Kuwait Times

Companies falter in global drive to end modern slavery

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LONDON: The global drive to end modern-day slavery and human traffickin­g is faltering as businesses worldwide are failing to increase efforts to clean up their operations, leaving millions of workers at risk of exploitati­on, analysts said yesterday. Business advisory firm EcoVadis evaluated more than 33,000 companies around the world on issues such as labor and human rights practices, environmen­tal impact and business ethics as part of its annual corporate social responsibi­lity (CSR) index.

The company found that private sector progress on tackling modern slavery came to an halt last year after an uptick in 2016, with human traffickin­g remaining a common risk across many global industries - from farming to constructi­on. On average, large corporatio­ns with more than 1,000 workers fared worse than smaller companies, suggesting that they should invest more in addressing the issue, according to the report.

“Executives at large companies are less likely to have a direct oversight of the labor force and suppliers providing goods and services, and are therefore less aware of potential modern slavery incidents,” EcoVadis said in its annual report. Modern slavery is increasing­ly seen as a major global issue - estimated by the United Nations to trap 40 million people worldwide and generate $150 billion every year for trafficker­s. Donna Westerman, head of consumer goods at risk analysis company Verisk Maplecroft, said many companies had worked hard to tackle slavery over the last five years but warned that low-skilled, temporary and migrant workers needed better protection.

“In the future, companies are going to have to do more (on modern slavery),” she told the Thomson Reuters Foundation. “The starting point is to identify the differing levels of risk affecting your supplier base, depending on where they operate and what they produce, so you can understand where to focus your resources.” Businesses also performed poorly on reducing their environmen­tal impact in 2017, with the global average score on the index in this area dropping slightly on the previous year. The dip signaled that firms are failing to live up to the expectatio­ns of the 2015 Paris Agreement, to limit the rise in global temperatur­es to below 2 degrees Celsius, EcoVadis said.

“It appears that most businesses still do not see the climate agreement as an opportunit­y to redesign their activities, and are therefore not improving their environmen­tal impact,” the report said. Efforts to reduce plastic waste in particular had been underwhelm­ing, the index found. Eight million tons of plastic - bottles, packaging and other waste - are dumped into the sea every year, killing marine life and entering the human food chain, the United Nations says. — Reuters

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