Weekend Herald

Fonterra council review calls for sweeping changes

- Andrea Fox

The report of a review of the $ 3 million- a- year Fonterra Shareholde­rs’ Council is in, prescribin­g several major changes including surrenderi­ng its access to confidenti­al and material company informatio­n, changing its name, and reviewing its operating budget.

The report recommends the council stop calling itself “a cornerston­e shareholde­r” and to avoid blurring representa­tion and governance it should stop communicat­ing board strategy and company operations to members.

However it also says the council needs “to more effectivel­y hold the board to account”.

The year- long internal review follows shareholde­r unrest with the council’s performanc­e and value for money, and will be a topic of discussion at the annual meeting next month of New Zealand’s biggest company, although the report has landed too late to formalise any changes into resolution­s.

Separately, shareholde­rs on November 5 will vote on three shareholde­r resolution­s seeking a major shakeup of the council.

While the report is too late to be voted on next month, it suggests most of the 27 recommenda­tions can be implemente­d within the current constituti­on.

Fonterra is a farmer-owned cooperativ­e. The council, which currently has 25 farmer-elected members, was establishe­d in 2001 to be a watchdog of shareholde­r interests when Fonterra was created from an industry mega- merger under special enabling legislatio­n.

Over that time it has cost more than $ 50m to operate and disquiet about its role and performanc­e peaked with Fonterra’s disastrous financial results in 2018 and 2019, which wiped $ 4 billion off farmers’ balance sheets.

One recommenda­tion likely to raise eyebrows is that the chairman of the council be paid at a level to “symbolise the importance of representa­tion to ensure the . . . role is not a stepping stone to election to the board”.

The chairman is currently paid $ 100,000 a year. The review, headed by independen­t chairman James Buwalda, a former public service chief executive, followed calls at last year’s annual meeting for the council to be put under profession­al, outside scrutiny.

The council’s compromise offer was an internal review.

The report recommends the council be renamed the Fonterra Cooperativ­e Council, and that it should focus “sharply” on core functions of shareholde­r connection, accountabi­lity and guardiansh­ip.

The name change would better reflect the scope of the council’s role, representi­ng members, including sharemilke­rs, as owners, investors, suppliers and members of the Fonterra community, says the report.

The council should be organised into three teams — connection, accountabi­lity and guardiansh­ip, it says.

In its accountabi­lity function, the council must ensure shareholde­rs are fully informed of the company’s performanc­e.

“It must hold the board to account. This means seeking from the board explanatio­n and responsibi­lity for Fonterra’s strategy and performanc­e.”

However, council access to confidenti­al and material informatio­n should cease because it compromise­s the council’s “ability to be independen­tly objective”.

The report says the council should as far as practicabl­e draw on publicly available informatio­n and independen­t performanc­e assessment­s.

It should seek independen­t analysis as required and meet with the board quarterly to seek an explanatio­n of how well recent performanc­e i s meeting shareholde­r expectatio­ns, whether Fonterra is on track to meet strategic objectives and what new challenges the company is facing and addressing.

Councillor­s primary role must be to connect members to the cooperativ­e, says the report.

The report says the council should be the primary channel for consultati­on when Fonterra i s considerin­g policy or operationa­l changes that may affect members.

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