In total, 13 issues were confirmed, leading to further consequences: five conflicts of interest, four
leadership issues, three fraud cases and one instance of harassment. As a result, 14 warning letters
were issued, there was one dismissal and a total of 15 people left the company, while internal control
measures were reinforced.
‘Tell us’ 2016 complaints received
Compliance related
Private-to-private bribery 4
Environmental sustainability 1
Seeking advice 9
Supplier concerns 9
Labour practices 18
Leadership style 10
Non-compliance related
Total 642
Data privacy
13 729 The data protection regulatory landscape underwent great change in 2016, due to the adoption of
the European General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR), a major reform designed to strengthen
employees received and unify data protection, and China’s new Cybersecurity Law.
data privacy training
To meet the demands of the ever-changing regulatory landscape and new consumer expectations
for data protection, Nestlé commenced a project to undertake a review of its personal data
processing and related procedures. The purpose of the project is twofold:
1. To ensure necessary changes are made to Nestlé’s current practices to meet requirements under
See our GRI Index for additional
privacy data (indicator G4-PR8). the GDPR when it comes into effect in 2018; and
2. To have a consistent, simplified and standardised approach to the handling of personal data
across the Nestlé Group.
Two key features of the compliance project are a new Data Privacy Standard, which will reinforce
Nestlé’s data protection principles across the world, and a revised and strengthened data protection
organisation comprising data privacy officers and champions to support the implementation of
Nestlé’s data protection strategy.
We also carried out further data privacy training in 2016, with 13 729 people completing
e-learning courses.
G4-49, G4-57, G4-58, Environmental grievance mechanisms G4-DMA, G4-EN34, Labor practices grievance mechanisms G4-DMA, G4-LA16, Human rights grievance mechanisms G4-DMA,
Anti-corruption G4-DMA, Grievance mechanisms for impacts on society G4-MDA, G4-SO11, G4-PR7, Customer privacy G4-DMA, G4-PR8
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Security
All security personnel working on Nestlé’s behalf are expected to respect human rights, act within
Find out more about Nestlé’s
Corporate Business Principles and the law and comply with the company’s rules, as outlined by our Nestlé Group Security Policy and
how we live them. Corporate Business Principles.
We run two mandatory online training modules for site security representatives. The first module
covers the principles and security governance; the second is more technical, but includes guidance
on where to install surveillance cameras so as to respect privacy. Both modules attended by 382
security representatives and include specific points on human rights.
Furthermore, we held three regional workshops for security managers where particular emphasis
was made on security and human rights.
We also incorporated an audit component for security within the CARE programme, which revealed
20 minor gaps and four major gaps in 2016.
Taxation
Sustainable Development Goals Taxation has been identified by our stakeholders as a material issue for
We identified the following goals
Nestlé. We view the tax we pay as part of both compliance (business ethics)
where our work adds value: and Creating Shared Value in the countries where we operate. We believe it
is good practice to disclose information about our tax management
principles and key tax indicators and contributions.
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If we analyse the taxes borne by type, 48 % of the CHF 6.4 billion was taxes on profit, 30% taxes on
employment, 17% taxes on transactions, 3% taxes on properties and 2% taxes on environment.
If we analyse the taxes borne by geography, 37% of the CHF 6.4 billion was incurred in our EMENA
Zone, 36% in our Americas Zone, and 27% in our AOA Zone. 73% of that amount was borne in our
top 10 countries.
The remaining CHF 8.3 billion of taxes were taxes collected by Nestlé through our operations and
paid to governments.
Finally, we had a Group “VAT Throughput” of CHF 22,500 billion, i.e. for the total of all VAT receivable
(on customers) and VAT payable (to suppliers), as an indicator of the volume of VAT (and similar
indirect consumption based taxes), generated and managed by Nestlé worldwide.
G4-EC1
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Our people
Helping develop thriving, resilient communities
Our 2030 ambition is to improve 30 million livelihoods in communities directly connected to our business
activities. At Nestlé, our purpose is to enhance quality of life and contribute to a healthier future. This has to
be reflected in everything we do, in all our products and brands. In pursuing our purpose, we are guided by
our values, which are rooted in respect. This means respect for ourselves, for others, for diversity and for
the future. People are at the heart of our company. They ensure our success and without them nothing can
be achieved. This is why we care for people first and why we put people above systems.
SDG 1: SDG 3: SDG 4: SDG 5: SDG 8: SDG 10: SDG 16: SDG 17:
No poverty Good health Quality education Gender equality Decent work and Reduced Peace, justice and Partnerships
and wellbeing economic growth inequalities strong institutions for the goals
153 Our people strategy 156 Why our people matter 162 Building a safer, healthier workplace
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Investor benefits According to the UN, 1.2 billion people still live in extreme poverty. More than 75% of them live
in rural areas and depend on agriculture, including family smallholdings, for their livelihoods. We
Our work ensures we stay ahead of
regulations, helping us reduce costs aim to improve livelihoods and develop thriving communities. Driven by our company purpose
and improve revenues, as to enhance quality of life and contribute to a healthier future, we have defined an overarching
consumers are increasingly looking ambition that will guide our work towards achieving our 2020 commitments and supporting the
for products that take care of human
rights in the supply chain.
achievement of the SDGs. Our 2030 ambition is to improve 30 million livelihoods in communities
directly connected to our business activities
Our business benefits from
attracting and retaining the best
talent through initiatives such as Enhancing rural livelihoods Respecting and promoting Promoting decent
the Nestlé Global Youth Initiative. human rights employment and diversity
A positive reputation for employee
training and development enhances
the Company’s ability to recruit and By 2050 the world will have to Human rights abuses often
retain talent. produce 50% more food than occur when people are at their
today to feed the population – most vulnerable, and can take
but climate change is making many forms – from labour
it harder for farmers in rural abuses to slavery or child labour.
communities to grow enough People expect companies to
See our GRI Index for additional crops and earn a living. We rely uphold the highest standards
workforce and Health and
on people living and working in in protecting, respecting and
Safety data.
rural communities to produce promoting the rights of their
the ingredients that go into our employees and those who work Global uncertainty over the
food. We have a responsibility to for their partners and suppliers. economy is generating concern
make sure that our farmers and Our business is founded on over the future. Young people
their families are healthy and respect. Human rights abuses everywhere are finding it harder
have sufficient resources and of any kind have no place in than ever to find jobs, with many
food. By supporting them and our business and supply chain, lacking qualifications and skills.
helping their children to thrive, and we have a responsibility to The world cannot afford to lose
we build stronger communities. respect human rights across a generation to unemployment.
our business. It is critical to the We are determined to help
security and wellbeing of our young people find jobs and
workforce and suppliers. training while supporting local
communities, fairly and without
prejudice. Good working
conditions, respect for labour
practices and human rights are
essential – as are a safe and
healthy work environment and
flexible employment, which
enable us to attract and retain
the best people, from the widest
range of people and cultures.
Read more on our actions in Read more on our actions in Read more on our actions in
the Rural development chapter. the Human rights and this chapter.
compliance chapter.
Employment G4-DMA
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Our talent pool should reflect the societies in which we operate. We aim to provide a workplace
culture that generates equal opportunities for everyone, where people are treated with dignity and
respect. We’re also committed to promoting youth employment. As a major employer, we can make
a positive difference by providing employment and training opportunities and skills development for
young people, which in turn can help alleviate poverty.
We are also committed to the development of our people and encourage lifelong learning to help
our employees build successful careers and achieve their potential.
Ultimately, ensuring there is more to life at Nestlé begins with safeguarding the safety and health of
our people. We want to see all our employees living safe and healthy lives. As we seek to enhance
quality of life and contribute to a healthier future, we also want to help our employees take personal
responsibility, make more informed decisions about their own health, and choose to live and work in
a safe and healthy way. We also listen to what our people have to say to us through our biennial
Nestlé & I engagement survey.
External recognition
Our leadership as an employer is independently reviewed as part of voluntary third-party reporting
initiatives, where the results and feedback are made public. We have summarised the most
significant recognition below.
Organisation Progress
Thomson-Reuters We were ranked 13 th in the 2016 Thomson-Reuters Diversity & Inclusion Index, with a score of
Diversity & 76.75%. The Index ranks the top 100 publicly traded companies globally with the most diverse and
Inclusion Index inclusive workplaces, across 24 measurements.
Dow Jones With an overall score of 92 out of 100, Nestlé is industry leader.
Sustainability Index For the ‘social’ dimension, which encompasses:
2016 • Corporate citizenship/philanthropy;
• Human capital development;
• Labour practice indicators and human rights;
• Occupational health and safety;
• Social reporting; and
• Talent attraction and retention, we have the equal-highest industry score, with 86.
Asian-Pacific Nestlé Purina Petcare received the Champion of Diversity Award at the OCA’s 43rd Fundraising and
American Youth Scholarship Gala, recognising our work to develop and support diversity in the workplace.
Advocates (OCA)
Working Mother Nestlé India was recognised as one of the top 100 best companies for women in India 2016.This
was based on a study undertaken by Working Mother, a gender parity champion in the United
States, and the AVTAR Group, India’s leading diversity advocate and workplace inclusion expert.
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Material issues
Out of our formal materiality process, four material issues fall under the banner of ‘Our people’ that
Visit our website for more
information on our material issues are rated as being of high concern to our stakeholders and of strategic importance to our business,
across our value chain. namely: human resources, safety and health, community development and unemployment,
and women’s empowerment. These issues are critical to our operations as an ethical and
responsible business, and our stakeholders expect us to play a leading role in addressing them.
• Fair employment and youth employability: developing Nestlé’s human capital, including
maintaining positive relations with employees, promoting positive working conditions and youth
employment.
Sub-issues:
–– Employee benefits, remuneration, attraction, retention
–– Employee diversity
–– Employee engagement
–– Employee training and learning
–– Job creation and youth employment
• Employee safety, health and wellness: targeting zero accidents in the workplace, promoting
safe and healthy employee behaviours, and helping employees make more informed decisions to
achieve and maintain a healthy lifestyle.
Our commitments
Our public commitments are a result of our respect for individuals and families, communities and the
planet. Having listened to the views of others, we’ve identified what is important (with regards to
promoting diversity and supporting youth employment, for example) and determined where our
skills and expertise can be best focused to achieve positive outcomes for some of the world’s
biggest challenges.
Our public commitments align directly with our material issues. They drive continuous improvement
and allow stakeholders to hold us to account for delivering on our promises. Our commitments are
Our progress against our supported by a series of objectives to ensure we achieve each of them. This year we have introduced
objectives is indicated several new 2020 objectives to take our work forward.
throughout the report using
the following icons: Our commitments are:
Achieved • Enhance gender balance in our workforce and empower women across the entire value chain;
In progress • Roll out the Global Youth Initiative across all our operations;
Not yet achieved • Provide training on Corporate Business Principles, Nutrition and Environmental Sustainability;
New objective • Advocate for healthy workplaces and healthier employees; and
• Ensure that all Nestlé employees are covered by a certified safety and health
Visit our website for more
information on our commitment management system.
performance dashboard and
GRI content index.
Progress against our objectives is detailed in the following pages.
Employment G4-DMA, Labor/management relations G4-DMA, Occupational health and safety G4-DMA, Training and education G4-DMA, Diversity and equal opportunity G4-DMA,
Equal remuneration for women and men G4-DMA
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The diversity of our workforce in 2016 Total rate of employee turnover by age group and
gender (2016) (%)
Total workforce by gender *
Female Male
Women 93 122 (34.6%)
<30 19.74 17.43
Men 176 189 (65.4%)
30–50 12.12 9.99
*
overs Nestlé employees registered in the HR system
C
(approximately 82.1% of all employees). 50+ 11.84 10.82
G4-10, G4-LA1, Diversity and equal opportunity G4-DMA, G4-LA12, Equal remuneration for women and men G4-DMA
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In Nestlé Japan, management positions are mostly occupied by this, we’re providing development programmes including
men with similar backgrounds. We have set a goal to have 20% overseas personnel exchanges for female employees,
of management positions filled by women by 2020. To support supported by mentoring.
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Women in Nestlé Sales aims to enable us to succeed in the to attract and retain high-calibre employees, increase
marketplace by focusing on diversity and inclusion. The awareness and appreciation of diversity, create a supporter
scheme has three pillars: recruiting and retaining talent, work– and champion network, and provide personal career
life balance, and navigating your career. Through these, it aims development guidance.
SWAN Connect
We continued to implement SWAN – Senior Women at Nestlé – in 2016. Sponsored by the
company’s Executive Board, SWAN aims to help increase the representation of women in senior
leadership positions, through high-profile projects, informal mentoring and advocacy of talented
women. In 2016, SWAN set up a mentoring programme for young female talented managers –
SWAN Connect. Participants are paired with senior female role models with whom they meet to
discuss career challenges and aspirations, and gain insights on how to achieve their career ambitions.
WIN Conference
In October, Nestlé sponsored the Women’s International Networking (WIN) Conference in Rome.
This international event focuses on women’s career development and leadership. Over 100 Nestlé
women and men attended, from different businesses and markets. They participated in workshops
and plenary session under the theme ‘Leading the Way’ and a specific session with all Nestlé
participants was organised to work on barriers for advancement and actions to be implemented.
One plenary session was led by our Chief Human Resources Officer, Peter Vogt, who stressed:
“We all need to embrace and accelerate our efforts to adapt to the ever-changing world,
both women and men of all generations.”
Supporting parents
Our global Maternity Protection Policy, based on the ILO Maternity Protection Convention, is one of
See our GRI Index for our data on
parental leave (indicator G4-LA3). the most progressive programmes of its kind in the industry. It establishes minimum standards that
must be implemented at Nestlé workplaces across the world by 2018.
The policy applies to all primary caregivers of newly born children, including male employees and those
who adopt children. It includes 14 weeks paid maternity leave, which can be extended up to six months,
employment protection, flexible working arrangements and guaranteed access to breastfeeding rooms
during working hours in head offices and sites with more than 50 female employees. We currently have
more than 302 breastfeeding rooms across our global working facilities.
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Cross generations
At Nestlé, diversity and inclusion includes ensuring integration and equality for people across all age
Read more about our diversity and groups. The Digital Acceleration Team in Vevey runs a reverse mentorship programme with senior
inclusion performance. executives, a two-way communication to close the knowledge gap between older and younger
employees. Older employees learn about social media from younger colleagues and, in return,
younger employees learn about business terminology and industry practices.
Roll out the Global Youth Initiative across all our operations
20 517
Total 2016: 12 385
12 385 • Continue readiness for work events globally, with increasing number of employees involved in such events;
• Enhanced collaboration with external partners to motivate them to join and to increase impact; and
trainees under 30 hired in Europe, • 20 000 to 25 000 job opportunities for people under 30 years of age every year.
exceeding our target
Our 2020 objective includes our previous 2018 objective to support young people in the Americas,
and extends this globally.
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36 702 The Nestlé Global Youth Initiative was launched to help address the following:
• Skills and talent opportunities in our organisation;
job opportunities provided
to young people under 30 • High unemployment and under-employment in society; and
in Europe and the Americas
• Youth employability and social integration.
Nestlé believes that to prosper over the long term and create value for our shareholders, we must also
create value for society. Through the Global Youth Initiative, we support the development of
communities while ensuring our talent pipeline, bringing diversity and new skills to the organisation,
and developing the next generation of Nestlé employees and leaders. It is also a way in which we can
help tackle poverty and align our youth-related activities with the UN’s Sustainable Development Goals.
Our progress
• In Europe, we exceeded our 2014–16 objective on regular and temporary positions,
apprenticeships and traineeships offered to young people:
–– 20 517 job opportunities against an objective of 10 000; and
–– 12 385 apprenticeships and traineeships against an objective of 10 000.
• 1735 readiness for work events were organised in Europe in 2016 to help prepare young people
for work, with 5166 employees volunteering for such events.
• The Alliance for YOUth continued to grow, reaching 200 partners.
• In the Americas, we exceeded our 2015–18 objective in just over one year, with 7601 apprenticeship
and traineeship opportunities against the objective of 7000. We have so far offered 16 185 job
opportunities to young people, showing strong progress towards our objective of 24 000.
We have therefore offered a cumulative total of 36 702 job opportunities and 19 986 apprenticeships
and traineeships so far to young people across Europe and the Americas.
The Global Youth Initiative, which began in Europe, was fully implemented in the Americas and
launched in the Middle East, Africa, Asia and Oceania in 2016. As a result, with 100% of our
operations behind the initiative, we have achieved our previous objectives and are now making
global objectives from 2017 towards 2020.
G4-EC8
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Building a safer,
healthier workplace
Sustainable Development Goals Enhancing quality of life and contributing to a healthier future begins with
We identified the following goals
safeguarding the safety and health of our people. We work hard to create a
where our work adds value: culture in which safety and health are leading principles, and our aim is to
achieve zero work-related injuries and illnesses. We also want to help our
employees make more informed decisions about their own health, take
personal responsibility, and choose to live and work in a safe and healthy
way. Our strategic priorities are set out in the Nestlé Framework for
Employee Health, while our Safety and Health Roadmap 2016–18 details
our approach to addressing these issues.
Our commitment
2020 – Offer our employees education, early screening and programmes that support healthier lifestyle choices.
By
2020 – Continue leading through industry forums.
By
We have always been committed to employee health and wellbeing. Building on this, we have
decided to articulate our long-term objective through a public commitment. We have explored
options for assessing health risks among our employees, and evaluated effective
implementation approaches.
We aim to engage our people in learning more about this area, enabling them to use this learning to
improve their own diets, health and wellbeing. Communications, campaigns and events will
promote the benefits of healthier lifestyles and provide more information about the foods people
eat, the effects of exercise, and practices proven to boost wellbeing. We will also be monitoring key
indicators, and developing a methodology that will enable us to report future progress towards our
objectives.
A Global Sharing Platform has also been launched, with the objective of supporting our markets. It
will provide education about health and wellness initiatives, strengthening markets’ connections
with the Framework for Employee Health and establishing a ‘friends helping friends’ solution for
Nestlé in the markets.
In 2016, we also updated our Safety and Health Roadmap, which sets out our approach for managing
our strategic priorities through to 2018. The Roadmap is focused on four strategic priorities:
• Everyone engaged;
• Key risks managed;
• Our passion for nutrition, health and wellness; and
• Management processes.
This is not an exhaustive list of everything we need to do or work on. Its aim is to set high-level
priorities for the Group that guide our planning for the period 2016–2018. It is used as a reference by
zones, globally managed/regionally managed businesses, markets and support functions, though
they also take into account the specific context for their organisations.
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Strategic priorities
Our passion
Everyone Key risks for nutrition, health Management
engaged managed and wellness processes
Our approach
Everyone engaged
This strategic priority is comprehensive in its scope, covering everyone in Nestlé, from the
Management Board to the individual employee. Ultimately, our ambition is to establish safety and
health as a shared personal value for everyone by winning hearts and minds.
Values-based behaviours
Excellence in safety and health cannot be imposed from the top: it requires everyone to be engaged,
to internalise our safety and health values and to take personal ownership. We’re achieving this by
focusing on behaviour and improving the quality of management and peer-to-peer feedback. We are
working towards achieving 100% base level compliance with GI18.006, our internal standard for
Caring and Feedback, and reached 75% compliance in 2016.
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Machinery safety
Machinery safety is another significant cause of serious injury in our factories. We have improved
our comprehensive and systematic approach to machinery safety, including machine guarding and
safe methods of intervention. Our Machinery Safety programme was extended in 2016, with a
further five workshops to train 129 super users. We’re also striving to reinforce machinery safety in
new business acquisitions.
Process safety
We have identified a number of operational process risks, such as fires, explosions and chemical
releases. These have the potential to cause not only serious injury but also significant asset damage
and business interruption. Process safety incidents are also part of major incident reporting
procedures, and each incident follows the process of a detailed investigation at site level. We also
placed a particular focus on boiler and refrigeration safety. A number of workshops were organised
to build a network of certified assessors across our operations, with 28 people trained.
Key data
We gather information on key health and safety measures in order to help us recognise the impact of
work on health, and to address and reduce workplace health risks.
4
1.5
3
1.0
2
0.5
1
0.0 0
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Healthy diets
At the heart of our framework is nutrition, and our goal is to proactively make an impact on the diets
of our employees and their families. We aim to do this by offering locally relevant education on
nutrition and hydration, and by providing healthy food and drink options at work. In 2016, 94.2% of
our canteens provided a healthy meal option to our employees.
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Management processes
Our commitment
Ensure that all Nestlé employees are covered by a certified safety and health management system
We have always been committed to employee health and safety and continuously improve our
What is OHSAS: 18001? standards, procedures and processes, using the Nestlé Occupational Safety and Health
BS OHSAS 18001 is a Management System. During 2016, we progressed in expanding our certification scope beyond
framework for an manufacturing and have currently covered 79% of our employees, against 70% in 2015.
occupational health and
safety management system. Facilities certified against OHSAS 18001:2007
R&D centres 31
Other 20
Total 1 009
Contractor management
While contractors and construction activities are important for our growth, they also present an
increased risk of fatality and serious injury, while incidents in engineering projects often cause
significant interruption to business. We operate a Group standard on contractor management. This
outlines our expectations for each site to implement a process for selecting contractors, planning
work activities and ensuring safe execution. The standard is supported by a tool for categorising
contracts and determining the level of oversight required.
Project management on all capital projects has been improved to ensure a greater focus on safety and
health. We have also enhanced our safety and health training for project managers and engineers.
We operate a Group standard on contractor management. This outlines our expectations for each
site to implement a process for selecting contractors, planning work activities and ensuring safe
execution. The standard also provides a tool for categorising contracts and determining the level of
oversight required to reduce the risk of incidents.
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20
18
16
Total number of fatalities
14
12
10
8
6
4
2
0
2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016
Employee on-site Employee off-site Contractors on-site Member of public on-site Violence related
Risk assessment
Risk assessment is the primary safety and health management process by which we identify
hazards and determine how to protect people. Risk assessment is an integral part of the
Occupational Health and Safety Assessment Series (OHSAS) certification process and is in place for
certified sites. In 2016, we undertook extensive work on developing an integrated Nestlé
management system, which comprises a new risk-assessment toolkit that will enhance the quality
of risk assessment. This will be rolled out across sites in 2017.
Workplace design
Read more about safety and health.
The introduction of new equipment or processes and the construction of new facilities create a
potential for new risks. However, they are also an opportunity to build in safety and health at the
design stage. Getting this right is critical to managing many of our key risks. Packaging machinery
standards for several items of equipment have been revised in 2016.
Our approach is to enhance management of change programmes aligned with our Group standard
on the topic.
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Succession planning
All Nestlé employees have training plans, which are reviewed against changing career paths and
new opportunities. Employees have at least one formal discussion with their line manager around
their plan each year.
Succession planning is used to develop the leaders of the future through planned career
development, and for filling jobs at various levels in the organisation. In 2016, 51.4% of our Key Talents
were identified as potential successors to another role. About 9840 people have now been identified
as potential successors for key Nestlé positions across the organisation, up by 12% from 2015.
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Our objective
By 2017 – Nestlé’s Corporate Business Principles are fully embedded in all courses at our international training centre and
e-learning made available to all employees.
Our training is designed to enhance personal performance and to help achieve our business goals.
Training programmes are continuously changed and improved to meet business needs. They are
delivered by internal and external providers, and online. We have provided an overview of some of
our training courses during 2016, which took place all over the world, in the table below.
44% We hosted training for 2670 employees at our international training and conference centre
(Rive-Reine) in Switzerland in 2016. The percentage of female trainees continues to rise, reaching
of trainees participating at 44% of participants last year.
our international training and
conference centre were women
2016 management level courses Number of Approximate Locations
sessions number of
attendees
Leadership Through Safety® 295 3 215 Algeria, Argentina, Brazil, Belgium, Cameroon,
Canada, Chile, China, Czech Republic, Dominican
Republic, Egypt, France, Germany, Ghana, Greece,
India, Iran, Ireland, Israel, Italy, Malaysia, Morocco,
Netherlands, Nigeria, Norway, Peru, Philippines,
Romania, Russia, Serbia, South Africa, Switzerland,
Trinidad and Tobago, United Arab Emirates, United
Average hours of training per year Kingdom, United States, Côte d’Ivoire
per employee
Environmental Sustainability 16 212 Guatemala, Middle East, Nicaragua, Panama,
2016 38.8 Leadership Spain, Switzerland, Thailand
2015 31.6
2014 28.8 Our Leadership Through Safety® programmes are designed for us by executive coaching and
Covers approximately 82.1% of all employees. mentoring specialists AlleTrust, who use cognitive science to drive behavioural change. Our
Training hours are significantly higher due to IT-based Global Learning Management System, iLearn@Nestlé, enables employees to manage their
roll-out of Learning Management System
across the Group. own development and helps managers track the overall development of their team.
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Our environmental awareness programmes aim to foster a continuous improvement culture that
Read more about our work to
improve environmental raises awareness of environmental issues, our operations’ impact on them, and our employees’ role
sustainability. in managing them. In 2016, environmental awareness training was conducted in 95 countries in
which we operate.
More than More than 5600 employees successfully completed our e-learning course in 2016, enhancing their
5 600 knowledge and learning how to apply environmentally sustainable business practices.
Environmental Sustainability Leadership workshops were held in Guatemala, the Middle East,
employees have completed our Nicaragua, Panama, Spain, Switzerland and Thailand. The one-and-a-half-day sessions enable our
environmental e-learning course
employees to share best practices, improving their understanding of the challenges and external
pressures facing our business. The course helps us promote environmentally sustainable business
practices, and helps our leaders to apply policy requirements in daily activities. Nine of our trainers
also received training.
Seven of our senior managers also had the opportunity to attend the Prince of Wales’ Business &
Sustainability Programme at Cambridge University in 2016.
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G4-11, Market presence G4-DMA, Employment G4-DMA, Labor/management relations G4-DMA, G4-FP3, G4-LA16, Freedom of association and collective bargaining G4-DMA, G4-HR4
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Working time lost due to industrial disputes, Working time lost due to industrial disputes,
strikes and/or lock-outs (%) strikes and/or lock-outs by region 2016 (%)
2016 0.023 AMS 0.057
2015 0.024 AOA 0.003
2014 0.016 EMENA 0.020 0.020
0% 0.5%1% 0% 0.5%1%
Combating discrimination
Read more about our ‘Tell us’
All our workplaces should be free from discrimination and harassment. Our Human Resources
system through which incidents Policy and our Code of Business Conduct state that employees must not discriminate on the basis of
can be reported anonymously. origin, nationality, religion, race, gender, age or sexual orientation, or engage in any kind of verbal or
physical harassment based on any of the above or any other reason. In 2016, 133 alleged incidents of
discrimination in our operations were reported, of which 59% or 79 incidents have been resolved or
otherwise require no further action from the company.
Employment G4-DMA, Labor/management relations G4-DMA, G4-FP3, G4-LA16, Non-discrimination G4-DMA, G4-HR3, G4-HR4
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Appendix
Our UNGC Communication on Progress, Human Rights Reporting
Framework and GRI Index are available as separate pdfs, and can be
downloaded from the data performance centre.
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Report boundaries
We have considered and mapped material issues along the value chain of our business. This process
reviews where financial, operational and reputational impacts would be felt in the Nestlé value chain.
It also assesses the level of importance placed on issues by stakeholders in different parts of our
value chain. The results have informed the scope and boundaries of content featured in this report.
Currency conversion
All the amounts cited in this report have been converted to Swiss francs (CHF) using the exchange
rates reported in the consolidated financial statements of the Nestlé Group 2016.
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Audience
We have identified a wide range of stakeholders who have an interest in this report, and hold regular
dialogue with them. They include non-governmental organisations (NGOs), think tanks,
foundations, organisations, Environment, Social and Governance (ESG) services, our consumers
and our suppliers.
Assurance
This report is subject to independent assurance by Bureau Veritas. This includes assurance of the
report meeting the requirements of ‘in accordance’ with comprehensive GRI G4 guidelines.
The aim of this process is to provide reassurance to Nestlé’s stakeholders of the accuracy, reliability
and objectivity of the reported information, and that it covers the issues material to the business.
To view the scope of work and observations, see the full assurance statement on page 176.
Contact us
We hope you find this report engaging and informative, and we continue to welcome your input and
views: creatingsharedvalue@nestle.com
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Scope of work
The scope of our work was limited to assurance over performance data and information
included in the CSV Report for the reporting period January 1, 2016 to December 31, 2016 (the
‘Selected Information’). Subject to the limitations and exclusions listed in the next section, our
review included:
i) statements, information and performance data contained within the CSV Report;
ii) Nestlé’s management approach of material issues; and
iii) alignment of the reported data and information to the requirements of the Global Reporting
Initiative (GRI) G4 Sustainability Reporting Guidelines.
The assurance process was conducted in line with the requirements of the AA1000 Assurance
Standard (2008) Type 21 assurance. We applied a moderate2 level of assurance.
1
ype 2 Assurance: an engagement in which the assurance provider gives findings and conclusions on the principles of Inclusivity, Materiality and Responsiveness and verifies the reliability of
T
specified sustainability performance information (AA1000AS (2008) Standard). For further information see www.accountability.org/standards/aa1000as/
2
A ll relevant text was supported by interview evidence as a minimum, and supported by corroborating interview evidence or another source wherever possible. A moderate level of assurance is
commensurate with “limited” assurance as defined in the International Standard on Assurance Engagements 3000 (Revised) – Effective for assurance engagement dated on or after December 15, 2015.
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This moderate level assurance engagement relies on a risk based selected sample of the selected
information and the associated limitations that this entails. Our work was limited to head office
based activities and understanding how Nestlé consolidates and reconciles data provided by local
markets/countries. The reliability of the reported data is dependent on the accuracy of data
collection and monitoring arrangements at market/site level, not addresses as part of this assurance.
This independent statement should not be relied upon to detect all errors, omissions or
misstatements that may exist.
This assurance engagement does not constitute verification of Zero Waste to Landfill for the
locations where Nestlé reported that this has been achieved.
Responsibilities
The preparation and presentation of the Selected Information in the CSV Report are the sole
responsibility of the management of Nestlé.
Bureau Veritas was not involved in the drafting of the CSV Report. Our responsibilities were to:
• provide moderate level assurance over the accuracy, reliability and objectivity of the information
contained within the CSV Report;
• form an independent conclusion based on the assurance procedures performed and evidence
obtained; and
• report our detailed conclusions and recommendations in an internal letter to management.
Conclusion
On the basis of the scope of work, nothing came to our attention to suggest that:
• the Selected information is not fairly stated in all material aspects;
• Nestlé does not adhere to the principles of inclusivity, materiality and responsiveness as per the
AA1000 Accountability Principles Standard 2008.
Any errors or misstatements identified during the engagement were corrected prior to the CSV
Report being published.
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Inclusivity3
At the global level, Nestlé’s on-going programme of stakeholder convenings involving NGOs,
government, academia and investors, continues to provide the business with valuable stakeholder
insight on its CSV strategy and activities. Beyond this, the materiality analysis incorporates a review
of stakeholders’ interests.
Materiality4
Nestlé has conducted a new materiality analysis in 2016 which included an assessment of
stakeholders’ interest and the corresponding Nestlé business impact. This year the issues were also
mapped against the Sustainable Development Goals. A number of new issues were identified,
merged with others or have gone up in the prioritisation rankings.
We believe that this updated materiality process is appropriate and relevant to the business in 2016.
Responsiveness5
Nestlé remains responsive to stakeholder concerns through the publication of its annual CSV
Report. In addition, this year Nestlé has published in the CSV Report the full list of stakeholders’
recommendations from the 2016 Stakeholder Convening in Geneva and its responses.
3
Inclusivity is the participation of stakeholders in developing and achieving an accountable and strategic response to sustainability.
4
Materiality is determining the relevance and significance of an issue to an organisation and its stakeholders.
5
Responsiveness is the extent of an organisation’s response to stakeholder issues and is realised through decisions, actions and communication with stakeholders.
6
Certificate of Registration FS 34143 issued by BSI Assurance UK Limited
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